LONDON, June 30: The 2006 Champions Trophy to be held in India has been reduced to eight teams instead of 12 to make limited-overs tournament more competitive, International Cricket Council (ICC) said.

ICC has taken note of criticism that the 2004 event in England featured many one-sided matches due to enlarged field of 12, which included non-Test-playing nations Kenya and the United States.

Champions Trophy, second biggest tournament after World Cup, will now have eight teams split into two groups of four with top two from each group advancing to semi-finals.

The eight teams will comprise top six nations in ICC one-day table as on April 1, 2006 plus two sides drawn from a qualifying round just prior to the main tournament in October.

The qualifying round will be contested on a round-robin basis by teams placed 7-10 in ICC table.

ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed said the new format will be highly competitive for all participating teams.

“After last Champions Trophy, we sought opinions of a wide range of stakeholders and conducted a thorough review of the tournament’s structure.

“The new format has addressed main flaws of previous 12-team system. We now look forward to an exciting major international event in India.”

If current one-day table had been taken into account, hosts India would not have gained a direct entry due to their seventh place in the rankings.

The present top six are Australia (137 points), Sri Lanka (117), New Zealand (116), South Africa (112), Pakistan (112) and England (106).

The next four in the list are India (97), West Indies (95), Zimbabwe (50) and Kenya (26).

Test nation Bangladesh, placed 11th on 12 points, need major successes over next nine months to even enter the qualifying round.

The tournament will be held across India just five months before World Cup opens in the Caribbean in February, 2007.—PPI

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