Countries | West Indies |
---|---|
Administrator | Cricket West Indies (CWI) |
Format | First-class (4-day) |
First edition | 1965–66 |
Latest edition | 2023–24 |
Next edition | 2024–25 |
Tournament format | Round robin, semi-finals |
Number of teams | 8 |
Current champion | Guyana – 12 titles (plus 1 shared)[1] |
Most successful | Barbados – 23 titles (plus 1 shared)[2] |
Most runs | Devon Smith (Windward Islands) – 11,321[3][4][5] |
Most wickets | Veerasammy Permaul (Guyana) – 526[6][7] |
2023–24 West Indies Championship |
The Regional Four Day Competition,[8] formerly known as the Shell Shield, Red Stripe, Busta and Carib Beer Cup, is the West Indies's first-class cricket competition that's run by Cricket West Indies. In the 2013–2014 season the winner of the tournament was awarded the WICB President's Trophy while the winners of the knockout competition were awarded the George Headley/Everton Weekes trophy.[9] In a few previous seasons the winners of the tournament were awarded the Headley/Weekes trophy. On from the 2016–17 season, the Competition was sponsored by Digicel and was known as the Digicel Four Day Championship.[10] Since 2019–20, the competition has been renamed as the West Indies Championship.[11]
The competition is contested between seven Caribbean teams and, on occasion, touring sides from other countries. Of these sides four of them, Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, come from solitary nations. While two other teams, the Leeward Islands and the Windward Islands, previously competed as the Combined Islands, now each being from a myriad of nations. Since the 2007–08 season a Combined Campuses and Colleges cricket team (CCC cricket team) were included in the competition. However, in July 2014 the WICB announced that the CCC cricket team was to be excluded from the upcoming 2014-15 Regional Four Day competition. This came as a series of changes adopted based on the recommendations made in a March 2014 report presented by Richard Pybus, WICB's then director of cricket.[12]
The current structure of the tournament, since the 2014–15 season is a double round-robin league system with the team earning the most points being declared the winner. Prior to this the tournament didn't comprise a knock out stage so teams could potentially both win the tournament. The competition later consisted of a single round-robin league followed by semi-finals and a final. The current champions are Guyana. Barbados have won the most titles with twenty-two outright (and one shared), while Jamaica and Guyana have won the most consecutive titles (five).
WICB 4 day media release
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