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T20Sim Cup #61 Summary

A full written recap of the completed competition, including the league stage, finals, top performers, and championship result.

Champion medal
Champion Hail Stormers
Runner-up medal
Runner-up Sussex Snakes
Noman Ashraf
Player of the Series Noman Ashraf
(1806 points)
Pitch Invaders
Callum Hughes
Top Run Scorer Callum Hughes
(269 runs)
Colombo Cats
Corey Mitchell
Top Wicket Taker Corey Mitchell
(33 wickets)
Sussex Snakes
Competition trophy
Final Result Defending team won
Hail Stormers
(by 80 runs)

Competition Recap

T20Sim Cup #61 delivered a dramatic completed tournament, with ten teams battling through nine league rounds before a finals series decided the champion. The group stage was fiercely contested, but the title ultimately went to Hail Stormers, who defeated Sussex Snakes in the final. Although several teams looked dangerous during the league phase, the competition proved once again that topping the table is no guarantee of lifting the trophy.

The early story of the tournament belonged to Colombo Cats, who finished top of the ladder with 10 points from nine matches, ending the league stage 0 points clear of second place. Hail Stormers, Kiwi All Blacks, and Pitch Invaders completed the top four and moved into the semifinals, while the rest of the field fell short of finals qualification. That made the playoff race important right to the end, with teams jostling for position and momentum before knockout cricket began.

One of the standout moments of the competition came when Blocked Entry piled up 262/8 in 20.0 overs against Hail Stormers, the highest team total of the tournament. That innings showed just how explosive the batting could be in this competition and gave the tournament one of its most memorable scorecards. Across the league stage and finals, there were strong attacks, big totals, and shifting momentum, which helped give T20Sim Cup #61 a genuine tournament feel rather than a one-sided run to the finish.

Among the individual performers, Callum Hughes of Colombo Cats finished as the leading run scorer with 269 runs, making him one of the most dangerous batters in the competition. With the ball, Corey Mitchell of Sussex Snakes led the way with 33 wickets, underlining just how important wicket-taking bowlers were across the tournament. Player of the Series went to Noman Ashraf of Pitch Invaders, who collected 1806 points across the campaign and delivered the kind of all-round impact that defined the competition.

The finals then gave the tournament its clearest turning points. In the first semifinal, Sussex Snakes defeated Kiwi All Blacks with a result of Chasing team won by 1 wickets. In the second semifinal, Hail Stormers overcame Colombo Cats with a result of Defending team won by 107 runs. That set up a final between Hail Stormers and Sussex Snakes, with both teams arriving by very different paths. Sussex Snakes had earned their place by knocking out the top-ranked side, while Hail Stormers entered the final after a dominant semifinal display.

In the championship match, Hail Stormers completed the job against Sussex Snakes, with the official result recorded as Defending team won by 80 runs. That win sealed the title and turned a strong finals run into a championship campaign. What makes T20Sim Cup #61 especially memorable is that the eventual champions did not finish first in the league phase, showing how important timing, form, and composure become once knockout matches begin. The tournament set an exciting standard for future T20Sim competitions and delivered a complete cricket story from opening round to final trophy moment.