Mumbai Indians
{{Infobox cricket team
| name = Mumbai Indians
| alt_name = मुंबई इंडियन्स
| image = Mumbai Indians Logo.svg
| alt =
| captain = Rohit Sharma
| coach = [[Ricky Ponting
| city = Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
| colors =
| owner = Reliance Industrial Investments and Holdings Ltd (RIIHL)
(Stake: 98.3%)
Teesta Retail Pvt Ltd
(Stake: 1.7%)[1]
| founded = 2008
| dissolved =
| ground = Wankhede Stadium
(Capacity: 35,341)
| ground2 = Brabourne Stadium
(Capacity: 30,000)
| IPLwins = 1 (2013)
| clt20wins = 2 (2011, 2013)
| website = www
The Mumbai Indians (Template:Lang-mr) are a franchise cricket team representing the city of Mumbai in the Indian Premier League (IPL). The team is one of the eight founding members of the IPL in 2008. They are one of the main teams in the city, together with clubs like the Mumbai cricket team and football club Mumbai FC. The franchise is owned by India's biggest conglomerate, Reliance Industries, through its 100% subsidiary IndiaWin Sports. The primary home ground of the Mumbai Indians is the Wankhede Stadium.
The Mumbai Indians are currently captained by Rohit Sharma, and coached by Ricky Ponting. They won the 2011 Champions League Twenty20 after beating IPL rivals Royal Challengers Bangalore by 31 runs in the final. The team won its first IPL title, in 2013, by defeating Chennai Super Kings by 23 runs in the finals played at Kolkata, and then bowled out the Rajasthan Royals by 33 runs to win its second Champions League Twenty20 title.[2][3] Rohit Sharma is the leading run scorer of the team while Lasith Malinga is the leading wicket-taker.
Franchise history
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) announced in September 2007 the establishment of the Indian Premier League, a Twenty20 competition to be started in 2008.[4] In January 2008, the BCCI unveiled the owners of eight city-based franchises. The Mumbai franchise was sold to the Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) for $111.9 million, making it the most expensive team in the league.[5] RIL, owned by Mukesh Ambani acquired the rights to the franchise for a period of 10 years. The franchise was eventually named "Mumbai Indians".
Team history
2008-2009: Struggle in the initial seasons
The Indian Premier League named four players as icon players for their respective city franchises which made the players unavailable to play for any team other than their city team. Sachin Tendulkar was named Mumbai's icon player. The icon player was also entitled to earn 15% more than the next-best paid player in their team. At first player auctions for the inaugural IPL season conducted in February 2008, the Mumbai franchise bought several star international cricketers such as Sanath Jayasuriya, Harbhajan Singh, Shaun Pollock, Lasith Malinga and Robin Uthappa.[6] The franchise named Sachin Tendulkar as the captain of the team and appointed former India cricketer Lalchand Rajput as the head coach. However, Tendulkar was injured before the start of the 2008 season due to which Harbhajan Singh took over as the captain in the initial stage of the season. The team got off to a bad start in the season losing their first four games by some comprehensive margins. Their first match was a five-wicket defeat to the Royal Challengers Bangalore on 20 April 2008 at the Wankhede. Their stand-in captain, Harbhajan, was suspended from the tournament for reportedly slapping Sreesanth during Mumbai's league match against Kings XI Punjab. After Harbhajan's suspension, Shaun Pollock assumed the leadership duties until Tendulkar's return on 24 May. Under Pollock's captaincy, Mumbai won six out of their next six games which left them needing to win two more out of the remaining four matches to qualify for the semifinals. Mumbai suffered three last-over defeats in the next three games, including two off the last ball, before winning their last league match. They finished fifth in the points table with 7 wins and 7 losses, missing out on a semifinal spot by just one point.[7]
The 2009 season was played in South Africa as it coincided with multi-phase 2009 Indian general elections due to which the Government of India refused to commit the Indian paramilitary forces to provide security for the IPL. Before the start of the season, Mumbai Indians traded Robin Uthappa for Zaheer Khan with Royal Challengers Bangalore, and Ashish Nehra for Shikhar Dhawan with the Delhi Daredevils. Shaun Pollock retired after the first season and became the head coach of the team. Lasith Malinga, who missed the previous season due to an injury, returned to the team. At the player auction, Mumbai bought South African batsman JP Duminy to strengthen their batting department. After winning their opening match against the Chennai Super Kings, Mumbai struggled to put up consistent performances during the season. They relied heavily on Duminy and Tendulkar's batting, and Malinga's bowling along with minimal contributions from other players. With only five wins from 14 matches, Mumbai finished on seventh place in the league table.
2010-2012: Rise as a formidable team
At the 2010 players auction, Mumbai Indians bought Trinidadian all-rounder Kieron Pollard for $750,000 following a secret tie-breaker. After the auction, they signed up ten uncapped Indian players out whom seven were former ICL players. Former India cricketer Robin Singh was named as the head coach of the team as Pollock took up the role of bowling coach. Mumbai had to shift their home venue to Brabourne Stadium for the season since the Wankhede was undergoing renovation to host some matches of the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup. Mumbai won seven of their first eight games to take the top spot in the points table. Their success was mainly due to the efforts of Tendulkar, Malinga, Harbhajan, Ambati Rayudu and Saurabh Tiwary. They won three of the remaining six league games and finished with 20 points from 14 games at the top of the points table. They beat the Royal Challengers Bangalore by 35 runs in the semifinal, thanks to Pollard's all-round efforts (33* from 13 balls, and 3/17). At the final, they were defeated by the Chennai Super Kings by 22 runs. The Mumbai team management was criticised for the "strategic errors" during the final such as sending Abhishek Nayar and Harbhajan at batting positions 3 and 4 respectively while Duminy and Pollard were sent at 7 and 8. Mumbai skipper Sachin Tendulkar, who scored 618 runs at an average of 47.53 and strike rate of 132.6, won the Orange Cap for scoring most runs in the season. Mumbai qualified for the 2010 Champions League Twenty20 where they were eliminated in the group stage with two wins and two defeats in four matches.
In 2011, with the addition of two new teams to the IPL, the IPL Governing Council declared that each franchise could retain a maximum of four players of their 2010 squad, and the rest of the international players would be auctioned. Mumbai Indians retained Tendulkar, Harbhajan, Pollard and Malinga for a sum of $4.5 million. This retention left the franchise with the power of spending $4.5 million at the auction where they purchased Indian batsman Rohit Sharma for $2 million, former Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds for $850,000, and pacer Munaf Patel for $700,000. Mumbai won eight of their first ten league games following which they suffered a loss of form that led to three consecutive defeats and a last-ball win in their last league match. They finished third on the points table with 18 points from 14 games and qualified for the Eliminator. The Eliminator was played at the Wankhede where Mumbai faced the Kolkata Knight Riders. After winning the toss and electing to bowl first, Mumbai restricted Kolkata to 147 in 20 overs and chased down the target for the loss of six wickets with four balls to spare. Munaf Patel won the Man of the Match for his bowling figures of 3/27. With this win, Mumbai qualified for the Qualifying final against Royal Challengers Bangalore, the winner of which would play the Super Kings in the final. Mumbai skipper Tendulkar won the toss once again and put their opposition into bat who set Mumbai a target of 186. Mumbai kept losing wickets at regular intervals from the start of their innings and could score only 142/8, falling short by 43 runs. The top two leading wicket-takers of the season were Mumbai Indians pacers Lasith Malinga and Munaf Patel with 28 and 22 wickets respectively.
2013-Present: Regrowth of the team
The 2013 IPL saw Anil Kumble being appointed as the chief mentor, after he quit a similar position from Royal Challengers Bangalore. With a slump in batting form of Ricky Ponting, he was eventually dropped from the playing eleven and Rohit Sharma took lead of the team. Having the experienced advice of the likes of Anil Kumble, Johnty Rhodes and Sachin Tendulkar, the team emerged victorious in IPL 2013 and continued the victory streak in the Champions League.
Team identity
The Mumbai Indians were the most watched team on television in the first season of the IPL, totaling to 239 million viewers.[8] After posting a revenue of ₹69 crore and expenditure of ₹85 crore, the first season left the owners with net loss of INR 16 crore and were expected to break even in the 2009 season.[9]
Team name, motto and logo design
The motto of the team is "Duniya Hila Denge Hum", which translates to We will rock the world.[10] The first anthem of Mumbai Indian was based on this motto, wherein the Bollywood actor Hrithik Roshan was roped in for a promotional video campaign.[11]
The team logo is a Razor as initially the name of the team was supposed to be "Mumbai Razors" before Sachin Tendulkar suggested to keep it Mumbai Indians.
Jersey colors
The team's primary color is blue with golden stripes on either sides of the jersey. The team colours was almost the same in 2008 and 2009, with Idea as the principal sponsor, except for the colour shade and additional sponsors. In 2010, a new kit with golden stripes was unveiled. In 2011, kit used in 2010 is being used with Hero Honda as the main sponsor. The 2011 jersey also has three gold stripes going towards the back on the side of the jersey for the new players in the team. The kit manufacturer is Adidas.[12]
Theme song
The current theme song of the Mumbai Indians is the famous Ala Re. However, after every boundary or a wicket by the team, a music titled "Akkha Mumbai Khelega" is always played by the stadium disc jockey.
Players
During the player auction in 2008, the Mumbai Indians successfully bid for 7 players, including two members of the Indian Twenty-20 World cup winning side in Harbhajan Singh, Robin Uthappa. Sanath Jayasuriya, Lasith Malinga, Luke Ronchi, Dilhara Fernando and Shaun Pollock were other cricketers who were successfully bid for by the franchise.[13]
Outside of the player auction, the franchise also signed up Ajinkya Rahane and Abhishek Nayar (from Mumbai), Yogesh Takawale (WK-Batsman from Maharashtra) and Pinal Shah (WK-Batsman from Baroda).[14] Saurabh Tiwary and Manish Pandey, the members of the U-19 world-cup winning team were the random picks drafted in during the BCCI held second auction. Dominic Thornely was also signed by the Mumbai Indians for a sum of $30,000. André Nel the South African fast bowler was signed on in the place of Dwayne Bravo who left the tournament early.[15]
In the 2009 player auction,the Mumbai Indians signed up South African player, JP Duminy for $950,000. He was the third most expensive pick after Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff (both signed up for $1.55m by Bangalore Royal Challengers and Chennai Super Kings respectively). In addition Kyle Mills and Mohammad Ashraful for $150,000 and $75,000 respectively were bought by MI management. The team also signed Graham Napier and Ryan McLaren at the pre-auction signings.
In the IPL 2010 Mumbai Indians bought West Indian all-rounder Kieron Pollard for $750,000 ($2,750,000) after a silent tie-breaker with Chennai Super Kings, Royal Challengers Bangalore and the Kolkata Knight Riders.as he impressed everyone with his performances at Big Bash and Champions League.
In 2011, as two new teams were added to the IPL, the IPL Governing Council declared that each franchise could retain a maximum of four players of their squad, only three of whom can be Indian players, and the rest of the international players would be put in the mega-auction. The Mumbai franchise, keen to have the same set of core players, retained captain Sachin Tendulkar, Vice-Captain Harbhajan Singh, All-Rounder Kieron Pollard and Fast Bowler Lasith Malinga for a total of $4.5 million. The retention left them with the power of spending only $4.5 million at the mega-auction. At the auction, they purchased Rohit Sharma as one of the costliest player in the auction along with Munaf Patel, Andrew Symonds, Aiden Blizzard, a hard-hitting Australian batsman and James Franklin, an all rounder from New Zealand.
At the 2012 IPL player auction, Mumbai Indians bought South Africans Richard Levi and Robin Peterson for $50,000 and $100,000 respectively, Australian fast bowler Mitchell Johnson for $300,000, Indian fast bowler R. P. Singh for $600,000 and Sri Lankan all-rounder Thisara Perera for $650,000.
After the auctions, Mumbai Indians managed to get South African explosive opener Richard Levi, who shot into limelight after hitting the fastest century in T20 international cricket and hitting a record 13 sixes, after a bidding war with Pune Warriors India. Richard Levi was brought in as a replacement for Andrew Symonds, who retired from all forms of the game citing family reasons. Sachin Tendulkar stepped down as Mumbai Indians captain ahead of the IPL 2012 season-opener against Chennai.
At the 2013 IPL player auction, Former Australian Captain Ricky Ponting was purchased by Mumbai Indians for $400,000 and he became the new captain for sixth edition of IPL. Also at the auction, the Million Dollar Baby Glenn Maxwell was purchased by Mumbai Indians. Also Philip Hughes, Nathan Coulter - Nile, Jacob Oram was purchased by MI Management.
Transfers
In the 2008–2009 transfer window, Mumbai Indians conducted two straight swap deals, with no money exchanged. Ashish Nehra was swapped with Shikhar Dhawan of Delhi Daredevils[16] and on the last day of the transfer window, Robin Uthappa was swapped with Zaheer Khan of Royal Challengers Bangalore,[17] who plays for Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy. In a three-way trade, Jaydev Shah of the Rajasthan Royals – captain of the Saurashtra Ranji squad that made it to the semi-finals and son of former cricket board secretary Niranjan Shah – will move to the Mumbai Indians.
During the transfer window, Mumbai Indians was the first team to induct a new player in their squad. Tamil Nadu wicket-keeper Dinesh Karthik transferred to Mumbai Indians for $2.35 million (Rs 12.4 crores approximately).[18] Also making a switch was Rajagopal Sathish, who moved to Kings XI Punjab for an undisclosed amount. In their latest trade, Indian left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha has transferred to Mumbai Indians from Deccan Chargers for an undisclosed amount.,[19] while letting Ali Murtaza move to Pune Warriors India.
On 4 November 2014, Mumbai Indians have acquired Unmukt Chand , Aaron Finch and Vinay Kumar for 2015 IPL tournament.[20] Parthiv Patel also joins Mumbai Indians squad for 8th edition of IPL in the transfer window period. Aaron Finch along with Mitchell Mcclenaghan joins Mumbai Indians in the 2015 IPL Auction.
Honours
Year | Indian Premier League | Champions League Twenty20 |
---|---|---|
2008 | Group stage | DNQ |
2009 | Group stage | DNQ |
2010 | Runners-up | Group stage |
2011 | Playoffs | Champions |
2012 | Playoffs | Group stage |
2013 | Champions | Champions |
2014 | Playoffs | Qualifier stage |
- Q = Qualified; DNQ = Did Not Qualify
Complete Players List
Current squad
Template:Mumbai Indians Roster
Administration and support staff
- Owner – Mukesh Ambani & Nita Ambani (Reliance Industries)
- Head coach – Ricky Ponting
- Assistant and Batting coach – Robin Singh
- Bowling coach - Shane Bond [21]
- Fielding coach – Jonty Rhodes
- Mentor - Sachin Tendulkar
- Chief mentor – Anil Kumble
- Youth development and talent scout – John Wright
- Physio – Dr Nitin Patel
- Trainer – Paul Chapman
- Nutritionist – Kinita Kadakia Patel
- Masseur - Robert Gibson
- Video analyst – Dhananja
Former players
Home ground
The Mumbai Indians play their home games at the Wankhede Stadium.[22] However, in 2010, they played all seven home games at the Brabourne Stadium while the Wankhede Stadium underwent renovation for hosting a few group stage as well as the final match of the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011. Mumbai Indians won six out of the seven matches at the Brabourne Stadium that season.
Sponsors and partners
American multinational corporation – Mastercard is the official founding sponsor of the Mumbai Indians,[23] while Adidas is their official apparel sponsor.[24] Associate sponsors and official partners include Bridgestone, Dheeraj and East Coast LLC, Kingfisher, Wrigley's Orbit, Wrigley's Boomer, Royal Stag, Air India, Msn and Red FM 93.5.[25] Now Hero Motocorp is also one of the main sponsors of Mumbai Indians from 2011 season onwards.
Education for all
Mumbai Indians have supported the social cause of education to the underprivileged. Mumbai Indians have been raised funds for the cause via selling merchandise like wristbands signed by their Players. The NGOs supported are Pratham, Ummeed, Akanksha, Teach For India and Nanhi Kali.[26]
Fixtures and results
Overall results in the IPL
Year | Total | Wins | Losses | No result | % Win | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 14 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 50.00% | 5 |
2009 | 14 | 5 | 8 | 1 | 35.71% | 7 |
2010 | 16 | 11 | 5 | 0 | 68.75% | 2 |
2011 | 16 | 10 | 6 | 0 | 62.50% | 3 |
2012 | 17 | 10 | 7 | 0 | 58.82% | 4 |
2013 | 19 | 13 | 6 | 0 | 68.42% | 1 |
2014 | 14 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 50.00% | 4 |
Total | 110 | 63 | 46 | 1 | 57.27% |
By Opposition
Opposition | Played | Won | Lost | NR |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cape Cobras | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Chennai Super Kings | 20 | 10 | 10 | 0 |
Deccan Chargers | 10 | 6 | 4 | 0 |
Delhi Daredevils | 12 | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Guyana | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Highveld Lions | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Kings XI Punjab | 14 | 7 | 7 | 0 |
Kochi Tuskers Kerala | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Kolkata Knight Riders | 13 | 10 | 3 | 0 |
Lahore Lions | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Lions | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
New South Wales Blues | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Perth Scorchers | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Pune Warriors India | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 |
Rajasthan Royals | 15 | 8 | 6 | 1 |
Otago Volts | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Royal Challengers Bangalore | 15 | 9 | 6 | 0 |
Somerset | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
Southern Redbacks | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Sunrisers Hyderabad | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 |
Sydney Sixers | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
Trinidad and Tobago | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
Yorkshire Carnegie | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Teams now defunct |
Non IPL Teams |
IPL 2008 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 20 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
2 | April 23 | Template:Cr-IPL | Chennai | Lost by 6 runs | Cricinfo |
3 | April 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mohali | Lost by 66 runs | Cricinfo |
4 | April 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | Navi Mumbai | Lost by 10 wickets | Cricinfo |
5 | April 29 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | MoM – Sanath Jayasuriya 3/14 (4 overs) and 18 (10) | Won by 7 wickets;Cricinfo |
6 | May 4 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Shaun Pollock 33 (15) and 2/16 (4 overs) | Won by 29 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
7 | May 7 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Ashish Nehra 3/13 (3 overs) | Won by 7 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
8 | May 14 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Sanath Jayasuriya 114* (48) | Won by 9 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
9 | May 16 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Shaun Pollock 3/12 (4 overs) | Won by 8 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
10 | May 18 | Template:Cr-IPL | Hyderabad | Dwayne Bravo 30 (17) and 3/24 (4 overs) | Won by 25 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
11 | May 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 1 run | Cricinfo |
12 | May 24 | Template:Cr-IPL | Delhi | Lost by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
13 | May 26 | Template:Cr-IPL | Jaipur | Lost by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
14 | May 28 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bangalore | Dilhara Fernando 4/18 (4 overs) | Won by 9 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
Overall record of 7 – 7
Failed to make in the Semifinals, ended 5/8 |
IPL 2009 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 18 | Template:Cr-IPL | Cape Town | MoM - Sachin Tendulkar 59* (49) and 1 catch | Won by 19 runs;Cricinfo |
2 | April 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | Durban | Match did not start after intermittent rain | Cricinfo |
3 | April 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Durban | Lost by 19 runs | Cricinfo |
4 | April 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | Port Elizabeth | Sachin Tendulkar 68 (45) and 2 catches | Won by 92 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
5 | April 29 | Template:Cr-IPL | Durban | Lost by 3 runs | Cricinfo |
6 | May 1 | Template:Cr-IPL | East London | JP Duminy 52 (37), 1 catch and 1 runout | Won by 9 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
7 | May 3 | Template:Cr-IPL | Johannesburg | Lost by 9 wickets | Cricinfo |
8 | May 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Pretoria | Lost by 19 runs | Cricinfo |
9 | May 8 | Template:Cr-IPL | East London | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
10 | May 10 | Template:Cr-IPL | Port Elizabeth | JP Duminy 59* (41) and 1 catch | Won by 16 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
11 | May 12 | Template:Cr-IPL | Pretoria | Harbhajan Singh 1/9 (4 overs) and 2 catches | Won by 8 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
12 | May 14 | Template:Cr-IPL | Durban | Lost by 2 runs | Cricinfo |
13 | May 16 | Template:Cr-IPL | Port Elizabeth | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
14 | May 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | Pretoria | Lost by 4 wickets | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 5 – 8 (One match no result)
Failed to make in the Semifinals, ended 7/8 |
IPL 2010 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | March 13 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 4 runs | Cricinfo | |
2 | March 17 | Template:Cr-IPL | Delhi | Sachin Tendulkar 63 (32) | Won by 98 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
3 | March 20 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 4 wickets | Cricinfo | |
4 | March 22 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Sachin Tendulkar 71* (48) | Won by 7 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo | |
5 | March 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Sachin Tendulkar 72 (52) | Won by 5 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo | |
6 | March 28 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Harbhajan Singh 49* (18) and 3/31 | Won by 41 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
7 | March 30 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lasith Malinga 4/22 | Won by 4 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo | |
8 | April 3 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Ambati Rayudu 55 (29) | Won by 63 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
9 | April 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Chennai | Lost by 24 runs | Cricinfo | |
10 | April 9 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mohali | Lost by 6 wickets | Cricinfo | |
11 | April 11 | Template:Cr-IPL | Jaipur | Sachin Tendulkar 89* (59) | Won by 37 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
12 | April 13 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Kieron Pollard 45* (13) and 2 runouts | Won by 39 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
13 | April 17 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bangalore | Ryan McLaren 40 (42) and 1/21 | Won by 57 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
14 | April 19 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | Lost by 9 wickets | Cricinfo | |
Semifinal | ||||||
15 | April 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | Navi Mumbai | Kieron Pollard 33* (13) and 3/17 | Won by 35 runs; MoM –Cricinfo | |
Final | ||||||
16 | April 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 22 runs | Cricinfo | |
Overall record of 11 – 5
Runners-up of IPL 2010 |
CLT20 2010 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 10 | Lions | Johannesburg | Lost by 9 runs | Cricinfo |
2 | September 14 | Southern Redbacks | Durban | Lost by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
3 | September 16 | Guyana | Durban | Kieron Pollard 72* (30) | Won by 31 runs; MoM -Cricinfo |
4 | September 19 | Royal Challengers Bangalore | Durban | Dwayne Bravo 29 (17) and 2/23 | Won by 2 runs; MoM -Cricinfo |
Overall record of 2 – 2
Failed to make in the Semifinals |
IPL 2011 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 10 | Template:Cr-IPL | Delhi | Lasith Malinga 5/13 (3.4 overs) | Won by 8 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
2 | April 12 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bangalore | Sachin Tendulkar 55* (46) | Won by 9 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
3 | April 15 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 8 wickets | Cricinfo |
4 | April 20 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Munaf Patel 3/8 (2.2 overs) | Won by 7 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
5 | April 22 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Harbhajan Singh 5/18 (4 overs) | Won by 8 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
6 | April 24 | Template:Cr-IPL | Hyderabad | Lasith Malinga 3/9 (4 overs) | Won by 37 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
7 | April 29 | Template:Cr-IPL | Jaipur | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
8 | May 2 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Kieron Pollard 20 (11), 1/18 (3 overs) and 2 catches | Won by 23 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
9 | May 4 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 21 runs | Cricinfo |
10 | May 7 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Ambati Rayudu 59 (39), 1 catch and 1 runout | Won by 32 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
11 | May 10 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mohali | Lost by 76 runs | Cricinfo |
12 | May 14 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 10 runs | Cricinfo |
13 | May 20 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 10 wickets | Cricinfo |
14 | May 22 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | James Franklin 45 (23) and 2/35 (4 overs) | Won by 7 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
Eliminator | |||||
15 | May 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Munaf Patel 3/27 (4 overs) | Won by 4 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
Qualifier 2 | |||||
16 | May 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | Chennai | Lost by 43 runs | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 10 – 6
Failed to make in the Final, ended 3/10 |
CLT20 2011 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 24 | Chennai Super Kings | Chennai | Lasith Malinga 37* (24) and 1/29 | Won by 3 wickets; MoMCricinfo |
2 | September 26 | Trinidad and Tobago | Bengaluru | Won by 1 wicket | Cricinfo |
3 | September 30 | Cape Cobras | Bengaluru | Match did not start after intermittent rain | Cricinfo |
4 | October 2 | New South Wales Blues | Chennai | Lost by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
Semifinal | |||||
5 | October 8 | Somerset | Chennai | Lasith Malinga 4/20 | Won by 10 runs; MoMCricinfo |
Final | |||||
6 | October 9 | Royal Challengers Bangalore | Chennai | Harbhajan Singh 3/20 and 2 catches | Won by 31 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
Overall record of 4 – 1 (One match no result)
Champions of the Champions League 2011 |
IPL 2012 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 4 | Template:Cr-IPL | Chennai | Richard Levi 50 (35) | Won by 8 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
2 | April 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 28 runs | Cricinfo |
3 | April 9 | Template:Cr-IPL | Vishakapatnam | Rohit Sharma 73* (50) and 1 catch | Won by 5 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
4 | April 11 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Kieron Pollard 64 (33), 4/44 (4 overs) and 1 catch | Won by 27 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
5 | April 16 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
6 | April 22 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 6 wickets | Cricinfo |
7 | April 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mohali | Ambati Rayudu 34* (17) | Won by 4 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
8 | April 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | New Delhi | Lost by 37 runs | Cricinfo |
9 | April 29 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 5 wickets | Cricinfo |
10 | May 3 | Template:Cr-IPL | Pune | Lasith Malinga 2/25 (4 overs) and 14 (14) | Won by 1 run; MoM –Cricinfo |
11 | May 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Dwayne Smith 24* (9) | Won by 2 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
12 | May 9 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 9 wickets | Cricinfo |
13 | May 12 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | Rohit Sharma 109* (60) | Won by 27 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
14 | May 14 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bengaluru | Ambati Rayudu 81* (54) | Won by 5 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
15 | May 16 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 32 runs | Cricinfo |
16 | May 20 | Template:Cr-IPL | Jaipur | Dwayne Smith 87* (58) & 1 catch | Won by 10 wickets; MoM –Cricinfo |
Eliminator | |||||
17 | May 23 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bengaluru | Lost by 38 runs | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 10 – 7 |
CLT20 2012 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | October 14 | Highveld Lions | Johannesburg | Lost by 8 wickets | Cricinfo |
2 | October 18 | Yorkshire Carnegie | Cape Town | Match did not start after intermittent rain | Cricinfo |
3 | October 20 | Chennai Super Kings | Johannesburg | Lost by 6 runs | Cricinfo |
4 | October 22 | Sydney Sixers | Durban | Lost by 12 runs | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 0 – 3 (One match no result)
Failed to make in the Semifinals |
IPL 2013 season
For the 2013 season, Anil Kumble joined the team as Chief Mentor after having quit the same post with Royal Challengers Bangalore.[27] In this season the team remained unbeaten at home.[28] With a slump in batting form of Sachin Tendulkar and Ricky Ponting, they were eventually dropped from the team and Rohit Sharma took the lead of the team as well as the batting side. Having the experienced advice of the likes of Anil Kumble, Johnty Rhodes and Sachin Tendulkar, the team emerged victorious in IPL 2013 and continued the victory streak in the Champions League.
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 4 | Template:Cr-IPL | Bengaluru | Lost by 2 runs | Cricinfo |
2 | April 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Chennai | Won by 9 runs; MoM – Kieron Pollard 57* (38) | Cricinfo |
3 | April 9 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 44 runs; MoM – Dinesh Karthik 86 (48) | Cricinfo |
4 | April 13 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 41 runs; MoM – Rohit Sharma 62* (32) | Cricinfo |
5 | April 17 | Template:Cr-IPL | Jaipur | Lost by 87 runs | Cricinfo |
6 | April 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | New Delhi | Lost by 9 wickets | Cricinfo |
7 | April 24 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | Won by 5 wickets; MoM – Dwayne Smith 62 (45) | Cricinfo |
8 | April 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 58 runs; MoM – Dwayne Smith 50 (36) and 2/20 | Cricinfo |
9 | April 29 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 4 runs; MoM – Rohit Sharma 79* (39) | Cricinfo |
10 | May 1 | Template:Cr-IPL | Hyderabad | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
11 | May 5 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 60 runs; MoM – Mitchell Johnson 3/27 (3 overs) | Cricinfo |
12 | May 7 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 65 Runs; MoM – Sachin Tendulkar 48 (28) | Cricinfo |
13 | May 11 | Template:Cr-IPL | Pune | Won by 5 Wickets; MoM – Mitchell Johnson 2/8 (4 overs) | Cricinfo |
14 | May 13 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 7 wickets; MoM – Kieron Pollard 66* (27) | Cricinfo |
15 | May 15 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 14 Runs; MoM – Aditya Tare 59 (37) | Cricinfo |
16 | May 18 | Template:Cr-IPL | Dharamsala | Lost by 50 Runs | Cricinfo |
Qualifier 1 | |||||
17 | May 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | New Delhi | Lost by 48 Runs | Cricinfo |
Qualifier 2 | |||||
18 | May 24 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | Won by 4 wickets; MoM Harbhajan Singh 3/23, 2 catches and 6* (4) | Cricinfo |
Final | |||||
19 | May 26 | Template:Cr-IPL | Kolkata | Won by 23 Runs; MoM – Kieron Pollard 60* (32) | Cricinfo |
Overall Record of 13 – 6
Champions of the 2013 Indian Premier League Qualified for 2013 Champions League Twenty20 |
CLT20 2013 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 21 | Rajasthan Royals | Jaipur | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
2 | September 23 | Otago Volts | Ahmedabad | Match did not start after intermittent rain | Cricinfo |
3 | September 27 | Highveld Lions | Jaipur | Dwayne Smith 63 (47) and 1 catch | Won by 7 wickets; MoMCricinfo |
4 | October 2 | Perth Scorchers | Delhi | Rohit Sharma 51* (24) | Won by 6 wickets; MoMCricinfo |
Semifinal | |||||
5 | October 5 | Trinidad & Tobago | Delhi | Dwayne Smith 59 (38) | Won by 6 wickets; MoMCricinfo |
Final | |||||
6 | October 6 | Rajasthan Royals | Delhi | Harbhajan Singh 4/32 and 1 catch | Won by 33 runs; MoM –Cricinfo |
Overall record of 4 – 1 (One match no result)
Champions of the Champions League 2013 |
IPL 2014 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 16 | Template:Cr-IPL | Abu Dhabi | Lost by 41 runs | Cricinfo |
2 | April 19 | Template:Cr-IPL | Dubai | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
3 | April 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Dubai | Lost by 7 wickets | Cricinfo |
4 | April 27 | Template:Cr-IPL | Sharjah | Lost by 6 wickets | Cricinfo |
5 | April 30 | Template:Cr-IPL | Abu Dhabi | Lost by 15 runs | Cricinfo |
6 | May 3 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 5 wickets, MoM – Corey Anderson 1/17(2 Overs) & 35(25) | Cricinfo |
7 | May 6 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 19 Runs, MoM – Rohit Sharma 59*(35) | Cricinfo |
8 | May 10 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 4 wickets | Cricinfo |
9 | May 12 | Template:Cr-IPL | Hyderabad | Won by 7 Wickets, MoM – Ambati Rayudu 68(46) | Cricinfo |
10 | May 14 | Template:Cr-IPL | Cuttack | Lost by 6 wickets | Cricinfo |
11 | May 19 | Template:Cr-IPL | Ahmedabad | Won by 25 Runs, MoM – Mike Hussey 56(39) | Cricinfo |
12 | May 21 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mohali | Won by 7 Wickets, MoM – Lendl Simmons 100*(61) | Cricinfo |
13 | May 23 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 15 Runs, MoM – Mike Hussey 56(33) | Cricinfo |
14 | May 25 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Won by 5 Wickets, MoM – Corey Anderson 95*(44) | Cricinfo |
Eliminator | |||||
15 | May 28 | Template:Cr-IPL | Mumbai | Lost by 7 Wickets | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 7 – 8 Qualified for 2014 Champions League Twenty20 |
CLT20 2014 season
No. | Date | Opponent | Venue | Result | Scorecard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 13 | Lahore Lions | Raipur | Lost by 6 wickets | Cricinfo |
2 | September 14 | Southern Express | Raipur | Lendl Simmons 76 (51) | Won by 9 wickets MoMCricinfo |
3 | September 16 | Northern Knights | Raipur | Lost by 6 wickets; | Cricinfo |
Overall record of 1 – 2
Did Not qualify to the Main Round |
References
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- ^ "Mumbai Indians beat Rajasthan Royals to win second CLT20 title". Times of India. Retrieved 6 October 2013.
- ^ "Rampant Mumbai seal title in style". Wisden India. May 26, 2013.
- ^ "Franchises for board's new Twenty20 league". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ^ "Big business and Bollywood grab stakes in IPL". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
- ^ "IPL Auction: Players' worth". rediff.com. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
- ^ "Indian Premier League, 2007/08 / Points table". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
- ^ "Teams". IPLT20.com. Retrieved March 20, 2012.
- ^ "Will cricket's new czars make money?". Business Today. May 14, 2008.
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{{cite news}}
:|archive-date=
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ignored (|url-status=
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{{cite web}}
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ignored (|url-status=
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- ^ "Kumble joins chief mentor of Mumbai Indians". Wisden India. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
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