Tuesday, 26 January 2016

IPL 2010

The 2010 Indian Premier League season, abbreviated as IPL 3 or the 2010 IPL, was the third season of the Indian Premier League, established by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 2007. The tournament was hosted by India and had an estimated television audience of more than 200 million people in the country.[2] It was played between 12 March and 25 April 2010. It was also the first ever cricket tournament that was broadcast live on YouTube.[3] The final four matches of the tournament were screened in 3D across movie halls in India.[4]
The tournament was won by the Chennai Super Kings, who defeated the Mumbai Indians in the final played at Mumbai. The purple cap went to Pragyan Ojha of Deccan Chargers, while the orange cap and the player of the tournament award were awarded to Sachin Tendulkar of the Mumbai Indians. Saurabh Tiwary was declared the U-23 success of the tournament, while the Chennai Super Kings won the Fair Play Award.




Venues

Five new venues were introduced for the third edition of IPL.[5] These included Nagpur, Cuttack, Mumbai, Ahmedabad and Dharamsala. Nagpur, Cuttack, and Mumbai amongst them hosted the home games for Deccan Chargers, and Ahmedabad and Dharamsala shared some of the home matches of Rajasthan Royals and Kings XI Punjab respectively. Additionally, Hyderabad, which hosted all Deccan's home games in 2008, did not host any games this season. This was attributed to the possibility of unrest due to a Telangana state succession.
The 60-game tournament also featured a third-place playoff between the losing semi-finalists as a qualifier for the Champions League and also saw the induction of ICL players.[5] Both semi-finals were scheduled to be hosted in Bangalore but instead were played in Mumbai. The final and the third place playoff games were played at Mumbai and the season ended five days before the World Twenty20 in West Indies.[5]
Chennai Mumbai Mohali Kolkata
Chennai Super Kings Mumbai Indians Kings XI Punjab Kolkata Knight Riders
M. A. Chidambaram Stadium Brabourne Stadium PCA Stadium Eden Gardens
Capacity: 50,000 Capacity: 20,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 90,000
MAC Chepauk stadium.jpg Brabourne.jpg LightsMohali.png Eden Gardens.jpg
Ahmedabad Bangalore
Rajasthan Royals Royal Challengers Bangalore
Sardar Patel Stadium M. Chinnaswamy Stadium
Capacity: 54,000 Capacity: 45,000
Sardar Patel Stadium.JPG MChinnaswamy-Stadium.jpg
Cuttack Nagpur
Deccan Chargers Deccan Chargers
Barabati Stadium Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground
Capacity: 45,000 Capacity: 40,000

VCA Jamtha 1.JPG
Dharamsala Jaipur Mumbai Delhi
Kings XI Punjab Rajasthan Royals Mumbai Indians Delhi Daredevils
HPCA Cricket Stadium Sawai Mansingh Stadium DY Patil Stadium Feroz Shah Kotla
Capacity: 21,000 Capacity: 30,000 Capacity: 55,000 Capacity: 48,000



Feroz Shah Kotla - WI vs RSA03.jpg

Security concerns

In one of the last games of the tournament, two bombs went off in Bangalore, while another was defused. The game on the day did continue, however, after an hour's delay. As a consequence both semi-finals were moved out of the city.[6] A third device was defused on 18 April 2010. All three devices were hidden in the stadium's perimeter wall and the two explosions were believed to have injured 15 people. Initial investigations suggested that the explosives used in the devices were locally made and were of low intensity.[7] Former cricketers Sir Ian Botham, Brian Lara, Steve Waugh and Shaun Pollock urged the players not to give in to terrorism by opting out of the league.[8]






Player auction

11 players were sold at the player auction held on 19 January 2010 in Mumbai. This was from a list of 97 registered players, which was then shortlisted to 66.[9] West Indian all rounder Kieron Pollard and New Zealand fast bowler Shane Bond were the highest bid players in the auction who were bought for $750,000 but not before their prices went in the silent tie breaker round. Kieron Pollard was bought by Mumbai Indians and Shane Bond by Kolkata Knight Riders.[10]


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