Following drops in attendances at county cricket matches, the England and Wales Cricket Board first suggested playing a new reduced form of cricket in 1998. The first-class cricket counties and the Marylebone Cricket Club did not approve the idea, which was then shelved. However, attendances continued to drop, and in 2001 the ECB brought the idea up once more, and invested £200,000 in market research. This research suggested that two-thirds of the population claimed to either hate cricket, or have no interest in it, and that cricket grounds had the intimidating feel of private members' clubs. Half of the study group indicated that they would be able to tolerate a shorter match played on weekday evenings. This research was taken back to the first-class counties and the MCC, and the formation of a new, short form of cricket was approved 11–7, with the MCC abstaining. The format, in which team batted and bowled for 20 overs with a 15-minute break between innings, was decided upon, and the ECB then began marketing the concept with special offers and newspaper adverts. In addition to the shorter format, the competition also included off-field entertainment, including live bands, replay screens, barbecue zones and karaoke machines. Each of these were introduced to attract a wider range of spectators, particularly families and younger people.
Format
The 18 first-class counties were split into three regional groups of six teams, which were retained from the Benson & Hedges Cup. The three group-winners and the best runner-up progressed straight to Finals Day on Saturday 19 July. Each team then played each other team in the group once, the 45 group matches took place over 12 days. On Finals Day, both semi-finals and the final were all played on the same day, with the first match starting at 10:45, and the final not due to finish until 22:00 that evening. In a break from tradition, the finals were not held at Lord's – who had their application for a concert licence turned down by Westminster City Council. Instead, the event was hosted by Nottinghamshire, at their Trent Bridge ground.
Each innings should last no longer than 75 minutes.
Teams will incur a six-run penalty if they fail to bowl the full 20 overs within the 75 minutes.
New batsmen must be in position within 90 seconds of a wicket falling.
Only two fielders are allowed outside an inner circle during the first six overs of a team's innings.
Bowlers are permitted a maximum of a fifth of the total overs in a completed innings.
Umpires can impose a five-run penalty for time-wasting by batsmen. They are expected to be ready as soon as the bowler is ready.
No-balls will be penalised by a free-hit next ball with standard rules on no-ball dismissals applying.
Each side must face a minimum of five overs for a match to be valid. The Duckworth-Lewis method will be used to calculate run targets in rain-affected games.
Media coverage
broadcast eight group matches and the entirety of Finals Day live. Channel 4 broadcast one live group match, and showed highlights of the final. They also covered the event in their weekly sports programme. The BBC provided radio coverage of group matches via regional and local stations, and the Twenty20 final was given live coverage on BBC Radio 5 Live, while both semi-finals were covered on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra.
Fixtures and results
Group stage
Midlands/Wales/West Division
North Division
South Division
The inaugural Twenty20 match was contested between Hampshire Hawks and Sussex Sharks at The Rose Bowl on 13 June 2003. The match attracted a sell-out crowd and was screened live on Sky Sports. Hampshire "came out of the blocks firing", according to Cricinfo's Vic Isaacs, scoring 66 runs in the opening 7 overs. A steady fall of wickets thereafter resulted in the Hawks scoring 153 all out. Hampshire's Wasim Akram and Alan Mullally then bowled economically, and despite a half-century by Sussex's Tim Ambrose, Hampshire won by 5 runs. In the division's other opening-night match, Surrey Lions’James Ormond took the first five-wicket haul in the Twenty20 Cup to help restrict Middlesex Crusaders to 155, which Surrey then passed with four balls remaining to secure the win.
Team
Pld
W
L
T
N/R
Pts
Net R/R
Surrey Lions
5
5
0
0
0
10
+1.068
Sussex Sharks
5
3
2
0
0
6
+0.617
Kent Spitfires
5
2
3
0
0
4
+0.250
Middlesex Crusaders
5
2
3
0
0
4
+0.196
Essex Eagles
5
2
3
0
0
4
–0.811
Hampshire Hawks
5
1
4
0
0
2
–1.321
Finals Day
Semi-Finals
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Final
This was the first ever English domestic final to be played with coloured clothing and white balls.
This was also the first ever English domestic final to be played under floodlights.