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Stop clock will become a permanent fixture in all ODIs and T20Is: ICC

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Last updated on 15 Mar 2024 | 11:16 AM
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Stop clock will become a permanent fixture in all ODIs and T20Is: ICC

The ICC Board also approved the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026, which will be held in India and Sri Lanka, will see 12 automatic qualifiers

The International Cricket Council (ICC) Board meeting in Dubai this week confirmed that the stop clock will become a permanent fixture in all ODIs and T20Is. The results of the stop clock trial were presented to the Chief Executives’ Committee, which demonstrated that around 20 minutes per ODI match had been saved in time.

The CEC approved that the stop clock be introduced as a mandatory playing condition in all men’s ODI and T20I matches between Full Members from June 1, including the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024.

Crucially, the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup will have reserve days scheduled for the semi-finals and final. Also, in the group stage and Super Eight series, a minimum of five overs have to be bowled to the team batting second to constitute a game, while in the knock-out stages, a minimum of ten overs will need to be bowled. The ICC Board also approved the qualification process for the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026. The event, which will be held in India and Sri Lanka, will see 12 automatic qualifiers. 

These will include the joint hosts along with the top eight teams from the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024, with the remaining spots (between 2-4 depending on host finishing positions) to be filled from the next highest-ranked teams on the ICC Men’s T20I rankings table as at June 30, 2024. The remaining eight teams will be identified through Regional Qualifiers.

The Board and the Chief Executives’ Committee both had extensive discussions on the future structure of the game, considering issues such as greater context for international white-ball matches and the feasibility of scheduling windows as well as the principles of the commercial arrangements underpinning the FTP.

ICC Chair Greg Barclay said, “The ICC Board and Committee meetings are the forum for us to discuss the long-term future of the international game and at this set of meetings we spent a number of hours constructively considering the structure of the global cricket calendar. Whilst there are no easy answers, there is a commitment to exploring how context can be delivered and further options will be considered at upcoming meetings.”

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