The International Cricket Council (ICC) was founded at Lord's on 15 June 1909 as the Imperial Cricket Conference,[1] with Australia, England, and South Africa as its founding members.
In the beginning, only countries within the Commonwealth could join.[2] India, New Zealand and the West Indies joined in 1926, and Pakistan joined in 1953 after the partition of India.[3] In 1961, South Africa resigned from the Conference due to their leaving the Commonwealth,[2] but they continued to play Test cricket until their international exile in 1970.[4]
The Imperial Cricket Conference was renamed the International Cricket Conference in 1965, with new rules permitting countries from outside the Commonwealth to be elected into the governing body for the first time: Fiji and the USA became the first associate member nations that year.[2]
In 1981, Sri Lanka became the first associate member to be elected a full member, returning the number of Test-playing nations to seven. In 1989, the ICC was again renamed, this time to the International Cricket Council.[2] South Africa was re-elected as a full member of the ICC in 1991, with Zimbabwe elected in 1992,[3] and Bangladesh elected in 2000.[3]
On 22 June 2017, Ireland and Afghanistan were granted full member (and Test) status, bringing the number of full members to 12.[5]
As of November 2023, there are 108 ICC members, with 12 full members and 96 associate members. [6]
The membership committee will consider all future requests for membership – full and associate – against an objective set of criteria. There was previously a third level, affiliate membership, which was abolished in June 2017, with all existing affiliate members becoming associate members,[7] and introducing a two-tier hierarchy (full members and associate members): any new member elected to the ICC would be an associate member, with the possibility of promotion to full member status based on ongoing performance in international competition.
From July to October 2019, the ICC suspended Zimbabwe Cricket due to government interference, the first time this had occurred with a full member side.[8][9][10] On 10 November 2023, the ICC suspended Sri Lanka Cricket due to government interference in the board. [11]
Full members
Full members are the governing bodies for cricket in a country or a group of associated countries representing a geographical area.
All full members have a right to send a representative team to play official Test matches, have full voting rights at meetings of the ICC, and are automatically qualified to play ODIs and T20Is.[2] The West Indies cricket team is a combined team representing 15 countries and territories from the Caribbean, while the English cricket team represents both England and Wales and the Irish cricket team represents all of the island of Ireland.
Of these 12 nations, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Ireland played as associate members before being elected as full members.
In April 2021, ICC granted permanent Women's Test status to all the full member nations.[12]
Reference: ICC Men's Rankings, ICC Women's Rankings, 23 October 2021
Suspended Full member
No | Country | Teams | Governing body | Full member since[2] | Test status since | Region |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sri Lanka | Men • Women • U19 | Sri Lanka Cricket | 21 July 1981[13] | 17 February 1982 | Asia |
Associate members
Associate members are countries where cricket is firmly established and organised, but do not qualify for full membership.[2] There are 96 associate members.[14]
All associates were eligible to play in the World Cricket League, a series of international one-day cricket administered by the ICC until 2019.[15] This was replaced by the ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 and ICC Cricket World Cup Challenge League from 2019 onwards.[16] There are also ICC Men's T20 World Cup Qualifier events that works as a qualification process for ICC Men's T20 World Cup: until April 2018, only the qualified teams were awarded Twenty20 International status.[17]
In April 2018, the ICC announced T20I status for all its members from 1 July 2018 for the women's game, and from 1 January 2019 for the men's game.[18]
†Denotes members that are currently suspended by the ICC.
- ↑ Switzerland were admitted in 1985, but were expelled in 2012,[92][93] before being readmitted in July 2021.[65]
- ↑ The USA were admitted as an associate member in 1965 under the governance of the United States of America Cricket Association, which was expelled in September 2017. USA Cricket was admitted in January 2019.
Associate members with ODI status
The ICC granted men's One Day International status to its associate members based on their success in the World Cricket League; the World Cricket League was replaced in 2019 and ODI status now goes exclusively to all teams in the newly created ICC Cricket World Cup Super League and ICC Cricket World Cup League 2.[101]
The Associate teams who currently hold men's ODI status are:
Team | Governing body | ODI status since | Region | Current ODI ranking |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canada | Cricket Canada | 2023 | Americas | - |
Namibia | Cricket Namibia | 2019[102] | Africa | 17 |
Nepal | Cricket Association of Nepal | 2018[2] | Asia | 15 |
Netherlands | Royal Dutch Cricket Association | 2018[2] | Europe | 15 |
Oman | Oman Cricket | 2019[103] | Asia | 18 |
Scotland | Cricket Scotland | 2018[2] | Europe | 12 |
United Arab Emirates | Emirates Cricket Board | 2018 | Asia | 19 |
United States | USA Cricket | 2019 | Americas | 16 |
Netherlands ensured they would regain ODI status after the completion of the 2018 World Cup Qualifier, by winning the 2015–2017 World Cricket League. The next three highest placed associates in the qualifier (UAE, Scotland and Nepal) also gained ODI status. In June 2018, Scotland and UAE were added to the main ODI rankings list, with Nepal joining them in January 2019.[104] Netherlands were also added afterwards after playing enough games to gain a ranking.
Four additional teams gained ODI status after the conclusion of the World Cricket League Division Two tournament in April 2019.[101] These teams were Namibia, Oman, Papua New Guinea and USA.[101]
In April 2021, ICC granted permanent Women's One Day International status to all the full-member teams.[105] On 25 May 2022, five Associate teams were granted Women's ODI status by the International Cricket Council.[106]
Team | Governing body | ODI status since | Region | Current ODI ranking |
---|---|---|---|---|
Netherlands | Royal Dutch Cricket Association | 2022 | Europe | 12 |
Papua New Guinea | Cricket PNG | 2022 | East Asia-Pacific | - |
Scotland | Cricket Scotland | 2022 | Europe | - |
Thailand | Cricket Association of Thailand | 2022 | Asia | 9 |
United States | USA Cricket | 2022 | Americas | - |
Associate members with T20I status
In April 2018, the ICC announced T20I status for all members from 1 January 2019. Therefore, all Twenty20 matches played between ICC members since 1 January 2019 have been eligible for full T20I status.[107][18]
Former members
There are seven countries who were previously members of the International Cricket Council (as associate and/or affiliate members), but were subsequently expelled:
Country | Region | ICC membership period |
---|---|---|
Brunei | Asia | 2002–2015[108] |
Cuba | Americas | 2002–2013 |
Morocco | Africa | 1999–2019[109][110] |
Russia | Europe | 2012–2022[28] |
Tonga | East Asia-Pacific | 2000–2014[111] |
Zambia | Africa | 2003–2021[65] |
Dissolved members
There were two combined teams who were members of the International Cricket Council (as associate members), but were subsequently dissolved:
- East Africa (a join team representing Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia): admitted as an associate member in 1966, the team played at the inaugural Cricket World Cup in 1975, with Kenya becoming an associate member in its own right in 1981. In 1989, East Africa was succeeded by a combined team from East and Central Africa (representing Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and Malawi), which remained an associate member, with Uganda and Tanzania becoming associate members in their own right in 1998 and 2001. In 2003, the ICC, Zambia and Malawi mutually agreed to dissolve the team, with Zambia becoming an associate member (expelled in 2021) and Malawi becoming an affiliate member (associate member from 2017).
- West Africa (representing Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria and Sierra Leone): admitted as an associate member in 1976. In 2003, the ICC and the constituent countries mutually agreed to dissolve the team, with Nigeria becoming an associate member and the other three nations becoming affiliate members (associate members from 2017).
Regional bodies
Regional bodies aim to organise, promote and develop the game of cricket in their respective ICC regions.
These are the current bodies:
- African Cricket Association
- Asian Cricket Council
- ICC Americas
- ICC East Asia-Pacific
- European Cricket Council
Two further regional bodies were dissolved following the creation of the African Cricket Association:
References
- ↑ "Role of the ICC – International Cricket Council". Retrieved 14 May 2008.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Williamson, Martin (18 May 2007). "International Cricket Council: A brief history..." ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
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- ↑ "South Africa are isolated". Cricinfo. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
- ↑ "Ireland & Afghanistan awarded Test status by International Cricket Council". BBC Sport. 22 June 2017. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
- ↑ "ICC welcomes Mongolia, Tajikstan, and Switzerland as new Members". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
- ↑ "Ireland and Afghanistan ICC newest full members amid wide-ranging governance reform". International Cricket Council. 22 June 2017. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
- ↑ "ICC board and full council concludes in London". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 18 July 2019.
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- ↑ "Zimbabwe and Nepal readmitted as ICC members". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 October 2019.
- ↑ "ICC suspends Sri Lanka Cricket with immediate effect". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
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