Event: | ICC Champions Trophy 2009/10 |
With many former players raising questions over the relevance of Champions Trophy's in an already crammed international calendar, the ICC has assured that it would be altogether a different experience when the biennial event gets underway here next month.
 
Officially launching the tournament, ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said the event, offering a whopping $4 million prize money, would eclipse all its previous editions. 
"This ICC Champions Trophy is quite different and more exciting compared to all the ones that went before," said Lorgat. 
"Effectively, it is in one location with two world-class venues at The Wanderers and Centurion. It is a short, sharp event with just the top eight-ranked ODI teams taking part in international competition," he said. 
"The event is all about prestige. It features the best players competing for a major ICC title with more prize money on offer than ever before with a total of $4 million at stake," added the ICC official. 
Incidentally, a number of former cricketers believe the event should be scratched from the ICC calendar. Lorgat, however, insisted that the event would showcase the very best One-day cricket has to offer. 
The prize money on offer this year is four-fold since 2006. The winner will receive $2 million, the runner-up $1 million with the two beaten semi-finalists taking home $400,000 each. Those teams that finish third in their groups will each win $100,000. 
There is also an extra incentive for individuals to excel. Each man of the match will win an exclusive IWC watch worth $8,500 and each member of the winning team will win a unique ICC Champions Trophy winners' jacket which only a champion will be entitled to wear. 
The teams - Australia, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, host South Africa, Sri Lanka and the West Indies - have been divided into two pools of four, with the top two from each pool progressing to the semi-finals stage.