Pakistan eye Ireland and England series for automatic World Cup qualification
Up for grabs for ninth-ranked Pakistan are invaluable rankings points, which can potentially go a long way in helping it qualify automatically for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019, while Ireland can improve its ranking of 12th and England can consolidate its fifth position.
The 1992 world champions are presently languishing on 87 points – seven points behind eighth-ranked West Indies.
Host England and the seven highest-ranked sides on the MRF Tyres ICC ODI Team Rankings as on Sept 30, 2017, will qualify directly for the ICC’s pinnacle 50-over tournament.
This means Pakistan finds itself in a situation where it cannot afford any further slip-ups if it is keen to avoid having to play in the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2018.
The four bottom-ranked sides on the ODI table will be joined by six teams from the ICC World Cricket League Championship and ICC World Cricket League in the 10-team qualifying competition.
The top two side will complete the 10-team line-up for the event to be staged from May 30 to July 15, 2019.
In the forthcoming matches, Pakistan not only has a chance to close the gap with the West Indies but it can move ahead of the two-time former world champion by a fraction of a point.
However, to make this happen, it will have to win every match against Ireland and England.
The incentive for 12th-ranked Ireland in the upcoming series is massive as well.
If it wins both the matches against Pakistan, it will leapfrog Zimbabwe and Afghanistan into 10th position on 53 points, while Pakistan will plummet to 83 points.
A 1-all draw will mean Ireland will move ahead of Zimbabwe in 11th position on 48 points, while Pakistan will drop to 85 points.
The only way Pakistan can stay on 87 points is by winning both the matches and this is because it enters the series leading Ireland by 44 points, and because the rankings are weighted to reflect this difference, it is expected to win the series convincingly.
If England beats Pakistan and Sri Lanka defeats Australia by identical 5-0 margins, then England will finish on 109 points, Sri Lanka on 108 points while Australia will retain its number-one position though its 10-point advantage over second-ranked New Zealand will be reduced to just two points.
Meanwhile, England’s Joe Root and Australia’s Mitchell Starc will start as the highest-ranked batsman and bowler, respectively, in the upcoming matches.
Root is in seventh position at 741 points in a list which is headed by AB de Villiers of South Africa with 887 points.
Tillakaratne Dilshan of Sri Lanka (10th), Australia’s David Warner (12th), Pakistan’s Mohammad Hafeez (23rd) and Ireland’s Ed Joyce (24th) are expected to start as their countries’ highest-ranked batsmen.
Apart from Starc, Australia also boasts Josh Hazlewood inside the top 20 while 15th-ranked Moeen Ali is England’s highest-ranked bowler to challenge Pakistan, which boasts Wahab Riaz and Yasir Shah just outside the top 50 in 53rd and 57th positions respectively.
The bowlers’ list is headed by the West Indies’ Sunil Narine, with Trent Boult of New Zealand second and Shakib Al Hasan of Bangladesh third.
MRF Tyres ICC ODI Team Rankings (as on Aug 16, before Ireland v Pakistan, Sri Lanka v Australia and England v Pakistan series)
Rank Team Points
1 Australia 123
2 New Zealand 113
3 India 110
4 South Africa 110
5 England 106
6 Sri Lanka 102
7 Bangladesh 98
8 West Indies 94
9 Pakistan 87
10 Afghanistan 49
11 Zimbabwe 46
12 Ireland 43
(Developed by David Kendix)
MRF Tyres ICC ODI Player Rankings (as on Aug 17, before Ireland-Pakistan, Sri Lanka-Australia and England-Pakistan series)
Batsmen (top 20)
Rank Player Team Pts Ave Highest Rating
1 AB de Villiers SA 887 53.63 902 v NZ at Auckland 2015
2 Virat Kohli Ind 813 51.51 886 v Ban at Fatullah 2014
3 Hashim Amla SA 778 51.97 901 v Eng at Trent Bridge 2012
4 Kane Williamson NZ 752 47.00 798 v SA at Centurion 2015
5 Martin Guptill NZ 751! 43.25 751 v Aus at Hamilton 2016
6 Rohit Sharma Ind 750 42.08 761 v Aus at Sydney 2016
7 Joe Root Eng 741 44.96 743 v SA at Johannesburg 2016
8 Shikhar Dhawan Ind 737 43.97 794 v SA at Melbourne 2015
9 Quinton de Kock SA 735 41.83 789 v Eng at Centurion 2016
10 T. Dilshan SL 734 39.44 802 v Sco at Hobart 2015
11 Faf du Plessis SA 716 40.56 730 v Aus at Barbados 2016
12 David Warner Aus 712 39.15 726 v SA at St Kitts 2016
13 MS Dhoni Ind 706 51.25 836 v Aus at Delhi 2009
14 Ross Taylor NZ 702 43.90 743 v Zim at Harare 2015
15 Jos Buttler Eng 695 37.32 706 v SA at Port Elizabeth 2016
16 Steve Smith Aus 694 41.15 709 v Ind at Canberra 2016
17 Aaron Finch Aus 679 37.41 743 v Eng at Melbourne 2015
18= Mushfiqur Rahim Ban 661 31.61 671 v Zim at Mirpur 2015
Angelo Mathews SL 661 40.67 707 v Eng at Colombo (RPS) 2014
Bowlers (top 20)
Rank Player Team Pts Avge Highest Rating
1 Sunil Narine WI 759 25.74 4.07 791 v SL at Jamaica 2013
2 Trent Boult NZ 731* 22.96 4.81 745 v Aus at Auckland 2016
3 Shakib Al Hasan Ban 699 27.89 4.30 717 v Zim at Chittagong 2009
4 Imran Tahir SA 693 23.13 4.64 735 v SL at Sydney 2015
5 Mitchell Starc Aus 681 19.79 4.82 783 v NZ at Melbourne 2015
6 Matt Henry NZ 675*! 22.17 5.42 675 v Aus at Hamilton 2016
7= Dale Steyn SA 645 25.93 4.86 746 v Ind at Durban 2013
Kagiso Rabada SA 645*! 21.45 4.78 645 v WI at Barbados 2016
9 Morne Morkel SA 628 24.60 4.95 717 v SL at East London 2012
10 Mohammad Irfan Pak 616 31.14 4.91 641 v UAE at Napier 2015
11 R. Ashwin Ind 606 31.73 4.85 691 v SL at Hambantota 2012
12 Akshar Patel Ind 603*! 28.09 4.40 603 v Zim at Harare 2016
13 Josh Hazlewood Aus 593*! 23.18 4.57 593 v WI at Barbados 2016
14 Moeen Ali Eng 588 41.15 5.02 610 v SA at Cape Town 2016
15 M. Mortaza Ban 579 30.76 4.73 653 v Zim at Mirpur 2009
16 Adil Rashid Eng 577*! 43.24 5.66 577 v SL at Cardiff 2016
17 M. Hafeez Pak 568 34.86 4.10 769 v Ind at Kolkata 2013
18 Jason Holder WI 565 32.70 5.58 577 v Aus at St Kitts 2016
19 Steven Finn Eng 561 28.96 5.09 755 v NZ at Auckland 2013
20 B. Kumar Ind 560 38.30 4.89 657 v WI at Dharamsala 2014
All-rounders (top five)
Rank Player Team Pts Highest Rating
1 Shakib Al Hasan Ban 416 453 v Zim at Chittagong 2009
2 M. Hafeez Pak 363 438 v Ind at Kolkata 2013
3 Angelo Mathews SL 344 427 v Eng at Colombo (RPS) 2014
4 T. Dilshan SL 325 415 v Sco at Hobart 2015
5 James Faulkner Aus 315 361 v NZ at Melbourne 2015
*indicates provisional rating; a batsman qualifies for a full rating after a minimum of 40 started innings; a bowler qualifies for a full rating after he has conceded 1,500 runs.
!indicates career-highest rating
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