Vijay Hazare Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 competition, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) have booked to direct the Vijay Hazare Trophy. The competition will be beginning on February 20 and the gathering stages will be directed until March 1. After a brief break for seven days, the knockout stages will be played from March 8. The semi-finals and the last will be played on March 11 and 14 separately.
This will be the primary season in quite a while that Ranji Trophy will not be played. The load up had expressed that having a competition of that enormous scope will not be feasible for them during these occasions. Consequently, they chose to go with the chief 50 overs rivalry. The Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 prize commenced the homegrown period of Indian cricket. The competition finished up on 31st January.
BCCI have obviously sent a legitimate round to all the state affiliations, illuminating all the insights regarding the 50-over rivalry. It was expressed that the gathering phases of the competition will be played between February 20 and March 1. From that point onward, a progression of COVID-19 tests will be directed before the knockout phase of the competition.
Six scenes chose for the Vijay Hazare Trophy
The last will be played on March 14. The scene of the last has not been chosen at this point. The knockout phases of the Syed Mushtaq Ali T20 competition was played at the Motera Stadium in Ahmedabad. Six settings were chosen for the Vijay Hazare Trophy, Surat, Indore, Bangalore, Jaipur, and Kolkata and a scene in Tamil Nadu.
“The groups are needed to collect in their individual host urban communities on February 13 and will be expected to go through Covid-19 testing methodology and Quarantine as per the State administrative specialists and the BCCI’s SOPs,” said the BCCI mail to the state units, which was accounted for by Cricbuzz, said on Sunday night.
Virat Kohli’s wicket is certainly the most satisfying of my career: Dominic Bess
Here are the gatherings of the competition
World class A (Surat): Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, Tripura, Hyderabad, Baroda, and Goa
Tip top B (Indore): Tamil Nadu, Punjab, Jharkhand, MP, Vidarbha, and AP
First class C (Bangalore): Karnataka, UP, Kerala, Odisha, Railways, and Bihar
World class D (Jaipur): Delhi, Mumbai, Maharashtra, HP, Rajasthan, and Pondicherry
World class E (Kolkata): Bengal, Services, J&K, Saurashtra, Haryana, and Chandigarh
Plate (Tamil Nadu, city TBC): Uttarakhand, Nagaland, Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, and Sikkim