Hong Kong Cricket Sixes

International cricket competition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hong Kong Cricket Sixes is a six-a-side international cricket tournament held at the Kowloon Cricket Club and Mission Road Ground, Mong Kok comprising between eight and twelve teams. Organised by Cricket Hong Kong, it is sanctioned by the International Cricket Council. The tournament is designed for television viewing, with rules and a venue that encourage aggressive batting and high scoring. Because every player (except the wicket-keeper) is required to bowl one over, the format suits all-rounders.

Quick Facts Countries, Administrator ...
Hong Kong Cricket Sixes
Countries Hong Kong
AdministratorHong Kong Cricket Board
Format6 Overs match
First edition1992
Latest edition2024
Tournament formatRound-robin tournament and Knockout
Number of teams
  • 8 (1992–2017)
  • 12 (2024–present)
Current champion Sri Lanka (2nd title)
Most successful Pakistan
 England
 South Africa (5 titles each)
WebsiteOfficial website
Close

All editions of the tournament have been held at the Kowloon Cricket Club except for the 1996 and 1997 editions, which were held at the Hong Kong Stadium[1][2] and the 2024 edition was held in Mission Road Ground, Mong Kok .

History

Summarize
Perspective

Pakistan is the most successful team of the tournament. Pakistan won 5 titles and also finished runner ups in 5 titles. In 2007, Sri Lanka defeated an All-Stars team (featuring players such as Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Shane Warne) to take the title.

The All-Stars returned for the 2008 event with West Indies batting great Brian Lara and New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming as members. They joined nine representative international teams in the tournament – defending champions Sri Lanka, Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, and hosts Hong Kong.

The 2009 tournament, held from 31 October to 1 November, saw eight teams competing, with South Africa defeating Hong Kong in the final.

In 2011, the Hong Kong Cricket Association was awarded HK$3.5 million by the Hong Kong SAR government's Mega Event Fund (MEF) to organise the event, with added sponsorship from the KARP Group. To comply with the Mega Events Fund's objectives of promoting Hong Kong as an events capital in Asia, some changes were made to the format. These included expanding the tournament from two to three days, with tournament play starting on the Friday of the event weekend. The field was also increased from 8 to 12 teams with the addition of three more national teams and an invitational squad of international players.[3]

The HKCA did not make another MEF application in 2012 due to time constraints, preferring instead to rely on a smaller grant through the government's 'M' Mark scheme. This resulted in a downscaled tournament played over two days on 27–28 October with eight teams (excluding the All-Stars side).[4]

In 2013, the Hong Kong Cricket Association's applications for MEF contributions (at first HK$10 million then revised to HK$5 million) were turned down, leaving it with a budget of HK$1 million from the M-Mark scheme to organise the tournament. The association felt that a further HK$500,000 to HK$1 million would be needed to organise the tournament and cancelled it after not securing private sponsorship.[5]

On 28 June 2017, Cricket Hong Kong announced that the Hong Kong Sixes would return on 28–29 October following a five-year absence. The event that year took place at the Kowloon Cricket Club.[6]

Match rules

The Laws of Cricket apply, except:

  • Games are played between two teams of six players, and each game consists of a maximum of six(6) six-ball overs bowled by each side (eight-ball overs in the final match).[7]
  • Each member of the fielding side bowls one over, with the exception of the wicket-keeper.
  • Wides and no-balls count as the usual extra run to the batting side, plus an extra ball. But there are no free hits for no balls.
  • If five wickets fall before 5 overs are completed, the last remaining batsman bats on with the fifth batsman acting as a runner. He always takes strike. The innings is complete when the sixth wicket falls.
  • Batsmen retire not out on reaching 50 runs. A retired batsman can return to the crease after lower-order batsmen either retire or are out.
  • A tournament points system awards two points for each match won.

Tournament results

More information Year, Winner ...
YearWinnerRunners-upLeading run scorerLeading wicket takersMan of the Tournament
1992 Pakistan[8] India
1993[9] England Sri LankaEngland Phillip DeFreitas
1994 Australia
1995 South Africa EnglandSouth Africa Jonty Rhodes
1996 West Indies IndiaCricket West Indies Stuart Williams (123)
South Africa Derek Crookes (123)
India Atul Bedade (123)
Sri Lanka Ruwan Kalpage (6)South Africa Derek Crookes
1997 Pakistan EnglandCricket West Indies Floyd Reifer (133)England Matthew Fleming (6)
England Ben Hollioake (6)
Hong Kong Mohammad Zubair (6)
Pakistan Zahoor Elahi
2001 South AfricaUnited Arab Emirates Kaif Ghaury (158)Sri Lanka Upul Chandana (5)
United Arab Emirates Ahmed Nadeem (5)
Pakistan Wasim Akram
2002 EnglandAustralia Dene Hills (159)Pakistan Naved-ul-Hasan (6)
England Chris Silverwood (6)
Australia Dene Hills
2003 England PakistanSri Lanka Saman Jayantha (152)South Africa Gerald Dros (7)Sri Lanka Saman Jayantha
2004 Sri LankaKenya Ravindu Shah (126)United Arab Emirates Arshad Ali (5)
England Darren Maddy (5)
Sri Lanka Dilruwan Perera (5)
Hong Kong Hussain Butt
2005 India West IndiesSri Lanka Thilina Kandamby (125)England Robert Croft (6)India Reetinder Sodhi
2006 South Africa PakistanIndia Robin Singh (129)Cricket West Indies Sylvester Joseph (5)
South Africa Nicky Boje (5)
Pakistan Imran Nazir
2007 Sri LankaAll StarsNew Zealand Craig McMillan (148)Sri Lanka Saman Jayantha (6)New Zealand Craig McMillan
2008 England AustraliaEngland Dimitri Mascarenhas (185)Hong Kong Irfan Ahmed (7)England Dimitri Mascarenhas
2009 South Africa Hong KongEngland Peter Trego (184)Pakistan Shoaib Malik (7)Hong Kong Irfan Ahmed
2010 Australia PakistanPakistan Ahmed Shehzad (218)Pakistan Shoaib Malik (5)
Sri Lanka Kaushalya Weeraratne (5)
Australia Glenn Maxwell
2011 Pakistan EnglandPakistan Umar Akmal (254)England Rory Hamilton-Brown (6)
Pakistan Abdul Razzaq (6)
Pakistan Umar Akmal (6)
Pakistan Umar Akmal
2012 South Africa PakistanPakistan Umar Akmal (201)South Africa Lyall Meyer (7)
2017Hong Kong Nizakat Khan (192)Hong Kong Ehsan Khan (6)
South Africa Sarel Erwee (6)
South Africa Corné Dry (6)
Hong Kong Nizakat Khan[10]
2024 Sri LankaOman Vinayak Shukla (275)Sri Lanka Tharindu Rathnayake (8)Sri Lanka Tharindu Rathnayake
Close

Most successful teams

More information Team, Tournaments won ...
TeamTournaments wonYears wonTournaments runner-upYears runner-up
 Pakistan51992, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2011 6 2003, 2006, 2010, 2012, 2017, 2024
 England51993, 1994, 2003, 2004, 2008 4 1995, 1997, 2002, 2011
 South Africa51995, 2006, 2009, 2012, 2017 1 2001
 Sri Lanka22007, 2024 2 1993, 2004
 Australia12010 2 1994, 2008
 India12005 2 1992, 1996
 West Indies11996 1 2005
Close

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.