Lanka, India to co-host ICC Men’s T20 World Cup

The Board of International Cricket Council (ICC) has green-lighted the qualification process for the 2026 Men’s T20 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by Sri Lanka and India.

Approval was given at the Board meeting in Dubai earlier this week.

ICC said the future structure and context of international bilateral cricket was top of the agenda of this meeting.

The 10th edition of the event will feature 12 automatic qualifiers. These will include the joint hosts and the top 8 teams from the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024.

Being the hosts, India and Sri Lanka will directly qualify for the tournament, while teams finishing in top 8 spots in the ICC T20 World Cup 2024 will also qualify for the next edition.

If India and Sri Lanka finish in the top 8, six other teams will qualify for the T20 World Cup 2026. If India and Sri Lanka finish at a position less than 8th in the 2024 edition, they will qualify along with teams finishing in the top eight positions.

Apart from these eight and the hosts, four other teams will qualify for the 2026 edition of the event based on ICC T20I team rankings as of June 30, The remaining eight slots will be filled through Regional Qualifiers.

The event will be a 20-team affair, similar to that of the 9th edition of the tournament, which will be hosted by the West Indies and the United States of America (USA) from 02 – 29 June 2024.

The 2024 prestigious tournament will set a new record in cricket as 20 teams will participate in an international event for the first time in cricket history. Therefore, the apex cricket body is also interested in keeping the tournament a 20-team event in 2026.

The ICC has also confirmed that the upcoming ICC T20 World Cup 2024 will have reserve days scheduled for the semi-finals and finals.

The apex cricket body also added that a team batting second must bowl a minimum of five overs to be considered for a result in the group and the Super Eight stages. However, in knockout matches, a minimum of 10 overs must be bowled in the second innings to constitute a game.