One-Day Cup (Australia)

(Redirected from Marsh Cup)

The One-Day Cup[a], is an Australian domestic List A 50-over limited-overs cricket tournament. It has had many different names, formats and teams since the inaugural 1969-1970 season. Initially a knockout cup, the competition now features a single round-robin followed by a finals series.

One-Day Cup
CountriesAustralia
AdministratorCricket Australia
FormatLimited-overs (50 overs per side)
First edition1969–70
Tournament formatSingle round-robin, then finals series
Number of teams10
Current champion Western Australia
Most successful Western Australia (17 titles)
Most runsBrad Hodge (5595)[1]
Most wicketsJames Hopes (145)[2]
TVFox Cricket
WebsiteCricket Australia
2024–25 Marsh One-Day Cup

The tournament is contested between teams representing the six states of Australia, who also compete in the first-class Sheffield Shield. Three other teams have also played in the tournament for short periods of time: New Zealand's national team competed from 1969–70 until the 1974–75, Australian Capital Territory participated from 1997–98 until 1999–2000, and a select Cricket Australia XI took part as the seventh team for three seasons from 2015–16 until 2017–18. The current champions are Western Australia.

History

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England was the first country to introduce a domestic one-day limited-overs competition with its Gillette Cup in 1963. Australia was the next country to do so when this competition was established in 1969–70. It has been held every summer since, under a wide variety of names and formats. It is a List A cricket competition. It was the first List A competition to feature numbers on player's shirts when they were introduced for the 1995–96 season and numbers were also subsequently introduced for the ODI series later in the season. In September 2017, former Australian Test cricketer Jason Gillespie suggested that Papua New Guinea should be added to the competition.[3] In August 2024, Cricket Australia launched a campaign to rename the competition after a former player, with fans being able to vote to select the cup's new name.[4]

Seasons and competition formats

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  • 1969/70–1978/79 – Straight knockout
  • 1979/80–1981/82 – 2 pools of 3, semi-finals, 3rd/4th playoff and final
  • 1982/83–1991/92 – 2 pools of 3, semi-finals and final
  • 1992/93–1999/2000 – Single round robin (i.e. home OR away), preliminary final and final
  • 2000/01–2010/11 – Double round robin home and away plus final.
  • 2011/12–2012/13 – Partial round robin (8 matches per team, 3 of 5 opponents played both home and away), plus final.
  • 2013/14 – Carnival format, 6 round games, preliminary final and final.
  • 2014/15 – Carnival format, 7 round games, preliminary final and final.
  • 2015/16–2017/18 – Carnival format, 8 round games, preliminary final and final.
  • 2018/19 – Single round robin, 2 qualification finals, 2 semi-finals and final.
  • 2019/20–present – Carnival format, 7 round games and final

Seasons of sponsorship and competition names

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  • 1969/70 - 1970/71 - Vehicle & General Australasian Knock-out Competition
  • 1971/72 - 1972/73 - Coca-Cola Australasian Knock-out Competition
  • 1973/74 - 1978/79 - Gillette Cup
  • 1979/80 - 1987/88 - McDonald's Cup
  • 1988/89 - 1991/92 - FAI Insurance Cup
  • 1992/93 - 2000/01 - Mercantile Mutual Cup
  • 2001/02 - 2005/06 - ING Cup
  • 2006/07 - 2009/10 - Ford Ranger Cup
  • 2010/11 - 2013/14 - Ryobi One-Day Cup
  • 2014/15 - 2016/17 - Matador BBQs One-Day Cup
  • 2017/18 - 2018/19 - JLT One-Day Cup
  • 2019/20 - 2023/24 - Marsh One-Day Cup

Uniforms

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Australian Capital Territory
 
 
 
 
 

ACT Kit

Cricket Australia XI
 
 
 
 
 

Cricket Australia XI Kit

New South Wales
 
 
 
 
 

New South Wales Kit

New Zealand
 
 
 
 
 

New Zealand Kit

Northern Territory
 
 
 
 
 

Northern Territory Kit

Queensland
 
 
 
 
 

Queensland Kit

South Australia
 
 
 
 
 

South Australia Kit

Tasmania
 
 
 
 
 

Tasmania Kit

Victoria
 
 
 
 
 

Victoria Kit

Western Australia
 
 
 
 
 

Western Australia Kit

One-Day Cup Teams

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Team Colour Limited-Overs Cricket Team Home Cricket Ground/s Since 1969/1970 City/Cities Est. First Season Last Season First Title Last Title Titles (total) Runners-up
  Australian Capital Territory Manuka Oval,
Various Others[a]
Canberra 1928 1997/98 1999/00 - - 0 0
  Cricket Australia XI Allan Border Field,
Hurstville Oval[a]
Brisbane,
Sydney
2015 2015/16 2017/18 - - 0 0
  New South Wales Sydney Cricket Ground,
Various Others[a]
Sydney 1856 1969/70 Present 1984/85 2020/21 12 10
  New Zealand None
None [b]
None
None [b]
1894 1969/70 1974/75 1969/70 1974/75 3 2
  Northern Territory Marrara Oval,
Various Others[a]
Darwin 1978 None None - - 0 0
  Queensland Brisbane Cricket Ground, Various Others[a] Brisbane 1882 1969/70 Present 1975/76 2013/14 10 8
  South Australia Adelaide Oval,
Various Others[a]
Adelaide 1887 1969/70 Present 1983/84 2011/12 3 7
  Tasmania Bellerive Oval, TCA Ground,
Various Others[a]
Hobart 1851 1969/70 Present 1978/79 2009/10 4 6
  Victoria[5]
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Various Others[a] Melbourne 1851 1969/70 Present 1971/72 2018/19 6 10
  Western Australia[6]
WACA Ground,
Perth Stadium[a]
Perth 1893 1969/70 Present 1970/71 2023/24 17 11
  • Titles correct up to the end of the 2023 season.

a Each team has used several venues to host matches. For a full list, see list of cricket grounds in Australia.
b New Zealand did not play home games in this series.

Competition placings

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For a complete list of finals with short scorecards and crowd figures, see Australian Domestic One-Day Cricket Final.

  • 1 The 1982–83 final was originally washed out, and then rescheduled at the beginning of the 1983–84 season.
  • 3 – Won third place playoff
  • 4 – Lost third place playoff

1969–70 to present

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Season First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh
1969–70 New Zealand Victoria New South Wales Western Australia Queensland South Australia Tasmania
1970–71 Western Australia Queensland South Australia New Zealand Tasmania Victoria New South Wales
1971–72 Victoria New Zealand South Australia Western Australia Queensland New South Wales Tasmania
1972–73 New Zealand Queensland South Australia New South Wales Tasmania Western Australia Victoria
1973–74 Western Australia New Zealand South Australia New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Queensland
1974–75 New Zealand Western Australia Queensland Tasmania New South Wales Victoria South Australia
1975–76 Queensland Western Australia South Australia Tasmania
1976–77 Western Australia Victoria Queensland New South Wales
1977–78 Western Australia Tasmania New South Wales Victoria
1978–79 Tasmania Western Australia Queensland Victoria
1979–80 Victoria New South Wales Western Australia 3 Tasmania 4
1980–81 Queensland Western Australia South Australia 3 Victoria 4
1981–82 Queensland New South Wales Western Australia 3 Victoria 4
1982–831 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Victoria
1983–84 South Australia Western Australia New South Wales Tasmania
1984–85 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Western Australia
1985–86 Western Australia Victoria New South Wales Queensland
1986–87 South Australia Tasmania Victoria Western Australia
1987–88 New South Wales South Australia Tasmania Victoria
1988–89 Queensland Victoria New South Wales Western Australia
1989–90 Western Australia South Australia New South Wales Queensland
1990–91 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Victoria
1991–92 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania
1992–93 New South Wales Victoria Western Australia Queensland Tasmania South Australia
1993–94 New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland Victoria Tasmania
1994–95 Victoria South Australia Western Australia Queensland Tasmania New South Wales
1995–96 Queensland Western Australia New South Wales South Australia Tasmania Victoria
1996–97 Western Australia Queensland New South Wales Victoria Tasmania South Australia
1997–98 Queensland New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Tasmania Australian
Cap. Territory
Victoria
1998–99 Victoria New South Wales Queensland South Australia Western Australia Australian
Cap. Territory
Tasmania
1999–00 Western Australia Queensland New South Wales South Australia Victoria Tasmania Australian
Cap. Territory
2000–01 New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria
2001–02 New South Wales Queensland South Australia Western Australia Victoria Tasmania
2002–03 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia
2003–04 Western Australia Queensland Victoria New South Wales South Australia Tasmania
2004–05 Tasmania Queensland Victoria Western Australia South Australia New South Wales
2005–06 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Western Australia Tasmania Queensland
2006–07 Queensland Victoria Western Australia South Australia Tasmania New South Wales
2007–08 Tasmania Victoria South Australia Queensland Western Australia New South Wales
2008–09 Queensland Victoria South Australia Tasmania Western Australia New South Wales
2009–10 Tasmania Victoria Queensland New South Wales Western Australia South Australia
2010–11 Victoria Tasmania New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland
2011–12 South Australia Tasmania New South Wales Queensland Victoria Western Australia
2012–13 Queensland Victoria South Australia New South Wales Tasmania Western Australia
2013–14 Queensland New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Western Australia South Australia
2014–15 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia
2015–16 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Tasmania Western Australia Queensland Cricket Australia XI
2016–17 New South Wales Queensland Victoria Western Australia Tasmania South Australia Cricket Australia XI
2017–18 Western Australia South Australia Victoria New South Wales Queensland Tasmania Cricket Australia XI
2018–19 Victoria Tasmania Western Australia South Australia New South Wales Queensland
2019–20 Western Australia Queensland South Australia Tasmania Victoria New South Wales
2020–21 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia
2021–22 Western Australia New South Wales Tasmania Queensland South Australia Victoria
2022–23 Western Australia South Australia Victoria Queensland New South Wales Tasmania
2023–24 Western Australia New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Queensland South Australia

Leading run-scorers and wicket-takers for each team

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Career statistics include all matches up to the end of the 2018–19 season.[7]

One-Day Cup Team Leading run scorer (career) Leading wicket taker (career)
Victoria Brad Hodge 5597 runs @ 47.03 Shane Harwood 88 wickets @ 23.72
Queensland Jimmy Maher 4589 runs @ 44.99 James Hopes 155 wickets @ 27.32
South Australia Darren Lehmann 3963 runs @ 55.04 Shaun Tait 103 wickets @ 22.92
Western Australia Shaun Marsh 3516 runs @ 45.07 Kade Harvey 103 wickets @ 27.12
Tasmania George Bailey 3537 runs @ 34.67 Xavier Doherty 120 wickets @ 32.20
New South Wales Brad Haddin 2724 runs @ 34.05 Stuart MacGill 124 wickets @ 22.36
Australian Capital Territory Peter Solway 455 runs @ 25.27 Lea Hansen 12 wickets @ 21.16
Cricket Australia XI Will Bosisto 386 runs @ 32.16 Arjun Nair 11 wickets @ 22.72
New Zealand Bevan Congdon 265 runs @ 33.12 Hedley Howarth 11 wickets @ 9.90

Player of the tournament

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Season Player State/Territory
1998–99 Matthew Hayden Queensland
1999–2000 Matthew Hayden Queensland
2000–01 Shaun Young Tasmania
Darren Lehmann South Australia
2001–02 Darren Lehmann South Australia
2002–03 Justin Langer Western Australia
2006–07 Matthew Elliott South Australia
2007–08 Matthew Elliott South Australia
2008–09 Shane Harwood Victoria
2009–10 Brad Hodge Victoria
2010–11 Brad Hodge Victoria
2011–12 Tom Cooper South Australia
2012–13 Aaron Finch Victoria
2013–14 Cameron White Victoria
2014–15 Cameron White Victoria
2015–16 Mitchell Starc New South Wales
2016–17 Marnus Labuschagne Queensland
2017–18 Shaun Marsh Western Australia
2018–19 Ben McDermott Tasmania
2019–20 Usman Khawaja Queensland
Marnus Labuschagne Queensland
2020–21 David Warner New South Wales
Tom Andrews Tasmania
2021-22 Matt Renshaw Queensland
2022-23 Josh Philippe Western Australia
2023-24 Caleb Jewell Tasmania

Records and statistics

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Batting Records
Most runs[8] Brad Hodge (Victoria) 5,597
Highest average[9] Michael Bevan
(New South Wales, South Australia, Tasmania)
61.18
Highest score[10] D'Arcy Short (Western Australia) 257 vs Queensland (28 September 2018)
Highest partnership[11] Usman Khawaja & Chris Hartley (Queensland) 280 vs Tasmania (18 October 2014)
Most hundreds[12] Brad Hodge (Victoria) 20
Bowling Records
Most wickets[13] James Hopes (Queensland) 155
Lowest average[14] Mitchell Starc (New South Wales) 15.42
Best strike rate[15] Mitchell Starc (New South Wales) 19.8
Best economy rate[16] Dennis Lillee (Tasmania, Western Australia) 3.12
Best bowling figures[17] Shaun Tait (South Australia) 8/43 vs Tasmania (9 January 2004)
Most wickets in a series[18] Mitchell Starc (New South Wales) 26 (season 2015–16)
Fielding
Most dismissals (wicket-keeper)[19] Brad Haddin (New South Wales) 164
Most catches (fielder)[20] Cameron White (Victoria) 56
Team Records
Highest total[21] Tasmania 9/435 (50) vs South Australia (8 October 2023)
Lowest total[22] South Australia 51 (28) vs Tasmania (26 January 2003)

Last updated on 9 October 2023[23]

Points system

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Points are awarded as follows:

  • 4 points for a win
  • 2 points for a no-result or a tie
  • 0 points for a loss
  • 1 bonus point if a team achieves a run rate 1.25 times that of the opposition
  • 2 bonus points if a team achieves a run rate twice that of the opposition

The top two teams at the end of the pool matches play-off in the final. The higher-placed team has the home ground advantage.

Television coverage

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In 2006–07, the Ford Ranger One Day Cup was televised on Fox Sports. 25 out of the 31 games were televised including the final. Prior to Fox Sports' broadcasting of the domestic cricket competition, Nine was the host broadcaster. In India STAR Cricket shows the telecast with the help of Fox Sports. In 2011–12 Fox Sports broadcast all 25 games of the Ryobi One Day Cup live. The Nine Network became the rights holder once again from season 2013–14 to the 2016–17 season, primarily showing matches Live on GEM and simulcasting via Cricket Australia's website. There are negotiations in place with ITV to televise the competition in the UK.[24]

For the 2017–18 season, the Nine Network dropped its coverage of the JLT One Day Cup. All matches were streamed live and free on Cricket Australia's own website and app.[25]

From the 2018–19 season, Fox Sports broadcast 13 matches of the tournament each year for six years on the new Fox Cricket channel. All remaining matches were streamed live on Cricket Australia's website and app.[26]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Has had many different names previously, but has been known as the One-Day Cup, name prefaced by various sponsors, since 2010.

References

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  1. ^ Australian Domestic One-Day Competition / Records / Most runs – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  2. ^ "Australian Domestic One-Day Competition / Records / Most wickets". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  3. ^ "Throw PNG a one-day lifeline: Gillespie". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  4. ^ "Name the Cup! Fan vote to help shape new one-day cup trophy". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 30 August 2024.
  5. ^ "Victoria unveil Male and Female squads, name change". Cricket Victoria. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  6. ^ "Domestic Cricket Changes". WACA. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  7. ^ "Cricket Records | Australian Domestic One-Day Competition | / | Records | Most wickets | ESPN Cricinfo". Cricinfo. Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  8. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most runs – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  9. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Highest averages – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  10. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - High scores – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  11. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Highest partnerships by runs – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  12. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most hundreds – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  13. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most wickets – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  14. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Best averages – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  15. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Best strike rates – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  16. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Best economy rates – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  17. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Best bowling figures in an innings – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  18. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most wickets in a series – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  19. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most dismissals – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  20. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Most catches – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  21. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Highest totals – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  22. ^ "Cricket Records – Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – - Lowest totals – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  23. ^ "Cricket Records – Australian Domestic One-Day Competition – / – Records – / – Trophy/Cup records – ESPNcricinfo". Cricinfo.
  24. ^ "New look domestic schedule announced". Cricket Australia. 7 September 2013. Archived from the original on 9 September 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  25. ^ "Sheffield Shield, One-Day Cup schedule revealed". Cricket Australia. 21 August 2017. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  26. ^ "Foxtel and Fox Sports Announce Cricket Broadcasting Rights For The Next Six Years". Fox Sports. 13 April 2018. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
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For match results and individual scorecards, see: