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CSA 4-Day Domestic Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cricket tournament in South Africa

Cricket tournament
CSA 4-Day Domestic Series
Tournament logo
CountriesSouth Africa
AdministratorCricket South Africa
FormatFirst-class cricket
First edition 1889–90
Latest edition2024–25
Next edition2025–26
Tournament formatSingle round-robin
Number of teams15
Current championLions
Most successfulTransvaal/Gauteng/Lions
Most runsGraeme Pollock (12,409)
Most wicketsVintcent van der Bijl (572)
2025–26 CSA 4-Day Series

TheCSA 4-Day Domestic Series is the domesticfirst classcricket competition ofSouth Africa. The tournament is contested by teams from all nine provinces of South Africa.

First contested as the Currie Cup from 1889–90, the tournament has undergone many changes and modifications in its history. In 2004, the traditional province-based format was replaced, with many teams amalgamating. In its place, six entirely professional franchises were created that represented much larger population areas.

The competition underwent significant restructuring once again before the start of the2021–22 season. The six-team franchise system was disbanded, and the tournament returned to its more traditional format. Fifteen province-based teams now compete across two divisions, determined by promotion and relegation.[1]

History

[edit]

Early years

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa to 1918

Like many otherCommonwealth nations, cricket was first introduced by the British in the early 19th Century, with the sport becoming firmly established in South Africa by the 1880s. In March 1889, a touring English side played a South African XI in two matches, in what would retrospectively be designated as the first Test played in South Africa.

First-class domestic cricket had slowly been developing since 1876, when local settlements and towns played each other in the Cape as part of theChampion Bat Tournament. The tournament was played on five occasions, with its final edition in 1890–91.

Sir Donald Currie, the founder of theCastle Shipping Line and the sponsor of the 1889 English tour, donated a trophy for the champions of the promising domestic competition. The 'Currie Cup' was first awarded toKimberley, who had beatenTransvaal in the single match competition of 1889–90. From 1892 to 1893, the competition began to take the familiar form of province-based competition in a champion format, inspired by theEnglish County Cricket structure. Kimberley (who became known asGriqualand West for the 1892–93 season) and Transvaal were joined byWestern Province (1892–93),Natal,Eastern Province (both 1893–94),Border (1897–98) andOrange Free State (1903–04) — although not all of these teams competed in every season after they were established.Rhodesia andSouth Western Districts also competed on a once-off basis in the 1904–05 season.

The Currie Cup was not contested every year, and a total of fourteen seasons were contested between its inception and theFirst World War. Aside from an interruption during theBoer War, typically seasons were not held when the English team were touring. The competition took on several different formats, including a knock-out structure, and a round-robin followed by a challenge final against the previous year's winner; but in 1906–07, a round-robin league format was established, which would be unchanged until 1982–83.

Interwar Years

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa from 1918-19 to 1945

First class cricket recommenced after theFirst World War in the 1920–21 season. The series continued to be held roughly two out of every three years, being cancelled during seasons which coincided with Test tours. After the 1925–26, all seven provincial teams featured in every season. They were joined temporarily byRhodesia (who contested the consecutive 1929–30 and 1931–32 season), and permanently byNorth Eastern Transvaal in 1937–38, which was the final season beforeWorld War II. In all, eleven seasons were played between the wars. During this time, cricket in South Africa began to spread outside the British settler diaspora, particularly in the Afrikaner and Indian community. However, cricket remained strictly, although not yet legally, segregated with various national bodies governing cricket for the different racial groups. First-class domestic continued to be white-only.

Second World War and the beginning of Isolation

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa from 1945-46 to 1970

After an eight-year hiatus, the Currie Cup restarted in 1946–47 with all eight provincial teams and Rhodesia (who would now feature permanently)

In 1951–52, the competition adopted a two-tiered structure, which was retained in some format until 1999–2000 (except for a one-off recombination into a single division in 1960–61). From its inception, until South Africa's international isolation in 1971, a promotion/relegation structure linked the two tiers, with the winner of the lower division generally replacing the last placed team from the top division — although this was not adhered to every season. The top division generally consisted of four or five teams.

During this time, the stronger provinces began to field a 'B' team in the lower division.Transvaal B was the first to appear (1959–60), followed byNatal B (1965–66). These B-teams were not promoted to the top division when they won the lower competition.

Since the 1965–66 season, the Currie Cup has been contested every year, and was no longer suspended during international tours.

The introduction ofapartheid (separation of racial groups by strict legal enforcement) following the1948 General Election did not have a great impact on the domestic competition. Although previously not bound legally, first-class cricket had long been de facto white-only and international opinion had little practical effect on the domestic game.

Apartheid Isolation: the 1970s and 1980s

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa from 1970–71 to 1990

Domestic cricket in South Africa reached its peak during the years of isolation in the 1970s and 1980s. With standards exceptionally high, spectators came in their thousands to watch Currie Cup cricket due to the inability to support the national team following South Africa's expulsion in 1970 by the ICC.

The two-division format was retained, but promotion/relegation was abandoned, and from 1971 to 1972, the top division remained constant with five teams: Transvaal, Natal, Eastern Province, Western Province and Rhodesia. The second division expanded with more B-teams:Western Province B joining in 1975–76, andEastern Province B andRhodesia B joining in 1977–78.

During the 1970s, the second division became a separate competition from the Currie Cup, known initially as the Castle Bowl (and later under different commercial names, such as UCB Bowl). In 1971–72, North Eastern Transvaal became known asNorthern Transvaal.

Political Change and International Restoration: the 1990s

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa from 1990–91 to 2000

Through the 1980s and 1990s, the weaker provincial teams began to gradually migrate back from the Bowl competition to the Currie Cup. At the same time, those provinces' B-teams began to contest the Bowl, which gradually turned the Bowl entirely into a Currie Cup second XI competition.

By 1996–97, the Bowl had split into a two-tier competition (with only the top division given first-class status), and by 1999–2000, all stand-alone provincial teams had returned to the Currie Cup, with the Bowl being shut down as a first-class competition.

Northern Transvaal was the first team to return to the Currie Cup, in 1979–80; that same year was the final year for Rhodesia, which did not participate following the end of white-minority rule and independence. Orange Free State returned to the Currie Cup in 1985–86. Border returned permanently in 1991–92 (following an unsuccessful two-season return in 1985–86 and 1986–87). Griqualand West returned in 1996–97. In addition, three new provincial teams entered during this time:Boland, who entered the Bowl in 1980–81, and entered the Cup in 1993–94; andEastern Transvaal andWestern Transvaal, who entered the Bowl in 1991–92, and were the last two teams promoted to the top level in 1999–2000.

During the same time, the Bowl competition was joined byNorthern Transvaal B (1982–83),Orange Free State B (1989–90),Border B andBoland B (1993–94) andGriqualand West B (1997–98), as well as aZimbabwean Board XI (1993–94) andNamibia cricket team (1996–97).

During the 1990s, as South Africa underwent political changes, several teams changed their names to adapt: Orange Free State becameFree State (1995–96); Eastern Transvaal becameEasterns (1995–96); Western Transvaal becameNorth West (1996–97); Transvaal becameGauteng (1997–98); Northern Transvaal becameNortherns (1997–98); and Natal becameKwaZulu-Natal (1998–99). The competition itself also changed its name for commercial reasons, becoming the Castle Cup in 1990–91, and then the SuperSport Series in 1996–97.[2]

During this era, the format of the competition changed several times. In 1982–83, a final was played between the top two teams; this was expanded to a four-team knock-out in 1983–84 and contracted to a three-team knock-out in 1985–86. In 1987–88, the league was split into two pools with a single final between the pool winners. In 1990–91, the league returned to a single pool with no final. The final returned in 1998–99. Then, with eleven teams from 1999 to 2000, the league adopted a format similar to the1999 Cricket World Cup, with a super eight or super six round before a single final.

The most notable feature of this era was the end of the dominance of Transvaal, Natal and Western Province. Prior to the 1988–89 season, the three teams had amongst them won 59 of the 60 Currie Cups contested — the only exception being Kimberley's win in the second tournament in 1890–91, won based on the result of a single game against Transvaal. In 1988–89, Eastern Province finally broke that dominance when it beat Transvaal in the final. Orange Free State would win its first championship in the 1990s, and Easterns would also win a championship in the 2000s.

In first-class domestic cricket, Transvaal/Gauteng were the most successful team to have played, winning the competition 25 times between 1889–90 and 2004–05, as well as four shared titles.

Franchise Era: 2004/05 – 2020/21

[edit]
See also:History of cricket in South Africa from 2000–01

In 2004–05, the format of South African domestic cricket was changed entirely. The eleven provincial teams were rationalised into six new teams: Western Province and Boland merged to form theCape Cobras; Griqualand West and Free State formed theEagles (who later became theKnights in 2010–11); Eastern Province and Border became theWarriors; North West and Gauteng became theLions; Northerns and Easterns became theTitans; and KwaZulu-Natal became theDolphins. These changes occurred across limited overs cricket as well as first class cricket, although the round-robin format was kept.

In the franchise era, theTitans (formerly North Eastern Transvaal/Northern Transvaal) were the most successful, winning six titles.

The eleven provincial Currie Cup teams, as well as South Western Districts andKwaZulu-Natal Inland, continued to compete separately in theProvincial Three-Day Challenge, which remained a first-class competition, although on a semi-professional level and no longer the top level of red-ball cricket in South Africa.

Return to Provincial Cricket: 2021–

[edit]

In March 2021,Cricket South Africa announced that South African domestic cricket would undergo a major restructuring, with the six-team franchise system, as well as the semi-professional Provincial Competition, being dissolved. A new format of 15 first-class teams playing in two separate divisions, determined by promotion and relegation (after 2023/24), has been created in its place.

From 2019, provinces and cricket unions submitted bids to CSA to make a case to be considered for the top division for the initial two seasons. The bidding process was overseen by the Independent Evaluation Committee (IEE) who took into account a range of criteria, such as cricketing and financial operations, women's and age-group development, transformation policies and stadium infrastructure.[3]

Eight teams make up the first division, with 16 contracted players each, and seven teams the second division, with 11 contracted players each, taking the total to 205.

CSA believes that the new format will provide more opportunities for players to compete at a high standard just below international cricket, in turn providing a wider talent pool for the national selectors. It is hoped that wider selection of teams at the highest domestic level will help increase playing opportunities of all races, particularly those currently underrepresented.[4]

Although the new format being seen as a return to the more traditional structure, some of South Africa's nine provinces have more than one team. Only Free State, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Northern Cape and North West – the least populated provinces – will have one team. Some new sides have opted to keep the name of their previous franchises to which they belonged, whilst others have decided on new branding.[5]

Teams

[edit]

Division allocation as of the 2023–24 season.

Division One
TeamLocationCapacityProvince
BolandBoland Park,Paarl10,000Western Cape
DolphinsKingsmead,Durban25,000KwaZulu-Natal
LionsWanderers Stadium,Johannesburg34,000Gauteng
KwaZulu-Natal InlandCity Oval,Pietermaritzburg12,000KwaZulu-Natal
North West DragonsJB Marks Oval,Potchefstroom18,000North West
TitansCenturion Park,Centurion, South Africa22,000Gauteng
WarriorsSt George's Park,Gqeberha19,000Eastern Cape
Western ProvinceNewlands,Cape Town25,000Western Cape
Division Two
TeamLocationCapacityProvince
BorderBuffalo Park,East London20,000Eastern Cape
EasternsWillowmoore Park,Benoni20,000Gauteng
KnightsMangaung Oval,Bloemfontein20,000Free State
LimpopoPolokwane Cricket Club,PolokwaneLimpopo
MpumalangaUplands College,White RiverMpumalanga
Northern CapeDe Beers Diamond Oval,Kimberley11,000Northern Cape
South Western DistrictsRecreation Ground,OudtshoornWestern Cape

Competition format

[edit]

Points System

Teams are awarded points based on the result of the match as follows:

  • Outright victory: 16 points
  • Tie: 8 points
  • Draw: 6 points
  • Any other result: 0 points

In addition, teams earn bonus points based on their performance in the first 100 overs of each team's first innings:

  • Batting bonus points: 1 point for reaching 150 runs, then 0.02 points for each run thereafter
  • Bowling bonus points: 1 point for taking three wickets, then 1 point for each two wickets thereafter

A points system of this basic structure was first introduced in 1971–72, and has been used in almost all seasons since; the current points system was introduced in the2017–18 season.[6]

Former Teams

[edit]

Franchise Era: 2004/05 – 2020/21

[edit]
FranchiseProvince
Cape CobrasWestern Cape
DolphinsKwaZulu-Natal
Knights*Free State &Northern Cape
LionsCentralGauteng &North West
TitansNorthern and Eastern Gauteng
WarriorsEastern Cape
  • The Knights were known as the Eagles prior to the 2010–11 season.

Provincial Era: 1889/90 – 2004/05

[edit]
TeamFirst seasonLast seasonFormer namesB teams
Boland1980–812003–04
Border1903–042003–04
Eastern Province1893–942003–04Eastern Province B (1977–78 to 2004–05)
Easterns1991–922003–04Eastern Transvaal (1991–92 to 1994–95)
Free State1897–982003–04Orange Free State (1897–98 to 1994–95)
Gauteng1889–902003–04Transvaal (1889–90 to 1996–97)Transvaal B (1959–60 to 1997–98)
Griqualand West1889–902003–04Kimberley (1889–90 to 1891–92)
KwaZulu-Natal1893–942003–04Natal (1893–94 to 1997–98)Natal B (1965–66 to 1998–99)
Northerns1937–382003–04Northern Transvaal (1971–72 to 1996–97)
North Eastern Transvaal (1937–38 to 1970–71)
North West1991–922003–04Western Transvaal (1991–92 to 1995–96)
Rhodesia1904–05[a]1979–80Rhodesia B (1977–78 to 1979–80)
South Western Districts1904–051904–05
Western Province1892–932003–04Western Province B (1975–76 to 2004–05)
  1. ^Rhodesia competed in 1904–05, 1929–30 and 1931–32 before playing each season from 1946–47.

Seasons

[edit]
SeasonChampionsRunners-upBowl winnersBowl secondNotes
1889–90Transvaal (1)Kimberley (1)Inaugural season
Cup decided by single match
1890–91Kimberley (1)Transvaal (1)
1891–92Not contested
1892–93Western Province (1)Transvaal (2)First appearance of Western Province
Kimberley now known as Griqualand West
1893–94Western Province (2)Natal (1)First appearances of Natal and Eastern Province
1894–95Transvaal (2)Western Province (2)
1895–96Not contested
1896–97Western Province (3)Transvaal (3)
1897–98Western Province (4)Transvaal (4)First appearance of Orange Free State
Competition not contested from 1898–99 to 1901–02 due to Boer War
1902–03Transvaal (3)Western Province (2)
1903–04Transvaal (4)Western Province (3)First appearance of Border
1904–05Transvaal (5)Western Province (4)One-off appearances of Rhodesia and South Western Districts
1905–06Not contested
1906–07Transvaal (6)Natal (2)
1907–08Not contested
1908–09Western Province (5)Transvaal (2)
1909–10Not contested
1910–11Natal (1)Transvaal (6)
1911–12Not contested
1912–13Natal (2)Western Province (5)
1913–14Not contested
Competition not contested from 1914–15 to 1919–20 due to World War I
1920–21Western Province (6)Transvaal (7)
1921–22Western Province
Natal
Transvaal
1922–23Not contested
1923–24Transvaal (7)Natal (3)
1924–25Not contested
1925–26Transvaal (8)Griqualand West (2)
1926–27Transvaal (9)Orange Free State (1)
1927–28Not contested
1928–29Not contested
1929–30Transvaal (10)Natal (4)One-off appearance of Rhodesia
1930–31Not contested
1931–32Western Province (7)Transvaal
Rhodesia
One-off appearance of Rhodesia
1932–33Not contested
1933–34Natal (3)Western Province (6)
1934–35Transvaal (11)Natal (5)
1935–36Not contested
1936–37Natal (4)Transvaal (8)
1937–38Transvaal
Natal
First appearance of North Eastern Transvaal
Competition not contested 1938–39 and from 1939–40 to 1945–46 due to World War II
1946–47Natal (5)Western Province (7)First regular appearance of Rhodesia
1947–48Natal (6)Transvaal (9)
1948–49Not contested
1949–50Not contested
1950–51Transvaal (12)Natal (6)
1951–52Natal (7)Western Province (8)Orange Free State (1)Rhodesia (1)League adapts two-division format
Orange Free State promoted
Transvaal relegated
1952–53Western Province (8)Natal
Orange Free State
Transvaal (1)Rhodesia (2)Transvaal promoted
Eastern Province relegated
1953–54Not contested
1954–55Natal (8)Transvaal (10)Eastern Province (1)Rhodesia (3)Eastern Province promoted
Orange Free State relegated
1955–56Western Province (9)Natal (7)Rhodesia (1)Border (1)Rhodesia promoted
Eastern Province relegated
1956–57Not contested
1957–58Not contested
1958–59Transvaal (13)Natal
Rhodesia
Western Province
Border (1)Eastern Province (1)Border promoted
1959–60Natal (9)Transvaal (11)Eastern Province
Transvaal B
First appearance of Transvaal B
Eastern Province promoted for 1962–63
Border and Rhodesia relegated for 1962–63
1960–61Natal (10)Eastern Province (1)One-off single-division format
1961–62Not contested
1962–63Natal (11)Western Province (9)Transvaal B (1)Rhodesia (4)
1963–64Natal (12)Transvaal (12)Rhodesia (2)North Eastern Transvaal (1)Rhodesia promoted
1964–65Not contested
1965–66Transvaal
Natal
North Eastern Transvaal (1)Border (2)First appearance of Natal B
Western Province relegated
1966–67Natal (13)Eastern Province
Transvaal
North Eastern Transvaal (2)Transvaal B
Western Province
North Eastern Transvaal promoted
Rhodesia relegated
1967–68Natal (14)Transvaal (13)Rhodesia (3)Natal B (1)Rhodesia promoted
North Eastern Transvaal relegated
1968–69Transvaal (14)Natal
Eastern Province
Western Province (1)Border (3)Western Province promoted
1969–70Transvaal
Western Province
Transvaal B (2)Natal B (2)Rhodesia relegated
1970–71Transvaal (15)Western Province (10)Rhodesia (4)Transvaal B (1)Rhodesia promoted
1971–72Transvaal (16)Rhodesia (1)Northern Transvaal (3)Transvaal B (2)North Eastern Transvaal now known as Northern Transvaal
1972–73Transvaal (17)Eastern Province (2)Transvaal B (3)Orange Free State (1)
1973–74Natal (15)Western Province (11)Natal B (1)Orange Free State (2)
1974–75Western Province (10)Natal (8)Transvaal B (4)Griqualand West (1)
1975–76Natal (16)Eastern Province (3)Orange Free State (2)Transvaal B
Western Province B
First appearance of Western Province B
1976–77Natal (17)Transvaal (14)Transvaal B (5)Western Province B (2)
1977–78Western Province (11)Transvaal (15)Northern Transvaal (4)Border (4)First appearances of Rhodesia B and Eastern Province B
1978–79Transvaal (18)Western Province (12)Northern Transvaal (5)Border (5)Once-off season with no B-teams competing in the Bowl
Northern Transvaal promoted
1979–80Transvaal (19)Western Province (13)Natal B (2)Western Province B (2)Final appearance of Rhodesia and Rhodesia B
1980–81Natal (18)Transvaal (16)Western Province B (1)Transvaal B (3)First appearance of Boland (Bowl)
1981–82Western Province (12)Transvaal (17)Boland (1)Western Province B (3)First appearance of Northern Transvaal B (Bowl)
1982–83Transvaal (20)Western Province (14)Western Province B (2)Transvaal B (4)
1983–84Transvaal (21)Western Province (15)Western Province B (3)Border (6)
1984–85Transvaal (22)Northern Transvaal (1)Transvaal B (6)Orange Free State (3)Border and Orange Free State promoted
1985–86Western Province (13)Transvaal (18)Boland (2)Western Province B (4)
1986–87Transvaal (23)Western Province (16)Transvaal B (7)Natal B (3)Border relegated
1987–88Transvaal (24)Orange Free State (2)Boland (3)Transvaal B (5)
1988–89Eastern Province (1)Transvaal (19)Boland (4)Transvaal B (6)
1989–90Eastern Province
Western Province
Border
Western Province B
First appearance of Orange Free State B (Bowl)
1990–91Western Province (14)Transvaal (20)Border
Western Province B
Border promoted
1991–92Eastern Province (2)Orange Free State (3)Eastern Transvaal (1)Boland (1)First appearances of Eastern Transvaal and Western Transvaal
No B-teams in Bowl competition
1992–93Orange Free State (1)Eastern Province
Natal
Transvaal
Boland (5)Griqualand West (2)No B-teams in Bowl competition
1993–94Orange Free State (2)Western Province (17)Transvaal B (8)Western Province B (5)B-teams again compete in Bowl competition
First appearances of Border B, Boland B and Zimbabwe Board XI
1994–95Natal (19)Northern Transvaal (2)Natal B (3)Eastern Transvaal (1)
1995–96Western Province (15)Transvaal (21)Natal B
Griqualand West
Orange Free State now known as Free State
Eastern Transvaal now known as Easterns
Griqualand West promoted
1996–97Natal (20)Western Province (18)Eastern Province B (1)Easterns (2)Western Transvaal now known as North West
1997–98Orange Free State (3)Eastern Province (4)North West (1)Northerns B (1)Northern Transvaal now known as Northerns
Transvaal now known as Gauteng
1998–99Western Province (16)Border (1)North West (2)Western Province B (6)First appearance of Griqualand West B
Natal now known as KwaZulu-Natal
Easterns and North West promoted
Final first class season of Bowl
1999–2000Gauteng (25)Border (2)
2000–01Western Province (17)Border (3)
2001–02KwaZulu-Natal (21)Northerns (3)
2002–03Easterns (1)Western Province (19)
2003–04Western Province (18)KwaZulu-Natal (9)
2004–05Eagles
Dolphins
Eleven provincial teams reduced to six combined teams
2005–06Titans
Dolphins
2006–07Titans (1)Lions (1)
2007–08Eagles (1)Warriors (1)
2008–09Titans (2)Eagles (1)
2009–10Cape Cobras (1)Titans (1)
2010–11Cape Cobras (2)Titans (2)Eagles now known as Knights
2011–12Titans (3)Cape Cobras (1)
2012–13Cape Cobras (3)Lions (2)
2013–14Cape Cobras (4)Knights (2)
2014–15Lions (1)Titans (3)
2015–16Titans (4)Lions (2)
2016–17Knights (2)Titans (4)
2017–18Titans (5)Warriors (2)
2018–19Lions (2)Cape Cobras (2)
2019–20Lions (3)Titans (5)Series ended after 8 rounds due to COVID-19
2020–21Dolphins (1)Titans (6)
2021–22Titans (6)Warriors (3)
2022–23Dolphins (2)Warriors (4)
2023–24Lions (4)

*Numbers in parentheses count outright championships only.

Championships

[edit]

Combined Team Era

[edit]
ClubSeasonsOutright winsShared winsTotal winsSeconds
Titans175166
Cape Cobras17442
Eagles/Knights172132
Lions17333
Dolphins172230
Warriors17002

Currie Cup – Provincial Era

[edit]
ClubSeasonsOutright winsShared winsTotal winsSeconds
Transvaal/Gauteng752542921
Natal/KwaZulu-Natal71213249
Western Province711832119
Orange Free State40333
Eastern Province662134
Kimberley/Griqualand West34112
Eastern Transvaal/Easterns5110
North Eastern Transvaal/
Northern Transvaal/Northerns
31003
Border35003
Rhodesia/Zimbabwe-Rhodesia22001
Western Transvaal/North West5000
Boland11000

Note: Transvaal B and South West Districts are not shown in the table. Each contested only one season in the top division, and neither finished in the top two.

Currie Cup Second Division and Bowl Competition

[edit]
ClubSeasonsOutright winsShared winsTotal winsSeconds
Transvaal B/Gauteng B328196
Boland13551
North Eastern Transvaal/
Northern Transvaal/Northerns
21551
Rhodesia/Zimbabwe-Rhodesia8444
Western Province B213256
Natal B/KwaZulu-Natal B313143
Orange Free State/Free State26223
Western Transvaal/North West8220
Border311236
Eastern Transvaal/Easterns8112
Eastern Province31121
Transvaal/Gauteng1110
Western Province3110
Eastern Province B19110
Kimberley/Griqualand West390112
Northern Transvaal B/Northerns B15001

Note: Includes only Currie Cup lower division and Bowl seasons with full first-class status.

Note: To minimise the size of the table, teams which contested five or fewer seasons without winning or placing second are not shown. These teams were: Orange Free State B/Free State B, Rhodesia B/Zimbabwe-Rhodesia B, Griqualand West B, Zimbabwe Board XI, Border B and Boland B.

Notable performances

[edit]

Two double centuries in a season

Five centuries in successive innings

Five centuries in six innings

Five wickets in six balls

Four wickets with consecutive balls

Ten wickets in an innings

Fifteen wickets in a match

A 100 runs and 10 wickets in a match

Ten wicketkeeping dismissals in a match

Individual records

[edit]

7000 runs in a career

RunsPlayerMatchesCenturies
12409Graeme Pollock15735
11835Peter Kirsten16229
11307Jimmy Cook16332
8487Kepler Wessels11622
7981Henry Fotheringham13219
7551Barry Richards7926

800 runs in a season

SeasonRunsPlayerMatches
1947–48864Dudley Nourse8
1971–721089Barry Richards8
1972–731064Barry Richards8
1973–74898Barry Richards8
1975–76868Barry Richards8
1975–76810Graeme Pollock8
1976–77967Peter Kirsten8
1978–79961Graeme Pollock8
1987–88878Allan Lamb6
1988–89846Ken McEwan8
1990–91994Mandy Yachad10
1996–97815Louis Koen8
1997–98866H. D. Ackerman8
1997–98847Kepler Wessels8
1998–99938Boeta Dippenaar8
1998–99810Ken Rutherford8
1999-00818Ken Rutherford10
2001–02934Martin van Jaarsveld8
2003–041015Zander de Bruyn9
2004–05827Arno Jacobs10
2005–06893Hashim Amla11
2006–07828Vaughn van Jaarsveld10
2006–07817Henry Davids10
2008–09835Imraan Khan10
2008–09809Ashwell Prince9
2009–101189Rilee Rossouw10[7]
2009–101060Dean Elgar10[7]
2009–101013Stephen Cook10[7]
2010–11954Jacques Rudolph10[8]
2011–12816Alviro Petersen10[9]
2013–14933Stiaan van Zyl10[10]
2013–14927Justin Ontong10[10]
2013–14882David White10[10]
2014–15889Stephen Cook10[11]
2014–15852Colin Ingram10[11]
2015–161,126Heino Kuhn10[12]
2016–17883Colin Ackermann10[13]
2017–18959Rassie van der Dussen10[14]
2017–18898Vaughn van Jaarsveld10[15]
2017–18892Pieter Malan10[16]
2017–18828Zubayr Hamza9[17]
2018-19923Keegan Petersen9[18]
2018-19921Eddie Moore10[19]
2018-19821Pieter Malan10[20]
2019-20843Raynard van Tonder8[21]
2020-21945Aiden Markram7[22]

Highest individual scores

RunsPlayerSeason
390Stephen Cook2009–10
337Daryll Cullinan1993–94
319Rilee Rossouw2009–10[7]
304*Tony de Zorzi2022–23
294Allan Lamb1987–88
292Heinrich Klaasen2022-23
279Raymond Gripper1967–68
277*Eric Rowan1950–51
271*Jack Cheetham1950–51
271Peter Kirsten1993–94
266*Zander de Bruyn2003–04
265*Jack Siedle1929–30
264Pieter Malan2020-21
261*Stephen Steyn1929–31
260Dudley Nourse1936–37

300 wickets in a career

WicketsPlayerMatches
572Vintcent van der Bijl109
365Garth Le Roux83
347Kenny Watson108
323Rupert Hanley82
319Denys Hobson90
317John Waddington59

50 wickets in a season

WicketsPlayerSeasonMatches
52Alfred Hall1926–276
53John Waddington1952–536
55Jackie Botten1958–596
50Mike Procter1972–738
59Mike Procter1976–778
53Garth Le Roux1977–788
54Vintcent van der Bijl1980–818
52Alan Kourie1980–818
57Vintcent van der Bijl1981–828
50Pienaar Anker1981–827
58Sylvester Clarke1984–8510
51Eric Simons1984–8510
50Corrie van Zyl1984–856
50Alan Kourie1984–8510
54Steven Jack1990–9110
56Vasbert Drakes1998–998
60Vasbert Drakes1999-0010
52Steve Elworthy2001–028
54Ryan McLaren2006–0710
55Dillon du Preez2007–0810
54Monde Zondeki2007–0810
54Monde Zondeki2007–0810
52Duanne Olivier2016–178[23]
54Dane Piedt2018-1910[24]

All-round play 3000 runs and 300 wickets

PlayerMatchesRunsWicketsCatches
Eddie Barlow1227881317152
Clive Rice1647714396112
Mike Procter110540547198
Alan Kourie1073962378124
Omar Henry1033890375109

All-round double, 400 runs and 40 wickets in a season

SeasonPlayerRunsWickets
1971–72Mike Procter49544
1972–73Mike Procter47450
1972–73Eddie Barlow48840
1979–80Mike Procter42045
1979–80Clive Rice40941

Wicketkeeping

PlayerMatchesDismissalsRuns10Dis match40Dis season
Ray Jennings137538362232
Richie Ryall111388130112
Dave Richardson11934442762
Noel Day10133744821

Sponsorship

[edit]

Between 1889–90 and 1990–91, the tournament was named the "Currie Cup" afterSir Donald Currie, the founder of theCastle Shipping Line, who had sponsored the first English tour to South Africa and donated a trophy for the domestic champions.

The competition took its first title sponsor for the 1990–91 season, becoming the "Castle Cup", and from1996–97 the broadcaster SuperSport assumed naming rights as the "SuperSport Series".

For the2012–13 season, the competition was renamed once again, becoming the "Sunfoil Series" after the Willowton Group formed a partnership with Cricket South Africa. This agreement lasted until2018–19 after Willowton Group withdrew sponsorship.[25]

The competition has been rebranded as the CSA 4-Day Domestic Series due to the lack of a title sponsor.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Cricket South Africa reveals Division One squads for 2021/22".boxscorenews.com. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  2. ^Kazi, Abid Ali (24 December 2015)."History of First Class Cricket |".
  3. ^"Revamped two-tier South African domestic structure ready to take off".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  4. ^"South Africa's new domestic structure: 2 tiers, 15 first-class teams, 205 contracted players".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved24 April 2021.
  5. ^"Upcoming domestic season a moment of truth for cricket in South Africa".Cricbuzz. Retrieved13 November 2021.
  6. ^"CSA announces new points system for first-class cricket".cricket.co.za. Archived fromthe original on 16 March 2018. Retrieved15 March 2018.
  7. ^abcd"SuperSport Series, 2009–10 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  8. ^"SuperSport Series, 2010–11 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  9. ^"SuperSport Series, 2011–12 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  10. ^abc"Sunfoil Series, 2013–14 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  11. ^ab"Sunfoil Series, 2014–15 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  12. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2015–16 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  13. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2016–17 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  14. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2017–18 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  15. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2017–18 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  16. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2017–18 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  17. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2017–18 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  18. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2018-19 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  19. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2018-19 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  20. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2018-19 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  21. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2019-20 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  22. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2020-21 Records: Most runs". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  23. ^"Sunfoil Series, 2016–17 Records: Most wickets". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 October 2017.
  24. ^"4-Day Franchise Series, 2018–19 Records: Most wickets". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved25 November 2022.
  25. ^"From the Currie Cup to the 4-Day Domestic Series – a brief history of SA's premier first-class competition".SA Cricket | OPINION | PLAYERS | TEAMS | FEATURES | SAFFAS ABROAD. 16 April 2020. Retrieved24 April 2021.

External links

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