The KFC Twenty20 Big Bash was a domestic Twenty20 cricket competition in Australia. The competition was organised by Cricket Australia, and sponsored by fast food chicken outlet KFC.

KFC Twenty20 Big Bash
Tournament logo
KFC Twenty20 Big Bash Logo
CountriesAustralia
AdministratorCricket Australia
FormatTwenty20
First edition2005–06
Latest edition2010–11
Tournament formatDouble round-robin and knockout finals
Number of teams6
Current championSouthern Redbacks (1st title)
Most successfulVictorian Bushrangers (4 titles)
Most runsBrad Hodge (919)
Most wicketsDirk Nannes (31)

Running over six seasons from 2005–06 to 2010–11, the KFC Twenty20 Big Bash was the first top level domestic Twenty20 competition in Australia, contested by the six traditional Sheffield Shield state cricket teams. The competition was replaced by the franchise-based Big Bash League from 2011–12.

Victoria was the most successful team during the tournament's running, winning four out of the six titles.

Teams

edit

Placings

edit
SeasonWinnerRunner-upThirdFourthFifthSixth
2005–06VictoriaNew South WalesWestern AustraliaQueenslandSouth AustraliaTasmania
2006–07VictoriaTasmaniaWestern AustraliaSouth AustraliaQueenslandNew South Wales
2007–08VictoriaWestern AustraliaTasmaniaNew South WalesQueenslandSouth Australia
2008–09New South WalesVictoriaQueenslandSouth AustraliaWestern AustraliaTasmania
2009–10VictoriaSouth AustraliaQueenslandWestern AustraliaNew South WalesTasmania
2010–11South AustraliaNew South WalesTasmaniaWestern AustraliaQueenslandVictoria

Finals

edit
Year Final Venue Final Attendance Final
Winner Result Runner-up
2005–06
Details
North Sydney Oval, Sydney 5,669 Victoria (state) Victoria
233 for 7 (20 overs)
Victoria won by 93 runs
Scorecard
New South Wales New South Wales
140 all out (15.3 overs)
2006–07
Details
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne 28,960 Victoria (state) Victoria
160 for 6 (20 overs)
Victoria won by 10 runs
Scorecard
Tasmania Tasmania
150 for 8 (20 overs)
2007–08
Details
WACA, Perth 16,589 Victoria (state) Victoria
203 for 8 (20 overs)
Victoria won by 32 runs
Scorecard
Western Australia Western Australia
171 all out (19.3 overs)
2008–09
Details
ANZ Stadium, Sydney 17,592 New South Wales New South Wales
167 for 5 (20 overs)
New South Wales won by 5 wickets
Scorecard
Victoria (state) Victoria
166 for 4 (20 overs)
2009–10
Details
Adelaide Oval, Adelaide 17,722 Victoria (state) Victoria
166 for 7 (20 overs)
Victoria won by 48 runs
Scorecard
South Australia South Australia
118 for 9 (20 overs)
2010–11
Details
Adelaide Oval, Adelaide 27,920 South Australia South Australia
155 for 2 (17.3 overs)
South Australia won by 8 wickets
Scorecard
New South Wales New South Wales
153 for 8 (20 overs)

Records

edit

Television coverage

edit

All games, including the finals were covered by Fox Sports.

References

edit
edit