FAQs - All you need to know about BPL 2023
When does it start? Who are the biggest names in attendance? Why the talent jam this year? We've got all your questions on the Bangladesh Premier League covered
Comilla Victorians won a thriller by one run to snatch the title last February • AFP/Getty Images
Yes, the BPL returns for its ninth edition from January 6. It has seven franchise teams that will play 46 games across three cities - Dhaka, Chattogram and Sylhet. The final will be played on February 16 in Dhaka. Yes, it is another franchise league, but one of the older ones.
Indeed, the BPL's inaugural season was in 2012, predating the SPL and the PSL. Barring the Indian players, almost every major T20 superstar has played in this tournament at one time or the other.
Chris Gayle, Andre Russell, Rashid Khan, Dwayne Bravo, Alex Hales and David Warner have all played the BPL. The likes of Jofra Archer, Nicholas Pooran and Mohammad Nabi too played the BPL early in their careers.
That's the thing. The BPL moved quite late in acquiring players for this season. It's quite packed with the UAE's ILT20 and South Africa's SA20 the new tournaments on the calendar, both clashing with the BPL, and Australia's BBL running concurrently too. Many of the biggest stars were already snapped up elsewhere by the time the BPL draft came around on November 23.
BPL 2023 will have a smattering of Pakistan stars like Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan. Shaheen Shah Afridi is also expected to turn up if and when he regains match fitness, while Dawid Malan and Sikandar Raza, who are both expected to be in the ILT20 too, are understood to have committed to a few games at least for their BPL teams.
Bangladesh's biggest T20 stars are all available for the BPL, including Shakib Al Hasan and Mustafizur Rahman. Tamim Iqbal, Mashrafe Mortaza and Mushfiqur Rahim, who have all retired from T20Is, will also be on show this tournament.
Bangladesh struggle more often than not in T20I cricket, so it feels contradictory that they host a big-money T20 franchise league where so many local players appear every year. But then the BPL franchises rely heavily on overseas players. Domestic cricketers hardly face up to the crunch moments, being mostly kept to bit-part roles. Still, the rare T20 talent is unearthed, like last season when Munim Shahriar showed a glimpse of his big-hitting talent. He was quickly drafted into the T20I side, but is yet to make the step up.
So many of them. From the huge match-fixing scandal of 2013 to teams being unable to pay players on time, to a mix-up on the points table resulting in confusion over who'd made the semis, to teams trying to field players without the required paperwork, it has all happened at the BPL.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84