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ICC ODI Championship

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ICC ODI Championship

ICC ODI Championship logo
Administrator International Cricket Council
Format One Day International
First tournament 1996
Last tournament ongoing
Tournament format notional (ongoing points accumulation through all matches played)
Number of teams  Australia
 Bangladesh
 England
 India
 New Zealand
 Pakistan
 Sri Lanka
 South Africa
 West Indies
 Zimbabwe

The ICC ODI Championship is an international competition run by the International Cricket Council in the sport of cricket. It currently involves the 10 nations that play Test cricket; Kenya, a non-Test country with full One Day International (ODI) status; and most recently Ireland, which qualified for the main ODI Table following their second victory over a Test playing nation in the ICC World Cup on 16 April 2007.[1] Starting in 2009, the number of teams on the main ODI Table will be set to 16, with the 10 current Test nations joined by the top six finishers in the ICC World Cup Qualifier. Kenya and Ireland must re-qualify for ODI status in that event.

The competition is notional in the sense that it is simply a ranking scheme overlaid on all international matches that are otherwise played as part of regular ODI cricket scheduling. Other non-Test countries with One-Day International status aren't included in the main table because they are yet to meet the promotion criteria.

In essence, after every ODI match, the two teams involved receive points based on a mathematical formula. The total of each team's points total is divided by the total number of matches to give a 'rating', and all eleven teams are ranked by order of rating (this can be shown in a table).

By analogy to cricket batting averages, the points for winning an ODI match are greater than the team's rating, increasing the rating, and the points for losing an ODI match are always less than the rating, reducing the rating. A drawn match between higher and lower rated teams will benefits the lower-rated team at the expense of the higher-rated team. An 'average' team that wins as often as it loses while playing a mix of stronger and weaker teams should have a rating of 100.

Contents

[edit] ODI Championship calculations

The calculations for the Table are performed as follows:

  • Each team scores points based on the results of their matches.
  • Each team's rating is equal to its total points scored divided by the total matches played. (Series are not significant in these calculations).
  • A match only counts if played in the last three years.
  • Matches played in the first year of the three-year limit count one-third; matches played in the second year count two-thirds; matches played in the last year count fully; essentially, recent matches are given higher weighting.
  • To determine a team's rating after a particular match:
    • Determine the match result (win, loss, or tie)
    • Calculate the match points scored:
      • If the gap between the ratings of the two teams at the commencement of the match is fewer than 40 points, then:
        • The winner scores 50 points more than the opponent's rating
        • The loser scores 50 points fewer than the opponent's rating
        • Each team in a tie scores the opponent's rating
      • If the gap between the ratings of the two teams at the commencement of the match is more than or equal to 40 points, then :
        • The winner, if it is the stronger team, scores 10 points more than its own rating
        • The winner, if it is the weaker team, scores 90 points more than its own rating
        • The loser, if it is the stronger team, scores 90 points fewer than its own rating
        • The loser, if it is the weaker team, scores 10 points fewer than its own rating
        • The stronger team in a tie scores 40 points fewer than its own rating
        • The weaker team in a tie scores 40 points more than its own rating
    • Add the match points scored to the points already scored (in previous matches as reflected by the Table) and determine the new rating. However, matches(and the points) which do not lie in last three year range will have to be removed.
  • Points earned by teams depend on the opponents ratings, therefore this system needed to assign base ratings to teams when it started.

[edit] Ranking of teams

[edit] Main ODI Table

Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1  South Africa 39 4911 126
2  Australia 50 4057 122
3  India 53 6410 121
4  New Zealand 35 3918 112
5  Pakistan 36 4009 111
6  England 37 3980 108
7  Sri Lanka 43 4508 105
8  West Indies 32 2949 92
9  Bangladesh 38 1731 46
10  Zimbabwe 32 736 23
11  Ireland 10 190 19
12  Kenya 12 0 0
Reference: ICC, 3 May 2009

[edit] Associate ODI rankings

Note:These are the associate ODI teams that do not yet qualify to be on main table.

Rank Team Matches  % vs associate  % vs full
13  Netherlands 26 66% 0%
14  Scotland 27 47% 69%
15  Canada 34 32% 0%
16  Bermuda 35 25% 0%
Reference: ICC, 8 April 2009

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]

[edit] External links

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