Virat Kohli achieves number one rankings
Kohli had entered the tournament 22 points behind number-one ranked AB de Villiers of South Africa (who had been No.1 since 25 February 2017) and 19 points behind Australia’s David Warner. However, following knocks of 81 not out against Pakistan and 76 not out against South Africa, he has leapfrogged de Villiers and Warner into the number-spot.
Kohli, who is ahead of Warner by just one point, had enjoyed just four days at the top in January 2017, but will now be aiming to do better when he faces Bangladesh in the second semi-final at Edgbaston on Thursday.
India’s opener Shikhar Dhawan has continued his love-affair with the ICC Champions Trophy by returning into the top 10. The left-hander has vaulted five places to 10th following scores of 68 against Pakistan, 125 against Sri Lanka and 78 against South Africa.
Dhawan’s rise means his team-mates Rohit Sharma and former captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni have slipped one place each to 13th and 14th, respectively, while Yuvraj Singh has gained six places and is now in 88th spot.
Fast bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar has led the charge of India’s bowlers by vaulting 13 places to share 23rd spot with Afghanistan’s Hamza Hotak. Umesh Yadav has gained two places and is now 41st, while Jasprit Bumrah is 43rd after rising three places.
However, India’s spinners have slipped in the latest rankings with Ravichandran Ashwin dropping two places to 20th and Ravindra Jadeja falling three places to 29th.
England’s impressive form in the ICC Champions Trophy is reflected in the latest player rankings.
Amongst the batsmen, Joe Root has moved up one place to fourth and Ben Stokes has rocketed nine places to a career-high 20th place, whereas amongst the bowlers, Liam Plunkett has jumped seven places to a career-best ninth spot, Adil Rashid has shot up nine places to 11th spot, Mark Wood has risen 35 places to a career-high 39th position and Jake Ball is now ranked 53rd after gaining 25 places.
Eoin Morgan has slipped one place to 18th and Jos Buttler has dropped two places to 19th following Bangladesh opener Tamim Iqbal’s rise from 19th to 17th in the latest rankings.
Apart from Tamim, wicketkeeper-batsman Mushfiqur Rahim has retained his 21st spot, Shakib Al Hasan has moved up one place to 30th and Mahmudullah has climbed six places to 37th position.
In contrast, Bangladesh bowlers have headed in the opposite direction with Shakib plummeting seven places to 16th, Mashrafe Mortaza slipping four places to 18th, Mustafizur Rahman sliding six places to 21st, Rubel Hossain finishing in 60th place after dropping four places and Taskin Ahmed falling one place to 63rd.
Pakistan, which takes on England in the first semi-final in Cardiff on Tuesday, also has something to celebrate in the latest rankings.
Its gutsy wicketkeeper-batsman and captain Sarfraz Ahmed has jumped five places to claim 31st ranking in the batting table, fast bowler Hassan Ali has stormed to a career-best 19th rank after vaulting 16 places, Imad Wasim has gained eight places to occupy 31st spot and Mohammad Amir has earned one spot and is now 37th.
Pakistan’s batsmen slide in the rankings include Babar Azam (eighth, down by one place), Mohammad Hafeez (22nd, down by two places), Azhar Ali (42nd, down by two) and Shoaib Malik (48th, down by one).
World champion Australia’s only consolation in the latest player rankings is that its fast bowler Josh Hazlewood has claimed the coveted number-one position for the first time in his career.
Hazlewood is currently the leading wicket-taker in the tournament with nine wickets in three matches, including six for 52 against New Zealand in a game which was abandoned due to rain.
Hazlewood, who is the first Australia bowler to top the bowling charts since October 2015 when Mitchell Starc peaked to the top, has leapfrogged Imran Tahir, Starc and Kagiso Rabada.
There is no change in the top five of the all-rounders’ list, which is headed by Bangladesh’s Shakib Al Hasan. However, Stokes has gained one spot and is now sixth, while Jadeja has broken into the top 10 in eighth position after rising three places.
Away from the ICC Champions Trophy, West Indies and Afghanistan are involved in a three-match ODI series, which is presently locked at one-all. Following Afghanistan’s shocking win in the opening match, wrist spinner Rashid Khan has rocketed 18 places to seventh place after claiming seven for 18.
The defeat in St Lucia on 9 June has severely dented ninth-ranked the West Indies as it has dropped from 79 points to 77 points in the MRF Tyes ICC ODI Team Rankings. Even if it wins the series-decider on 14 June, it will finish on 78 points, which is not good news considering 30 September is the cut-off date for automatic qualification for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019.
As England plus the next seven highest-ranked sides as on 30 September will qualify directly, the West Indies’ 9 June loss plus Pakistan’s victories against highest-ranked South Africa and Sri Lanka means Pakistan is now ahead of the West Indies by 14 points.
Meanwhile, there is no change in the rankings of the top three sides following 12 matches in the ICC Champions Trophy, though number-one ranked South Africa has dropped three points and second-ranked Australia has conceded one point.
However, England has swapped places with New Zealand and is now ranked fourth, three points ahead of the Black Caps.
In the upcoming matches, India will have a chance to top the table. But for that to happen, it will not only want to face England in the final but also need to retain the title. In this scenario, Kohli’s side will join South Africa on 119 points but will be ranked ahead of the Proteas by a fraction of a point.
The following are various permutations for the upcoming matches in the ICC Champions Trophy:
INDIA
· If loses to Bangladesh in the semi-final, it will finish on 115 points
· If beats Pakistan in the final, it will finish second on 119 points
· If loses to Pakistan in the final, it will finish on 116 points
· If beats England in the final, it will finish on top of the table on 119 points
· If loses to England in the final, it will finish on 116 points
ENGLAND
· If loses to Pakistan in the semi-final, it will finish on 113 points
· If beats Bangladesh in the final, it will finish on 116 points
· If loses to Bangladesh in the final, it will finish on 114 points
· If beats India in the final, it will finish on 116 points
· If loses to India in the final, it will finish on 114 points
BANGLADESH
· If loses to India in the semi-final, it will finish on 94 points
· If beats England in the final, it will finish on 99 points
· If loses to England in the final, it will finish on 96 points
· If beats Pakistan in the final, it will finish on 98 points
· If loses to Pakistan in the final, it will finish on 95 points
PAKISTAN
· If loses to England in the semi-final, it will finish on 90 points
· If beats India in the final, it will finish on 95 points
· If loses to India in the final, it will finish on 92 points
· If beats Bangladesh in the final, it will finish on 94 points
· If loses to Bangladesh in the final, it will finish on 92 points
Upcoming matches:
14 June – England v Pakistan, Cardiff
14 June – West Indies v Afghanistan, St Lucia
15 June – Bangladesh v India, Edgbaston
18 June – ICC Champions Trophy final, The Oval
MRF Tyres ICC ODI Team Rankings (as on 13 June, after group stage matches in the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 and second ODI between the West Indies and Afghanistan)
Rank Team Points
1 South Africa 119 (-3)
2 Australia 117 (-1)
3 India 117 (-)
4 England 114 (+2)
5 New Zealand 111 (-3)
6 Bangladesh 95 (+2)
7 Sri Lanka 93 (-)
8 Pakistan 91 (+3)
9 West Indies 77 (-2)
10 Afghanistan 54 (+2)
11 Zimbabwe 46
12 Ireland 41
(Developed by David Kendix)
MRF Tyres ICC ODI Player Rankings (as on 13 June, after group stage matches in the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 and second ODI between the West Indies and Afghanistan)
Top 30 batsmen
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Avge Highest Rating
1 (+2) Virat Kohli Ind 862 53.82 886 v Ban at Fatullah 2014
2 ( - ) David Warner Aus 861 44.72 880 v Pak at Adelaide 2017
3 (-2) AB de Villiers SA 847 53.55 902 v NZ at Auckland 2015
4 (+1) Joe Root Eng 798 49.42 806 v NZ at Cardiff 2017
5 (+4) Kane Williamson NZ 779 46.98 798 v SA at Centurion 2015
6 (-2) Quinton de Kock SA 769 43.44 803 v NZ at Wellington 2017
7 (-1) Faf du Plessis SA 768 43.41 791 v SL at Cape Town 2017
8 (-1) Babar Azam Pak 763* 52.73 773 v SA at Edgbaston 2017
9 (-2) Martin Guptill NZ 749 43.30 789 v SA at Hamilton 2017
10 (+5) Shikhar Dhawan Ind 746 44.81 794 v SA at Melbourne 2015
11 (-1) Hashim Amla SA 741 50.25 901 v Eng at Trent Bridge 2012
12 (-1) Steve Smith Aus 740 44.26 752 v Pak at Sydney 2017
13 (-1) Rohit Sharma Ind 728 41.82 761 v Aus at Sydney 2016
14 (-1) MS Dhoni Ind 716 51.02 836 v Aus at Delhi 2009
15 (-1) Ross Taylor NZ 707 44.12 743 v Zim at Harare 2015
16 ( - ) Alex Hales Eng 688 38.67 705 v NZ at Cardiff 2017
17 (+2) Tamim Iqbal Ban 678 34.17 688 v Aus at The Oval 2017
18 (-1) Eoin Morgan Eng 676 38.77 690 v Aus at The Oval 2010
19 (-2) Jos Buttler Eng 665 37.78 723 v Ban at Mirpur 2016
20 (+9) Ben Stokes Eng 636! 33.77 636 v Aus at Edgbaston 2017
21 ( - ) Mushfiqur Rahim Ban 627 31.88 671 v Zim at Mirpur 2015
22= ( - ) George Bailey Aus 620 40.58 867 v SA at Harare 2014
(-2) M. Hafeez Pak 620 32.51 665 v Ban at Mirpur 2014
24 (-1) Glenn Maxwell Aus 619 32.95 735 v Ind at Canberra 2016
25 (-1) Aaron Finch Aus 617 34.74 743 v Eng at Melbourne 2015
26 ( - ) Angelo Mathews SL 613 40.55 707 v Eng at Colombo (RPS) 2014
27 (+8) Kusal Mendis SL 610*! 37.38 610 v Pak at Cardiff 2017
28 (-2) David Miller SA 609 39.27 632 v Ban at Mirpur 2015
29 (+8) Travis Head Aus 606*! 40.75 606 v Eng at Edgbaston 2017
30 (+1) Shakib Al Hasan Ban 603 34.98 683 v Pak at Mirpur 2012
Top 30 bowlers
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Avge Eco. Highest Rating
1 (+4) Josh Hazlewood Aus 732! 23.85 4.69 732 v Eng at Edgbaston 2017
2 ( - ) Imran Tahir SA 718 23.87 4.66 786 v SL at Johannesburg 2017
3 ( - ) Mitchell Starc Aus 701 20.13 4.81 783 v NZ at Melbourne 2015
4 (-3) Kagiso Rabada SA 685 26.30 5.11 724 v Eng at Lord's 2017
5 (-1) Sunil Narine WI 683 26.46 4.12 791 v SL at Jamaica 2013
6 ( - ) Trent Boult NZ 665 25.48 5.00 766 v Ind at Delhi 2016
7 (+18) Rashid Khan Afg 647*! 14.74 3.97 647 v WI at St Lucia 2017
8 (-1) Chris Woakes Eng 630 31.60 5.58 651 v SA at Headingley 2017
9 (+7) Liam Plunkett Eng 624* 30.15 5.75 634 v NZ at Cardiff 2017
10 (-2) Mohammad Nabi Afg 618 32.74 4.29 653 v Zim at Harare 2017
11 (+9) Adil Rashid Eng 614 32.43 5.61 655 v Ban at Chittagong 2016
12 (-2) Mitchell Santner NZ 610* 33.77 4.99 617 v Ban at Dublin 2017
13= (-2) Matt Henry NZ 606 25.26 5.62 675 v Aus at Hamilton 2016
(-2) Akshar Patel Ind 606* 30.20 4.38 624 v NZ at Visakhapatnam 2016
15 (-2) Amit Mishra Ind 600* 23.60 4.72 618 v NZ at Visakhapatnam 2016
16 (-7) Shakib Al Hasan Ban 599 29.25 4.40 717 v Zim at Chittagong 2009
17 (+4) Morne Morkel SA 596 24.48 4.94 717 v SL at East London 2012
18 (-4) M. Mortaza Ban 591 30.54 4.75 653 v Zim at Mirpur 2009
19 (+16) Hasan Ali Pak 589*! 24.94 5.70 589 v SL at Cardiff 2017
20 (-2) R. Ashwin Ind 572 32.45 4.91 691 v SL at Hambantota 2012
21= (-3) Dale Steyn SA 570 26.62 4.94 746 v Ind at Durban 2013
(-6) M. Rahman Ban 570* 18.59 4.76 600 v NZ at Dublin 2017
23= (+4) Hamza Hotak Afg 567* 25.40 3.92 571 v Ire at Greater Noida 2017
(+13) B. Kumar Ind 567 38.72 4.93 657 v WI at Dharamsala 2014
25= (-8) Jason Holder WI 566 32.96 5.43 605 v SL at Bulawayo 2016
(-4) Mohammad Irfan Pak 566 30.71 4.91 641 v UAE at Napier 2015
27 (-4) James Faulkner Aus 564 30.08 5.50 594 v Pak at Melbourne 2017
28 (+1) Pat Cummins Aus 563* 27.30 5.54 575 v Ban at The Oval 2017
29 (-3) Ravindra Jadeja Ind 561 34.87 4.89 738 v Zim at Bulawayo 2013
30 (-6) Suranga Lakmal SL 551 30.47 5.50 563 v Ban at Colombo (SSC) 2017
Top 10 all-rounders
Rank (+/-) Player Team Points Highest Rating
1 ( - ) Shakib Al Hasan Ban 361 453 v Zim at Chittagong 2009
2 ( - ) M Hafeez Pak 339 438 v Ind at Kolkata 2013
3 ( - ) Mohammad Nabi Afg 329 349 v Ire at Greater Noida 2017
4 ( - ) Angelo Mathews SL 306 427 v Eng at Colombo (RPS) 2014
5 ( - ) James Faulkner Aus 299 361 v NZ at Melbourne 2015
6 (+1) Ben Stokes Eng 288! 288 v Aus at Edgbaston 2017
7 (-1) Mitchell Marsh Aus 273 /* 322 v NZ at Canberra 2016
8 (+3) Ravindra Jadeja Ind 254 378 v Eng at Edgbaston 2013
9 ( - ) Chris Woakes Eng 253 267 v SA at Headingley 2017
10 (-2) Jason Holder WI 252 269 v Pak at Guyana 2017
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