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New format for next three IPL seasons 0

Posted on September 05, 2010 by ZyonSTM

The IPL’s governing council has finally revealed the league’s format for next season. The 2011 season – as well as the two years after – will have 74 matches, down 20 games on what was previously thought but still up 14 matches on this year’s campaign.

The 10 IPL franchises, including newcomers Kochi and Pune, will be divided into two groups of five; each team will play each other home and away in its group. Then, and this is where it gets confusing, each team will play 4 of the 5 teams in the other group once, either home or away. Each team will also play the remaining team in the other group twice, home and away. Despite there being two different groups, all 10 teams will be ranked together in one league. 

This all means that every team will play 14 league games – the same amount as the first three seasons. A random draw will decide the composition of the groups as well as who plays whom across the groups once and twice.

Once the group stages reach their conclusion, the top four teams from the league will qualify for the play-offs. The teams that finish first and second in the league table will play the first play-off, which in effect is a semi-final. The teams that finish third and fourth will play what is effectively a quarter-final. Next, the loser of the first game will play the winner of the second game in a game that will decide who will join the winner of the first game in the final.

After all that is the now customary Champions League qualify match and, of course, the final.

If you don’t understand, and I don’t blame you if you don’t, here is a simpler run-down of the play-offs:

Game 1: Team 1 vs Team 2

Game 2: Team 3 vs Team 4

Game 3: Winner Game 2 vs Loser Game 1

Final: Winner Game 1 vs Winner Game 3

CLT20 qualifiers: Finalists and Loser Game 3

The play-offs come in an interesting format though they should be praised as it gives a clear incentive for teams to finish in the top two places in the league table. In past seasons, when a team has been virtually guaranteed a semi-final slot from early on, it would leave a few ‘dead’ games towards the end of the league stage. However, with this play-off system, teams will be desperate to finish in the top two places as they will be given two bites of the cherry for a slot in the final.

Overall, though, it is a confusing format, and you wonder how easy it will be for fans to follow. To be fair, it was always going to be difficult to find the balance between how many games money-hounding franchise owners and stakeholders want and how many matches would be too much for the fans to consume. In the end, the governing council has come up with a bloated and disjointed format. We will have to wait until April to see how it pans out.

The IPL governing council has also solved the issue of player retention.

Each of the eight franchises who participated in the 2010 season will be able to retain up to four players but only a maximum of three Indians. The retained players must have been part of the franchise’s registered squads for the 2010 season. The rest of the players will go into the auction scheduled for the second week of November.

IPL IV will start on April 7 – just five days after the final of the Cricket World Cup.



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