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The Men's Super Smash, currently named the Dream11 Super Smash for sponsorship purposes until 2026, [2] is a men's domestic Twenty20 cricket competition in New Zealand. [3] Since the 2018–19 season, the competition runs alongside the Women's Super Smash.
The rise of the financial power of the BCCI had an immense effect on NZ cricket and its players. The BCCI managed to convince other boards not to pick players who had joined the rival Twenty-20 Indian Cricket League. NZ Cricket lost the services of Shane Bond, Lou Vincent, Andre Adams, Hamish Marshall and Daryl Tuffey.
New Zealand Cricket, formerly the New Zealand Cricket Council, is the governing body for professional cricket in New Zealand. Cricket is the most popular and highest profile summer sport in New Zealand. New Zealand Cricket operates the New Zealand cricket team, organising Test tours and One-Day Internationals with other nations.
National Cricket League Twenty20 (2010, 2024–Present) Bangladesh Premier League* (2012–present) Victory Day T20 Cup (2013) Dhaka Premier Division Twenty20 Cricket League (2019–2021) Bangabandhu T20 Cup (2020) Hong Kong India Hong Kong T20 Blitz (2016–2019) Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy (2007-present) Indian Premier League* (2008–present)
The following season kept the same format, but was known as the New Zealand Cricket Women's Twenty20, with the Central Hinds winning their first title. [3] For the following two seasons, the tournament was known as the Action Cricket Twenty20, before becoming simply the New Zealand Women's Twenty20 Competition until the 2017–18 season.
Sri Lanka's Kusal Mendis plays a shot during the second ODI cricket match between Sri Lanka and New Zealand in Pallekele, Sri Lanka, Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024.
New Zealand Cricket released the list of their 2024–2025 national contracts on 9 July 2024. [38] 21 players received contracts. This is a list of every active player who is contracted to New Zealand Cricket, has played for New Zealand since January 2024 or was named in the recent Test, ODI or T20I squads. Uncapped players are listed in italics.
The Hallyburton Johnstone Shield is the premier domestic women's one-day cricket competition in New Zealand. [1] The tournament began in 1935–36, as a first-class competition, but is now played as a 50-over competition, with six provincial teams taking part: Auckland, Canterbury, Central Districts, Northern Districts, Otago and Wellington.