Twenty20 International

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Twenty20 International (T20I) is a form of Twenty20 cricket, in which each team plays a single innings with a maximum of twenty overs. The matches are played between international teams recognized by the International Cricket Council (ICC). In the T20I format, each bowler is restricted to a maximum of four overs. A mandatory powerplay is taken during the first six overs of an innings.

NicknamesT20I
First played17 February 2005
Team membersICC members
Quick facts Highest governing body, Nicknames ...
Twenty20 International
A Twenty20 match at the Oval
Highest governing bodyInternational Cricket Council
NicknamesT20I
First played17 February 2005
Characteristics
Team membersICC members
Mixed-sexNo
Typeoutdoor
Equipmentball, bat, stumps, glove, pad, helmet
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The first T20I match took place on 17 February 2005 between Australia and New Zealand, with the first ICC T20 World Cup held in 2007. The matches were initially competed between the full members of the ICC and selected associate member teams. In April 2018, the ICC announced that it would grant T20I status to matches played amongst any of all its 105 members from 1 January 2019. As of March 2025, 100 nations feature in ICC T20I team rankings.[1] The number of matches of the format increased in the 2010s and more T20I matches (100) were played than ODI matches (99) for the first time in 2016.[2]

As of March 2026, India has the most number of wins (187) while Pakistan has played the most number of matches (299). Babar Azam holds the record of the most runs and Rashid Khan of Afghanistan holds the record for the most career wickets (193). The highest individual score is 172, made by Australia's Aaron Finch against Zimbabwe in 2018, while Malaysia's Syazrul Idrus recorded the best bowling figures of 7/8 against China in July 2023.

Origins

Cricket itself was probably first played in England in the Late Middle Ages, but it did not rise to prominence until the eighteenth century. A set of laws were drawn up in 1744, and the game achieved a level of relative standardisation by the late nineteenth century.[3] One-day cricket was trialled in 1962, and the first domestic tournament played the following year,[4] and in 1971, England and Australia contested the first One Day International. The match consisted of one innings for each side, with 40 eight-ball overs.[5]

In the 1990s, a number of countries were exploring the possibility of a shorter game still: in New Zealand, Martin Crowe developed Cricket Max, in which each team bats for 10 eight-ball overs,[6] while in Australia they considered an eight-a-side contest they dubbed "Super 8s". At the same time, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) conducted consumer research, and proposed the idea of a 20 overs-per-side contest, which would last for about three hours.[7] The first match was played in 2003 between Hampshire and Sussex.[8]

History

The first Twenty20 International match between two men's sides was played on 17 February 2005, involving Australia and New Zealand. Wisden Cricketers' Almanack reported that "neither side took the game especially seriously",[9] and it was noted by ESPNcricinfo that but for a large score for Ricky Ponting, "the concept would have shuddered".[10] However, Ponting himself said "if it does become an international game then I'm sure the novelty won't be there all the time".[11]

Two further matches were played that year; England beat Australia in June, and South Africa were defeated by New Zealand in October.[12] Early the following year, a contest between New Zealand and the West Indies finished as the first tied match, and a tiebreak was played for the first time in men's international cricket: the two sides took part in a bowl-out to determine a winner; New Zealand won 3–0.[13]

The game had initially been developed to boost the interest in domestic cricket, and to aid this the international teams were only allowed to host three T20Is each year. The cricket manager for the ICC, David Richardson, also commented that "Part of the success of Twenty20 cricket is making sure it can coexist with Test cricket and one-dayers."[14] Despite this, the first international tournament was held in 2007 in South Africa; the 2007 ICC World Twenty20.[14] That tournament was won by India, who defeated their close rivals Pakistan in the final. Writing for The Guardian, Dilip Premachandran suggested that the competition's success meant that "the format is here to stay".[15] The next tournament was scheduled for 2009, and it was decided that they would take place biannually (more frequently than the 50 over Cricket World Cup, which occurs once every four years).[16] In the opening match of the 2007 World Twenty20, Chris Gayle scored the first century in a T20I, the achievement being reached in the twentieth match of the format.[17]

The 500th T20I match was contested between Ireland and the United Arab Emirates at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi on 16 February 2016.[18]

ICC decided to use Decision Review System (DRS) in Twenty20 Internationals from the end of September 2017,[19][20] with its first use in the India-Australia T20I series in October 2017.[21]

Current international rankings

Current ICC members by membership status:
  Full members (12)
  Associate members with ODI status (8)
  Associate members (85)
  Former members (4)
  Non-members

More information Team, Matches ...
ICC Men's T20I Team Rankings
TeamMatchesPointsRating
 India5214,306275
 England348,904262
 Australia359,044258
 New Zealand5012,348247
 South Africa4811,717244
 Pakistan5713,679240
 West Indies5312,367233
 Bangladesh4710,576225
 Sri Lanka419,053221
 Afghanistan367,935220
 Zimbabwe489,699202
 Ireland275,361199
 United States206,650183
 Netherlands244,311180
 Scotland234,116179
 Namibia335,863178
   Nepal396,928178
 United Arab Emirates549,408174
 Oman386,003158
 Canada263,864149
 Uganda385,478144
 Papua New Guinea141,941139
 Italy151,988133
 Malaysia445,526126
 Hong Kong394,888125
 Spain111,377125
 Kuwait293,585124
 Qatar364,297119
 Bahrain607,120119
 Jersey161,845115
 Bermuda171,924113
 Saudi Arabia262,825109
 Kenya333,443104
 Tanzania302,96799
 Germany191,66187
 Guernsey181,45381
 Cayman Islands241,91580
 Nigeria403,12878
 Portugal181,37476
 Japan312,23472
 Singapore241,68670
 Austria483,37170
 Denmark1175469
 Norway271,64161
 Sweden241,42259
 Argentina1472854
  Switzerland1790853
 Belgium241,25752
 Finland1467849
 Botswana261,24948
 Philippines231,08547
 Malawi361,66746
 Cyprus1882346
 Romania241,07445
 France241,07245
 Ghana1560540
 Thailand321,28740
 Rwanda512,04540
 Bahamas1559940
 Indonesia722,76738
 Cambodia291,10938
 Isle of Man725837
 Czech Republic1243837
 Cook Islands827835
 Eswatini1551434
 Samoa1550734
 Vanuatu929232
 Hungary2370030
 Malta2881929
 Zambia1029029
 Estonia1640926
 Gibraltar1535324
 Mexico2245421
 Belize48221
 Bhutan2651920
 Panama815620
 Luxembourg1625516
 Serbia1927514
 Cameroon44912
 Sierra Leone2124612
 Brazil1315212
 Bulgaria1618311
 Maldives131129
 South Korea11949
 Suriname10828
 Seychelles7467
 Mozambique10657
 China6295
 Turkey8284
 Timor-Leste800
 Mongolia700
 Saint Helena700
 Slovenia1300
 Myanmar2300
 Mali400
 Lesotho1000
 Croatia1900
 Costa Rica1200
Source: ICC Men's T20I Team Rankings, 5 May 2026
See points calculations for more details.
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Teams with T20I status

Permanent T20I status

Prior to 2019, permanent T20I status was limited to the Test-playing nations (the full members of the ICC), which included 12 teams after the promotion of Afghanistan and Ireland to full member status in 2017. In April 2018, the ICC announced that it would grant T20I status to all of its members from 1 January 2019.[22][23][24] Nations that have played T20I cricket are listed below, with the date of their first T20I after gaining permanent T20I status shown in brackets (teams in italics had previously played T20Is with temporary status):

  1.  Australia (17 February 2005)
  2.  New Zealand (17 February 2005)
  3.  England (13 June 2005)
  4.  South Africa (21 October 2005)
  5.  West Indies (16 February 2006)
  6.  Sri Lanka (15 June 2006)
  7.  Pakistan (28 August 2006)
  8.  Bangladesh (28 November 2006)
  9.  Zimbabwe (28 November 2006)
  10.  India (1 December 2006)
  11.  Afghanistan (5 February 2018)
  12.  Ireland (12 June 2018)
  13.  Bahrain (20 January 2019)
  14.  Kuwait (20 January 2019)
  15.  Maldives (20 January 2019)
  16.  Saudi Arabia (20 January 2019)
  17.  Qatar (21 January 2019)
  18.    Nepal (31 January 2019)
  19.  United Arab Emirates (31 January 2019)
  20.  Netherlands (13 February 2019)
  21.  Oman (13 February 2019)
  22.  Scotland (13 February 2019)
  23.  United States (15 March 2019)
  24.  Papua New Guinea (22 March 2019)
  25.  Philippines (22 March 2019)
  26.  Vanuatu (22 March 2019)
  27.  Malta (29 March 2019)
  28.  Spain (29 March 2019)
  29.  Belize (25 April 2019)
  30.  Costa Rica (25 April 2019)
  31.  Mexico (25 April 2019)
  32.  Panama (25 April 2019)
  33.  Belgium (11 May 2019)
  34.  Germany (11 May 2019)
  35.  Botswana (20 May 2019)
  36.  Ghana (20 May 2019)
  37.  Kenya (20 May 2019)
  38.  Namibia (20 May 2019)
  39.  Nigeria (20 May 2019)
  40.  Uganda (20 May 2019)
  41.  Italy (25 May 2019)
  42.  Guernsey (31 May 2019)
  43.  Jersey (31 May 2019)
  44.  Norway (15 June 2019)
  45.  Denmark (16 June 2019)
  46.  Malaysia (24 June 2019)
  47.  Thailand (24 June 2019)
  48.  Samoa (8 July 2019)
  49.  Finland (13 July 2019)
  50.  Singapore (22 July 2019)
  51.  Bermuda (18 August 2019)
  52.  Canada (18 August 2019)
  53.  Cayman Islands (18 August 2019)
  54.  Austria (29 August 2019)
  55.  Luxembourg (29 August 2019)
  56.  Romania (29 August 2019)
  57.  Turkey (29 August 2019)
  58.  Czech Republic (30 August 2019)
  59.  Argentina (3 October 2019)
  60.  Brazil (3 October 2019)
  61.  Chile (3 October 2019)
  62.  Peru (3 October 2019)
  63.  Hong Kong (5 October 2019)
  64.  Bulgaria (14 October 2019)
  65.  Serbia (14 October 2019)
  66.  Greece (15 October 2019)
  67.  Portugal (25 October 2019)
  68.  Gibraltar (26 October 2019)
  69.  Malawi (6 November 2019)
  70.  Mozambique (6 November 2019)
  71.  Bhutan (5 December 2019)
  72.  Iran (23 February 2020)
  73.  Isle of Man (21 August 2020)
  74.  France (5 August 2021)
  75.  Sweden (14 August 2021)
  76.  Rwanda (18 August 2021)
  77.  Hungary (2 September 2021)
  78.  Cyprus (5 October 2021)
  79.  Estonia (5 October 2021)
  80.  Eswatini (16 October 2021)
  81.  Lesotho (16 October 2021)
  82.  Seychelles (16 October 2021)
  83.  Sierra Leone (19 October 2021)
  84.   Switzerland (22 October 2021)
  85.  Tanzania (2 November 2021)
  86.  Cameroon (3 November 2021)
  87.  Bahamas (7 November 2021)
  88.  Israel (28 June 2022)
  89.  Croatia (13 July 2022)
  90.  Slovenia (25 July 2022)
  91.  Cook Islands (9 September 2022)
  92.  Fiji (9 September 2022)
  93.  Indonesia (9 October 2022)
  94.  Japan (9 October 2022)
  95.  South Korea (15 October 2022)
  96.  Mali (17 November 2022)
  97.  Saint Helena (17 November 2022)
  98.  Gambia (1 December 2022)
  99.  Cambodia (4 May 2023)
  100.  China (26 July 2023)
  101.  Myanmar (26 July 2023)
  102.  Mongolia (27 September 2023)
  103.  Ivory Coast (23 November 2024)
  104.  Suriname (6 December 2024)
  105.  Falkland Islands (10 March 2025)
  106.  Turks and Caicos Islands (17 April 2025)
  107.  Timor-Leste (6 November 2025)
  108.  Zambia (4 December 2025)

Temporary T20I status

Between 2005 and 2018, the ICC granted temporary ODI and T20I status to a selection of other teams (known as Associate members). Teams earned this temporary status for a period of four years based on their performance in the quadrennial ICC World Cricket League – or, more specifically, based on the top six finishing positions at the ICC World Cup Qualifier, which is the final event of the World Cricket League.[25] Teams could also earn this status by qualifying for the ICC T20 World Cup.

Twelve nations held this temporary T20I status before gaining permanent T20I status or losing status after underperforming at the World Cup Qualifier or World Twenty20 Qualifier (dates shown are for the first and last matches played while holding temporary T20I status, not when this status was gained, lost or changed to permanent):

The ICC has also given special T20I status to the ICC World XI team for:

Cricket at international multi-sport events

Cricket was played as part of the 1900 Summer Olympics, when England and France contested a two-day match.[28] In 1998, cricket was played as part of the Commonwealth Games, on this occasion in the 50-over format. There was some talk about Twenty20 cricket being part of the 2010 Commonwealth Games, which were held in Delhi, but at the time the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), were not in favour of the short format of the game, and it was not included.[29]

Cricket was played in 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China[30] and 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea.[31] India skipped both times.[32] There was further calls for subsequent Commonwealth Games and Olympic Games. The Commonwealth Games Federation asked the ICC to participate in the 2014 and 2018 Commonwealth Games, but the ICC turned down the invitation.[33] In 2010, the International Olympic Committee recognised the International Cricket Council as a governing body that complied to the requirements of the Olympic charter which in turn meant that cricket could apply to be included in the Olympic Games,[34] but in 2013 the ICC announced that it had no intentions to make such an application, primarily due to opposition from the BCCI. ESPNcricinfo suggested that the opposition might be based on the possible loss of income.[citation needed] In April 2016, ICC chief executive David Richardson said that Twenty20 cricket can have a chance of getting in for the 2024 Summer Games, but there must be collective support shown by the ICC's membership base, in particular from BCCI, in order for there to be a chance of inclusion.[35]

Statistics

Rohit Sharma and Glenn Maxwell are the only players to score 5 T20I tons.

The highest team total in a T20I was made by Zimbabwe versus Gambia when they scored 344/4.[36] The lowest total was recorded in 2024, when Nigeria bowled out Ivory Coast for just 7 runs.[37] The highest successful chase was made in March 2023, when South Africa scored 259 runs to overhaul West Indies's target and win the match.[38]

As of November 2025, Babar Azam has scored the most runs in the format.[39] Aaron Finch has made the highest individual score in T20Is, with his innings of 172 against Zimbabwe in 2018.[40] Afghanistan bowler Rashid Khan holds the records for the most wickets taken in the format.[41]

See also

References

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