Misplaced Pages

History of cricket in South Africa from 2000–01

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

This All Sections needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this All Sections. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "History of cricket in South Africa from 2000–01" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

This article describes the history of South African cricket from the 2000–01 season. Noted South African players in the 21st century have included Jacques Kallis, Shaun Pollock, Makhaya Ntini, Mark Boucher, Graeme Smith and Herschelle Gibbs.

Domestic cricket

In 2004–05 the SuperSport Series national championship was subject to a complete review designed to rebrand it and re-establish its popularity. Six new franchises were introduced to create a stronger top-tier of sides underpinned by a second-tier tournament that was based around the old provincial teams, who play in a provincial championship that is currently (2007–08) called the South African Airways Provincial Three-Day Challenge.

The rebranded SuperSport Series teams are:

SuperSport Series from 2000–01

the competition was rebranded in 2004 with the introduction of franchise teams

MTN Championship / Standard Bank Cup winners

Pro20 Series (Twenty20) winners

Provincial Three-Day Challenge winners

This is a first-class championship for the provincial teams and so is effectively the descendant of the old Currie Cup.

It was called the UCB Provincial Cup in 2004–05 and then its name was changed to South African Airways Provincial Three-Day Challenge. Winners have been:

International tours

2000–01, New Zealand

Main article: New Zealand cricket team in South Africa in 2000–01

2000–01, Sri Lanka

Main article: Sri Lankan cricket team in South Africa in 2000–01

2001–02, India

Main article: Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2001–02

2001–02, Australia

Main article: Australian cricket team in South Africa in 2001–02

2001–02, Kenya

Main article: Kenyan cricket team in South Africa in 2001–02

2002–03, Bangladesh

Main article: Bangladeshi cricket team in South Africa in 2002–03

2002–03, Sri Lanka

Main article: Sri Lankan cricket team in South Africa in 2002–03

2002–03, Pakistan

Main article: Pakistani cricket team in South Africa in 2002–03

2003–04, West Indies

Main article: West Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2003–04

2004–05, England

Main article: English cricket team in South Africa in 2004–05

2004–05, Zimbabwe

Main article: Zimbabwean cricket team in South Africa in 2004–05

2005–06, Australia

Main article: Australian cricket team in South Africa in 2005–06
For details of the famous high-scoring LOI, see : Australia in South Africa, 5th ODI, 2006

2005–06, New Zealand

Main article: New Zealand cricket team in South Africa in 2005–06

2006–07, India

Main article: Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2006–07

2006–07, Pakistan

Main article: Pakistani cricket team in South Africa in 2006–07

2006–07, Zimbabwe

Main article: Zimbabwean cricket team in South Africa in 2006–07

2007–08, New Zealand

Main article: New Zealand cricket team in South Africa in 2007–08

2007–08, West Indies

Main article: West Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2007–08

2008–09, Australia

Main article: Australian cricket team in South Africa in 2008–09

2008–09, Bangladesh

Main article: Bangladeshi cricket team in South Africa in 2008–09

2008–09, Kenya

Main article: Kenyan cricket team in South Africa in 2008–09

2009–10, England

Main article: English cricket team in South Africa in 2009–10

2009–10, Zimbabwe

Main article: Zimbabwean cricket team in South Africa in 2009–10

2010–11, India

Main article: Indian cricket team in South Africa in 2010–11

2010–11, Zimbabwe

Main article: Zimbabwean cricket team in South Africa in 2010–11

References

External sources

Bibliography

South African cricket seasons
International cricket tours of South Africa
Test and LOI tours
Australia
Bangladesh
England
India
Kenya
New Zealand
Pakistan
Sri Lanka
West Indies
Zimbabwe
Tournaments hosted
Multiple teams
Other tours
Note: during the isolation of South Africa from international cricket between 1970 and 1991, there were seven unofficial tours (italicised below) by various teams, collectively known as the South African rebel tours.
Australian
Bangladeshi
Dutch
English
Irish
Kenyan
Multi-national
Namibian
Scottish
Sri Lankan
West Indian
See also: International cricket in South Africa from 1971 to 1981
Categories: