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Chittagong Division cricket team

Bangladeshi cricket team


Summary

Bangladeshi cricket team

FieldValue
nameChittagong Division Cricket Team
imageChittagong_DSA_Logo.png
captainYasir Ali
groundZohur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong
capacity22,000
first_fc_year1999-2000
title1National Cricket League
title1wins1
title2National Cricket League One-Day
title2wins1

Chattogram Division cricket team represents the Chittagong Division, one of the eight administrative regions in Bangladesh. The team was founded in 1999 to compete in the National Cricket League (NCL) and plays first-class cricket. For the short-lived National Cricket League Twenty20 in 2010, the team adopted the name Cyclones of Chittagong. The equivalent team in the Bangladesh Premier League is the Chittagong Kings.

Chittagong Division play most of their home games at the Bir Shrestho Flight Lieutenant Matiur Rahman Cricket Stadium (BSFLMRCS) in the port city of Chittagong. The BSFLMRCS has superseded the older District Stadium, Chottogram (DSC) as Chittagong's main cricket venue. The District Stadium is now used primarily for football.

Honours

  • **National Cricket League (1) – **1999–2000
  • **One-Day Cricket League (1) – **2003–04

History

Before Bangladesh became independent, Chittagong was part of East Pakistan and it had a cricket team which was scheduled to take part in the Quaid-i-Azam Trophy in both 1959–60 and 1964–65, and in the Ayub Trophy in 1962–63. None of the scheduled matches took place as all were abandoned without any start of play. East Pakistan cricket had a chequered history and it was only after independence that cricket in Bangladesh gained any real significance.

The earliest known match involving a Chittagong Division team was in March 1980 when they played Rajshahi Division in an Inter-Divisional Championship competition. In March 1986, they took part in a National Cricket Championship and reached the quarter-final stage. These were not first-class competitions and it was not until the late 1990s, after Bangladesh had made progress in international cricket, that there was any possibility of first-class cricket at the domestic level.

Bangladesh won the 1997 ICC Trophy and so qualified for the 1999 Cricket World Cup. There was then the very real prospect (realised in 2000) of the country being admitted to full membership of the International Cricket Council (the ICC) and so steps were taken to create an organised national championship. The result was the NCL which began in the 1999–2000 season, though it did not have first-class status until the 2000–01 season. It was decided that the NCL teams should represent each of the country's six (at that time) administrative divisions and so a Chittagong Division team was formed, playing its matches at the M. A. Aziz Stadium in Chittagong, the Comilla Stadium in Comilla and the Niaz Mohammad Stadium in Brahmanbaria. Chittagong Division won the 1999–2000 championship.

In 2000–01, Chittagong Division became a first-class team and has continued to compete in the NCL but with no further titles to 2016. The List A One-Day Cricket League began in 2000–01 and ran until 2010–11 when it was terminated. Chittagong Division won the competition once, in 2003–04.

Chittagong played in the Bangladesh NCL (National Cricket League) Twenty20 tournament which was staged for one season only, 2009–10, and used the name Cyclones of Chittagong (CC). The team's official colours were blue and white. Though captained by Nafees Iqbal and featuring Tamim Iqbal, the Cyclones were unsuccessful. They lost four of their five games and finished fifth in the six-team league.

Results in National Cricket League

  • 1999–2000: seven wins in 10 matches, champions
  • 2000–01: five wins in 10 matches, finished second
  • 2001–02: two wins in 10 matches, finished third
  • 2002–03: three wins in six matches, finished third
  • 2003–04: one win in 10 matches, finished fifth
  • 2004–05: two wins in 10 matches, finished fourth
  • 2005–06: four wins in 10 matches, finished second
  • 2006–07: one win in 10 matches, finished third
  • 2007–08: four wins in 10 matches, finished fourth
  • 2008–09: one win in 10 matches, finished fifth
  • 2009–10: five wins in nine matches, finished second
  • 2010–11: no wins in five matches, finished sixth (last)
  • 2011–12: three wins in seven matches, finished fifth
  • 2012–13: two wins in seven matches, finished sixth
  • 2013–14: one win in seven matches, finished sixth
  • 2014–15: no wins in seven matches, finished eighth (last)
  • 2015–16: no wins in six matches, finished third in Tier 2
  • 2016–17: no wins in six matches, finished fourth (last) in Tier 2
  • 2017–18: no wins in six matches, finished equal fourth in Tier 2
  • 2018–19: one win in six matches, finished third in Tier 2
  • 2019-20: one win in six matches, finished fourth in Tier 2

References

Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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