India, Dec. 23 -- As the SA20 returns on December 26, the league is no longer just another addition to a crowded T20 calendar. Entering its fourth season, it has established itself as a key economic engine for South African cricket, reshaping revenue streams and redefining how domestic talent is identified, developed and rewarded.
Launched at a time when Cricket South Africa (CSA) was emerging from prolonged financial distress, SA20 was conceived as much as a commercial intervention as a sporting venture. Its impact reflects in CSA's finances. The board reported a profit of 815 million rand (approx. $45.6mn) in the 2023-24 financial year, and although that dipped to R238mn (approx. $14.25mn) in 2024-25, it was a huge turnaround after CSA...
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