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International Cricket Council

The International Cricket Council (ICC) is the global governing body of cricket. It was founded as the Imperial Cricket Conference in 1909 by representatives from Australia, England and South Africa. It was renamed as the International Cricket Conference in 1965, and took up its current name in 1987. The ICC has its headquarters in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

International Cricket Council

Current ICC Members - Red represents Full members
AbbreviationICC
PredecessorImperial Cricket Conference (1909–1965)
International Cricket Conference (1965–1989)
Formation15 June 1909; 113 years ago (1909-06-15)
TypeFederation of national associations
Headquarters Dubai, United Arab Emirates (2005–present)
London, England (1909–2005)[1]
Membership
108* members
Official languages
English
Greg Barclay
CEO
Geoff Allardice[2]
General Manager
Wasim Khan
Revenue (2020[3])
US$40.7 million
WebsiteICC-Cricket.com

The ICC has 108 member nations currently: 12 Full Members that play Test matches, and 96 Associate Members.[4] The ICC is responsible for the organisation and governance of cricket's major international tournaments, most notably the Cricket World Cup and the T20 World Cup. It also appoints the umpires and referees that officiate at all sanctioned Test matches, One Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals. It promulgates the ICC Code of Conduct, which sets professional standards of discipline for international cricket,[5] and also co-ordinates action against corruption and match-fixing through its Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU).

The ICC does not control bilateral fixtures between member countries (which include all Test matches), and neither does it govern domestic cricket within member countries. It does not make or alter the laws of the game, which have remained under the governance of the Marylebone Cricket Club since 1788.[6]

The Chairman heads the board of directors and on 26 June 2014, Narayanaswami Srinivasan, the former president of BCCI, was announced as the first chairman of the council.[7] The role of ICC president has become a largely honorary position since the establishment of the chairman role and other changes were made to the ICC constitution in 2014. It has been claimed that the 2014 changes have handed control to the 'Big Three' nations of England, India and Australia.[8] The last ICC president was Zaheer Abbas,[9] who was appointed in June 2015 following the resignation of Mustafa Kamal in April 2015. When the post of ICC president was abolished in April 2016, Shashank Manohar, who replaced Srinivasan in October 2015, became the first independent elected chairman of the ICC.[10]

History

1909–1963 – Imperial Cricket Conference

On 30 November 1907, Abe Bailey, the President of South African Cricket Association, wrote a letter to the Marylebone Cricket Club's (MCC, England) secretary, Francis Lacey. Bailey suggested the formation of an 'Imperial Cricket Board'. In the letter, he suggested that the board would be responsible for formulation of rules and regulations which will govern the international matches between the three members: Australia, England and South Africa. Bailey, wanted to host a Triangular Test series between the participant countries in South Africa. Australia rejected the offer. However, Bailey did not lose hope. He saw an opportunity of getting the three members together during the Australia's tour of England in 1909. After continued lobbying and efforts, Bailey was successful.[11]

On 15 June 1909, representatives from England, Australia and South Africa met at Lord's and founded the Imperial Cricket Conference. A month later, a second meeting between the three members was held. The rules were agreed amongst the nations, and the first ever Tri-Test series was decided to be held in England in 1912.[11]

In 1926, West Indies, New Zealand and India were elected as Full Members, doubling the number of Test-playing nations to six. After the formation of Pakistan in 1947, it was given Test status in 1952, becoming the seventh Test-playing nation. In May 1961 South Africa left the Commonwealth and therefore lost membership.[11]

1964–1988 – International Cricket Conference

In 1964, the ICC agreed upon including the non-Test playing countries. The following year, the ICC changed its name to the International Cricket Conference. The US, Ceylon and Fiji were admitted as Associates, a new class of member.[12]

In 1968, Denmark, Bermuda, Netherlands, and East Africa were admitted as Associates, while South Africa had still not applied to rejoin the ICC.

In 1969, the basic rules of ICC were amended.

At the 1971 meeting, the idea of organizing a World Cup was introduced. At the 1973 meeting, it was decided that a World Cup would be played in 1975 in England. The six Test playing nations and East Africa and Sri Lanka were invited to take part.[12]

New members were added frequently during this period:

In 1974, Israel and Singapore were admitted as Associates.

In 1976, West Africa was admitted as an Associate.

In 1977, Bangladesh was admitted as an Associate.

In 1978, Papua-New Guinea was admitted as an Associate. South Africa applied to rejoin, but their application was rejected.

In 1981, Sri Lanka was promoted to a Full Member, and they played their first Test in 1982.

In 1984, a third class of membership (Affiliate) was introduced. Italy was the first such member, followed by Switzerland in 1985. In 1987, Bahamas and France were admitted, followed by Nepal in 1988.

1989–present – International Cricket Council

At the July 1989 meeting, the ICC renamed itself as the International Cricket Council, and the tradition of the MCC President automatically becoming the Chairman of ICC was abolished.[13]

In 1990, UAE joined as an Associate.

In 1991, for the first time in ICC history, the meeting was held away from England, in Melbourne. South Africa was re-elected as a Full Member of the ICC in July, following the end of apartheid.

In 1992, Zimbabwe was admitted as the ninth Full Member. Namibia joined as an Associate member. Austria, Belgium, Brunei and Spain joined as Affiliates.

In 1993, the position of Chief Executive of ICC was created; David Richards of the Australian Cricket Board was the first person appointed to the position. In July, Sir Clyde Walcott, from Barbados, was elected as the first non-British Chairman. The emergence of new technology saw the introduction of a third umpire who was equipped with video playback facilities.

By 1995, TV replays were made available for run-outs and stumpings in Test matches, with the third umpire required to signal out or not out with red and green lights respectively. The following year, the cameras were used to determine if the ball had crossed the boundary, and in 1997 decisions on the cleanness of catches could be referred to the third umpire. This year also saw the introduction of the Duckworth-Lewis method of adjusting targets in rain-affected ODI matches.

In 2000, Bangladesh were admitted as the tenth Full Member of the International Cricket Council.

In 2005, ICC moved to its new headquarters in Dubai.

In 2017, Afghanistan and Ireland were admitted as the eleventh and twelfth Full Members of the International Cricket Council after a unanimous vote at the ICC Full Council meeting at The Oval. Affiliate Membership was also abolished, with all existing Affiliate Members becoming Associate Members.

In 2018, all Women's T20 matches were elevated to Women's Twenty20 International status.

In July 2022, Cambodia, Cote D'Ivoire, and Uzbekistan were granted associate member status by ICC.[14][15]

Members

 
Current ICC Members by Membership status:
  Full Members
  Associate Members with ODI status
  Associate Members
  Former or suspended Members
  Non-Members

Full Members – The twelve governing bodies of teams that have full voting rights within the International Cricket Council and play official Test matches.

Associate Members – The 96 governing bodies in countries where cricket is firmly established and organised, but have not been granted Full Membership yet.

Location

 
The ICC's offices in Dubai

From its formation, the ICC had Lord's Cricket Ground as its home, and from 1993 had its offices in the "Clock Tower" building at the nursery end of the ground. The independent ICC was funded initially by commercial exploitation of the rights to the World Cup of One Day International cricket. As not all Member countries had double-tax agreements with the United Kingdom, it was necessary to protect cricket's revenues by creating a company, ICC Development (International) Pvt. Ltd – known as IDI, outside the UK. This was established in January 1994 and was based in Monaco.[citations needed]

For the remainder of the nineties, the administration of IDI was a modest affair. But with the negotiation of a bundle of rights to all ICC events from 2001 to 2008, revenues available to International cricket and the ICC member countries rose substantially. This led to a growth in the number of commercial staff employed by IDI in Monaco. It also had the disadvantage that the council's cricket administrators, who remained at Lord's, were separated from their commercial colleagues in Monaco. The Council decided to seek ways of bringing all of their staff together in one office while protecting their commercial income from tax.[citations needed]

The option of staying at Lord's was investigated and a request was made, through Sport England, to the British Government to allow the ICC to have all its personnel (including those working on commercial matters) in London – but be given special exemption from paying UK corporation tax on its commercial income. The British Government was unwilling to create a precedent and would not agree to this request. As a consequence, the ICC examined other locations and eventually settled on the emirate of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. ICC is registered in British Virgin Islands. In August 2005, the ICC moved its offices to Dubai, and subsequently closed its offices at Lord's and Monaco. The move to Dubai was made after an 11–1 vote by the ICC's executive board in favour.[16]

While the principal driver of the ICC's move to Dubai was the wish to bring its main employees together in one tax-efficient location, a secondary reason was the wish to move offices closer to the increasingly important new centres of cricketing power in South Asia. Lord's had been a logical venue when the ICC had been administered by the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) (a situation that lasted until 1993). But the growing power of India and Pakistan in world cricket had made the continued control of international cricket by a British private members club (the MCC) anachronistic and unsustainable. A direct consequence of the changes and reforms instituted in 1993 was eventually to be the move away from Lord's to a more neutral venue.[17]

Income generation

 
Variant ICC Logo with old motto

The ICC generates income from the tournaments it organises, primarily the Cricket World Cup, and it distributes the majority of that income to its members. Sponsorship and television rights of the World Cup brought in over US$1.6 billion between 2007 and 2015, by far the ICC's main source of income.[18][19] In the nine-month accounting period to 31 December 2007 the ICC had operating income of $12.66 million, mainly from member subscriptions and sponsorship. In contrast, event income was US$285.87 million, including $239 million from the 2007 World Cup. There was also investment income of $6.695 million in the period.[needs update]

The ICC has no income streams from the bilateral international cricket matches (Test matches, One Day International and Twenty20 Internationals), that account for the great majority of the international playing schedule, as they are owned and run by its members. It has sought to create other new events to augment its World Cup revenues. These include the ICC Champions Trophy and the ICC Super Series played in Australia in 2005. However, these events have not been as successful as the ICC hoped. The Super Series was widely seen as a failure and is not expected to be repeated, and India called for the Champions Trophy to be scrapped in 2006.[20] The Champions Trophy 2004 event was referred to in Wisden 2005 by the editor as a "turkey of a tournament" and a "fiasco"; although the 2006 edition was seen as a greater success due to a new format.[21][22]

The ICC World Twenty20, first played in 2007, was a success. The ICC's current plan is to have an international tournament every year, with a Twenty20 World Cup played in even number years, the World Cup continuing to be held the year before the Olympic Games, and the ICC Champions Trophy in the remaining year of the cycle. This cycle began in 2010, one year after the 2009 edition.

Rules and regulation

The International Cricket Council oversees playing conditions, bowling reviews, and other ICC regulations. The ICC does not have copyright to the Laws of Cricket: only the MCC may change the Laws, though this is usually done in consultation with the game's global governing body.[citation needed] The ICC maintains a set of playing conditions for international cricket which make slight amendments to the Laws. They also have a "Code of Conduct" to which teams and players in international matches are required to adhere. Where breaches of this code occur the ICC can apply sanctions, usually fines. In 2008, the ICC imposed 19 penalties on players.[citations needed]

Umpires and referees

The ICC appoints international umpires and match referees who officiate at all sanctioned Test matches, One-Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals. The ICC operates three panels of umpires: the Elite Panel, the International Panel, and the Associates and Affiliates Panel.

As of March 2012, the Elite Panel included twelve umpires. In theory, two umpires from the Elite Panel officiate at every Test match, while one Elite Panel umpire stands in ODI matches together with an umpire from the International Panel. In practice, members of the International Panel stand in occasional Test matches, as this is viewed as a good opportunity to see whether they can cope at the Test level, and whether they should be elevated to the Elite Panel. Members of the Elite Panel are full-time employees of the ICC, although they do still, very occasionally, umpire first-class cricket in their country of residence. The average annual officiating schedule for Elite Umpires is 8–10 Test matches and 10–15 ODIs, a potential on-field workload of 75 days per year, plus travel and preparation time.[23]

The International Panel is made up of officials nominated from each of the ten Test-playing cricket boards. The Panel Members officiate in ODI matches in their home country, and assist the Elite Panel at peak times in the cricket calendar when they can be appointed to overseas ODI and Test matches. International Panel members also undertake overseas umpiring assignments such as the ICC Under 19 Cricket World Cup to improve their knowledge and understanding of overseas conditions, and help them prepare for possible promotion to the Elite Panel. Some of these umpires also officiate in the Cricket World Cup. Each of the Test cricket boards nominates a "third umpire" who can be called upon to review certain on-field decisions through instant television replays. All third umpires are first-class umpires in their own country, and the role is seen as a step onto the International Panel, and then the Elite Panel.[24]

The inaugural ICC Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel was formed in June 2006. It superseded the ICC Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel, created in 2005, and serves as the pinnacle for umpires from non-Test playing Members, with selection achieved through each of the five ICC Development Program Regional Umpires Panels.

Members of the Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel are eligible for appointments to ODIs involving ICC Associate Members, ICC Intercontinental Cup matches and other Associate and Affiliate tournaments. High-performing umpires may also be considered for other ICC events, including the ICC U/19 Cricket World Cup, and could also be invited to be involved in the ICC Champions Trophy and ICC Cricket World Cup.[25]

There is also an Elite Panel of ICC Referees who act as the independent representative of the ICC at all Test and ODI matches. As of January 2009, it had 6 members, all highly experienced former international cricketers. The Referees do not have the power to report players or officials (which has to be done by the umpires), but they are responsible for conducting hearings under the ICC Code of Conduct and imposing penalties as required at matches, ranging from an official reprimand to a lifetime ban from cricket. Decisions can be appealed, but the original decision is upheld in most cases.

The Council failed to achieve consensus among the cricket-playing nations – as of June 2012 – on the universal application of an Umpire's Decision Review System, due to opposition by BCCI. It will continue to be applied subject to mutual agreement of the playing countries.[26] In July 2012, ICC decided to send a delegation to show the ball tracking research done by Dr Ed Rosten, an expert on computer vision and technology, to BCCI to remove the scepticism about the use of DRS technology.[27][28]

Regional bodies

These regional bodies aim to organise, promote and develop the game of cricket:

Two further regional bodies were disestablished following the creation of the African Cricket Association:

Rankings, Competitions and awards

Rankings

The ICC publishes team rankings for all three formats of the game and updates the same periodically.

The ICC Player Rankings are a widely followed system of rankings for international cricketers based on their recent performances.

International Tournaments

Tournaments

The ICC organizes various international Test, One-Day and Twenty20 cricket competitions.

The ICC in association with Commonwealth Games Federation and International Olympic Committee also conducts Twenty20 Cricket Tournament for Women in Commonwealth Games.

Qualifiers

The ICC organizes qualifying tournaments for various international main events for lower tanked teams mostly including the associate members.

Awards

The ICC has instituted the ICC Awards to recognize and honor the best international cricket players of the previous 12 months. The inaugural ICC Awards ceremony was held on 7 September 2004, in London.[29] In 2020, ICC announced a special one-off edition, the ICC Awards of the Decade to honor the best performers and performances in the last 10 years.[30]

Anti-corruption and security

The ICC has also had to deal with drugs and bribery scandals involving top cricketers. Following the corruption scandals by cricketers connected with the legal and illegal bookmaking markets, the ICC set up an Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU) in 2000 under the retired Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police, Lord Condon. Among the corruption on which they have reported was that of former South African captain Hansie Cronje who had accepted substantial sums of money from an Indian bookmaker for under-performing or ensuring that certain matches had a pre-determined result. Similarly, the former Indian captain Mohammad Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja were investigated, found guilty of match-fixing, and banned from playing cricket (for life and for five years, respectively). The ACSU continues to monitor and investigate any reports of corruption in cricket and protocols have been introduced, which for example prohibit the use of mobile telephones in dressing rooms.

Prior to the 2007 Cricket World Cup ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed warned against any corruption and said that the ICC would be vigilant and intolerant against it.[31]

Following a scandal that occurred during the 2010 Pakistan tour of England, 3 Pakistani players, Mohammad Amir, Mohammad Asif and Salman Butt were found to be guilty of spot-fixing, and were banned for 5 years, 7 years and 10 years respectively. On 3 November 2011, jail terms were handed down of 30 months for Butt, one year for Asif, six months for Amir and two years eight months for Majeed, the sports agent that facilitated the bribes.[32][33][34][35]

In 2019, an investigation by Aljazeera revealed match-fixing in Sri-Lanka, India, England, Australia and other cricket playing nations.[36] The ICC launched an investigation corcerning the report.

Global Cricket Academy

The ICC Global Cricket Academy (GCA) is located at Dubai Sports City in the United Arab Emirates. The GCA's facilities include two ovals, each with 10 turf pitches, outdoor turf and synthetic practice facilities, indoor practice facilities including hawk eye technology and a cricket-specific gymnasium. Rod Marsh has been appointed as the academy's Director of Coaching. The opening, originally planned for 2008, took place in 2010.

ICC Cricket World Program

The International Cricket Council telecasts a weekly program on television called ICC Cricket World. It is produced by Sportsbrand.

It is a weekly 30-minute program providing the latest cricket news, recent cricket action including all Test and One-Day International matches, as well as off-field features and interviews.

Criticism

In 2015, Sam Collins and Jarrod Kimber made the documentary Death of a Gentleman on the internal organisation of the ICC, saying that the richer member countries were running the organisation to the detriment of the other members.[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cricket chiefs move base to Dubai". 7 March 2005.
  2. ^ "ICC appoints Geoff Allardice as CEO on permanent basis". Cricbuzz. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  3. ^ "ICC Annual Report 10 October 2021" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 13 June 2022. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  4. ^ "ICC Members". ICC. Retrieved 31 October 2017.
  5. ^ (PDF). Icc-cricket.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 July 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  6. ^ "Laws". www.lords.org. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  7. ^ "Srinivasan elected as the new Chairman of ICC from July 2014 onwards". Jagran Prakashan. 10 February 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  8. ^ "Mustafa Kamal quits as ICC president after World Cup snub". BBC Sport. 1 April 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  9. ^ "Zaheer Abbas Appointed ICC President". Gulf News. 25 June 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  10. ^ "ICC Office Bearers". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  11. ^ a b c "International Cricket Council". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
  12. ^ a b "International Cricket Council". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  13. ^ "International Cricket Council". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
  14. ^ "Three new countries receive ICC Membership status". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  15. ^ Kumar, Manoj (27 July 2022). "Cambodia, Uzbekistan and Cote D'Ivoire receive membership status from ICC". CricTracker. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
  16. ^ "Cricket chiefs move base to Dubai". BBC News. 7 March 2005.
  17. ^ . Asia Times Online. 23 April 2005. Archived from the original on 22 April 2005. Retrieved 18 August 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  18. ^ "ICC rights go to ESPN-Star". Cricinfo. ESPN. 9 December 2006. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  19. ^ "ICC set to cash in on sponsorship rights". Cricinfo. ESPN. 18 January 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  20. ^ "Biggest player in the game flexes muscle". The Age. Melbourne. 7 January 2006.
  21. ^ Murgatroyd, Brian / ICC (6 November 2006). "ICC President thanks India for "outstanding" ICC Champions Trophy". Cricinfo. ESPN. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  22. ^ "When the cricket did all the talking". Cricinfo. ESPN. 7 November 2006. Retrieved 18 August 2017.
  23. ^ . www.icc-cricket.com. Archived from the original on 3 October 2013. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
  24. ^ . www.icc-cricket.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
  25. ^ . www.icc-cricket.com. Archived from the original on 2 June 2016. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
  26. ^ "No decision yet on universal application of DRS". The Times of India. 27 June 2012. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013.
  27. ^ "Research on DRS to be shown to BCCI". The Times of India. 10 July 2012. Archived from the original on 26 January 2013.
  28. ^ "Ireland and Afghanistan ICC newest full members amid wide-ranging governance reform". icc-cricket.com. ICC. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  29. ^ "World's best players and teams to be honoured at cricket's 'Oscars'". ESPN.com. 29 June 2004. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  30. ^ "ICC Awards of the Decade announced". www.icc-cricket.com. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  31. ^ . The Jamaica Star. 13 February 2007. Archived from the original on 1 February 2009.
  32. ^ "Pakistan cricketers and agent jailed for betting scam". BBC News. 3 November 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  33. ^ "Pakistan spot-fixing players and agent sentenced to lengthy jail terms". The Guardian. UK. 3 November 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  34. ^ Kelso, Paul (3 November 2011). "Pakistan spot-fixing scandal: convictions of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir just one step on a long road". The Daily Telegraph. UK. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  35. ^ "Cricketers jailed for match-fixing". The Independent. UK. 3 November 2011. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  36. ^ "Cricket match-fixers suspended amid calls for police probe". Al Jazeera Investigative Unit. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  37. ^ Miller, Andrew (22 February 2016). "Cricket documentary Death of a Gentleman scoops prestigious Sports Journalists Association award". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 21 September 2020.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of International Cricket Council at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to International Cricket Council at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website

international, cricket, council, global, governing, body, cricket, founded, imperial, cricket, conference, 1909, representatives, from, australia, england, south, africa, renamed, international, cricket, conference, 1965, took, current, name, 1987, headquarter. The International Cricket Council ICC is the global governing body of cricket It was founded as the Imperial Cricket Conference in 1909 by representatives from Australia England and South Africa It was renamed as the International Cricket Conference in 1965 and took up its current name in 1987 The ICC has its headquarters in Dubai United Arab Emirates International Cricket CouncilCurrent ICC Members Red represents Full membersAbbreviationICCPredecessorImperial Cricket Conference 1909 1965 International Cricket Conference 1965 1989 Formation15 June 1909 113 years ago 1909 06 15 TypeFederation of national associationsHeadquartersDubai United Arab Emirates 2005 present London England 1909 2005 1 Membership108 membersOfficial languagesEnglishChairmanGreg BarclayCEOGeoff Allardice 2 General ManagerWasim KhanRevenue 2020 3 US 40 7 millionWebsiteICC Cricket comThe ICC has 108 member nations currently 12 Full Members that play Test matches and 96 Associate Members 4 The ICC is responsible for the organisation and governance of cricket s major international tournaments most notably the Cricket World Cup and the T20 World Cup It also appoints the umpires and referees that officiate at all sanctioned Test matches One Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals It promulgates the ICC Code of Conduct which sets professional standards of discipline for international cricket 5 and also co ordinates action against corruption and match fixing through its Anti Corruption and Security Unit ACSU The ICC does not control bilateral fixtures between member countries which include all Test matches and neither does it govern domestic cricket within member countries It does not make or alter the laws of the game which have remained under the governance of the Marylebone Cricket Club since 1788 6 The Chairman heads the board of directors and on 26 June 2014 Narayanaswami Srinivasan the former president of BCCI was announced as the first chairman of the council 7 The role of ICC president has become a largely honorary position since the establishment of the chairman role and other changes were made to the ICC constitution in 2014 It has been claimed that the 2014 changes have handed control to the Big Three nations of England India and Australia 8 The last ICC president was Zaheer Abbas 9 who was appointed in June 2015 following the resignation of Mustafa Kamal in April 2015 When the post of ICC president was abolished in April 2016 Shashank Manohar who replaced Srinivasan in October 2015 became the first independent elected chairman of the ICC 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 1909 1963 Imperial Cricket Conference 1 2 1964 1988 International Cricket Conference 1 3 1989 present International Cricket Council 2 Members 3 Location 4 Income generation 5 Rules and regulation 6 Umpires and referees 7 Regional bodies 8 Rankings Competitions and awards 8 1 Rankings 8 2 International Tournaments 8 2 1 Tournaments 8 2 2 Qualifiers 8 3 Awards 9 Anti corruption and security 10 Global Cricket Academy 11 ICC Cricket World Program 12 Criticism 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory Edit1909 1963 Imperial Cricket Conference Edit On 30 November 1907 Abe Bailey the President of South African Cricket Association wrote a letter to the Marylebone Cricket Club s MCC England secretary Francis Lacey Bailey suggested the formation of an Imperial Cricket Board In the letter he suggested that the board would be responsible for formulation of rules and regulations which will govern the international matches between the three members Australia England and South Africa Bailey wanted to host a Triangular Test series between the participant countries in South Africa Australia rejected the offer However Bailey did not lose hope He saw an opportunity of getting the three members together during the Australia s tour of England in 1909 After continued lobbying and efforts Bailey was successful 11 On 15 June 1909 representatives from England Australia and South Africa met at Lord s and founded the Imperial Cricket Conference A month later a second meeting between the three members was held The rules were agreed amongst the nations and the first ever Tri Test series was decided to be held in England in 1912 11 In 1926 West Indies New Zealand and India were elected as Full Members doubling the number of Test playing nations to six After the formation of Pakistan in 1947 it was given Test status in 1952 becoming the seventh Test playing nation In May 1961 South Africa left the Commonwealth and therefore lost membership 11 1964 1988 International Cricket Conference Edit In 1964 the ICC agreed upon including the non Test playing countries The following year the ICC changed its name to the International Cricket Conference The US Ceylon and Fiji were admitted as Associates a new class of member 12 In 1968 Denmark Bermuda Netherlands and East Africa were admitted as Associates while South Africa had still not applied to rejoin the ICC In 1969 the basic rules of ICC were amended At the 1971 meeting the idea of organizing a World Cup was introduced At the 1973 meeting it was decided that a World Cup would be played in 1975 in England The six Test playing nations and East Africa and Sri Lanka were invited to take part 12 New members were added frequently during this period In 1974 Israel and Singapore were admitted as Associates In 1976 West Africa was admitted as an Associate In 1977 Bangladesh was admitted as an Associate In 1978 Papua New Guinea was admitted as an Associate South Africa applied to rejoin but their application was rejected In 1981 Sri Lanka was promoted to a Full Member and they played their first Test in 1982 In 1984 a third class of membership Affiliate was introduced Italy was the first such member followed by Switzerland in 1985 In 1987 Bahamas and France were admitted followed by Nepal in 1988 1989 present International Cricket Council Edit At the July 1989 meeting the ICC renamed itself as the International Cricket Council and the tradition of the MCC President automatically becoming the Chairman of ICC was abolished 13 In 1990 UAE joined as an Associate In 1991 for the first time in ICC history the meeting was held away from England in Melbourne South Africa was re elected as a Full Member of the ICC in July following the end of apartheid In 1992 Zimbabwe was admitted as the ninth Full Member Namibia joined as an Associate member Austria Belgium Brunei and Spain joined as Affiliates In 1993 the position of Chief Executive of ICC was created David Richards of the Australian Cricket Board was the first person appointed to the position In July Sir Clyde Walcott from Barbados was elected as the first non British Chairman The emergence of new technology saw the introduction of a third umpire who was equipped with video playback facilities By 1995 TV replays were made available for run outs and stumpings in Test matches with the third umpire required to signal out or not out with red and green lights respectively The following year the cameras were used to determine if the ball had crossed the boundary and in 1997 decisions on the cleanness of catches could be referred to the third umpire This year also saw the introduction of the Duckworth Lewis method of adjusting targets in rain affected ODI matches In 2000 Bangladesh were admitted as the tenth Full Member of the International Cricket Council In 2005 ICC moved to its new headquarters in Dubai In 2017 Afghanistan and Ireland were admitted as the eleventh and twelfth Full Members of the International Cricket Council after a unanimous vote at the ICC Full Council meeting at The Oval Affiliate Membership was also abolished with all existing Affiliate Members becoming Associate Members In 2018 all Women s T20 matches were elevated to Women s Twenty20 International status In July 2022 Cambodia Cote D Ivoire and Uzbekistan were granted associate member status by ICC 14 15 Members EditMain article List of International Cricket Council members Current ICC Members by Membership status Full Members Associate Members with ODI status Associate Members Former or suspended Members Non Members Full Members The twelve governing bodies of teams that have full voting rights within the International Cricket Council and play official Test matches Team Region AdmittedEngland Europe 1909Australia East Asia Pacific 1909South Africa Africa 1909West Indies Americas 1926New Zealand East Asia Pacific 1926India Asia 1926Pakistan Asia 1952Sri Lanka Asia 1981Zimbabwe Africa 1992Bangladesh Asia 2000Ireland Europe 2017Afghanistan Asia 2017Associate Members The 96 governing bodies in countries where cricket is firmly established and organised but have not been granted Full Membership yet Location Edit The ICC s offices in Dubai From its formation the ICC had Lord s Cricket Ground as its home and from 1993 had its offices in the Clock Tower building at the nursery end of the ground The independent ICC was funded initially by commercial exploitation of the rights to the World Cup of One Day International cricket As not all Member countries had double tax agreements with the United Kingdom it was necessary to protect cricket s revenues by creating a company ICC Development International Pvt Ltd known as IDI outside the UK This was established in January 1994 and was based in Monaco citations needed For the remainder of the nineties the administration of IDI was a modest affair But with the negotiation of a bundle of rights to all ICC events from 2001 to 2008 revenues available to International cricket and the ICC member countries rose substantially This led to a growth in the number of commercial staff employed by IDI in Monaco It also had the disadvantage that the council s cricket administrators who remained at Lord s were separated from their commercial colleagues in Monaco The Council decided to seek ways of bringing all of their staff together in one office while protecting their commercial income from tax citations needed The option of staying at Lord s was investigated and a request was made through Sport England to the British Government to allow the ICC to have all its personnel including those working on commercial matters in London but be given special exemption from paying UK corporation tax on its commercial income The British Government was unwilling to create a precedent and would not agree to this request As a consequence the ICC examined other locations and eventually settled on the emirate of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates ICC is registered in British Virgin Islands In August 2005 the ICC moved its offices to Dubai and subsequently closed its offices at Lord s and Monaco The move to Dubai was made after an 11 1 vote by the ICC s executive board in favour 16 While the principal driver of the ICC s move to Dubai was the wish to bring its main employees together in one tax efficient location a secondary reason was the wish to move offices closer to the increasingly important new centres of cricketing power in South Asia Lord s had been a logical venue when the ICC had been administered by the Marylebone Cricket Club MCC a situation that lasted until 1993 But the growing power of India and Pakistan in world cricket had made the continued control of international cricket by a British private members club the MCC anachronistic and unsustainable A direct consequence of the changes and reforms instituted in 1993 was eventually to be the move away from Lord s to a more neutral venue 17 Income generation Edit Variant ICC Logo with old motto The ICC generates income from the tournaments it organises primarily the Cricket World Cup and it distributes the majority of that income to its members Sponsorship and television rights of the World Cup brought in over US 1 6 billion between 2007 and 2015 by far the ICC s main source of income 18 19 In the nine month accounting period to 31 December 2007 the ICC had operating income of 12 66 million mainly from member subscriptions and sponsorship In contrast event income was US 285 87 million including 239 million from the 2007 World Cup There was also investment income of 6 695 million in the period needs update The ICC has no income streams from the bilateral international cricket matches Test matches One Day International and Twenty20 Internationals that account for the great majority of the international playing schedule as they are owned and run by its members It has sought to create other new events to augment its World Cup revenues These include the ICC Champions Trophy and the ICC Super Series played in Australia in 2005 However these events have not been as successful as the ICC hoped The Super Series was widely seen as a failure and is not expected to be repeated and India called for the Champions Trophy to be scrapped in 2006 20 The Champions Trophy 2004 event was referred to in Wisden 2005 by the editor as a turkey of a tournament and a fiasco although the 2006 edition was seen as a greater success due to a new format 21 22 The ICC World Twenty20 first played in 2007 was a success The ICC s current plan is to have an international tournament every year with a Twenty20 World Cup played in even number years the World Cup continuing to be held the year before the Olympic Games and the ICC Champions Trophy in the remaining year of the cycle This cycle began in 2010 one year after the 2009 edition Rules and regulation EditThe International Cricket Council oversees playing conditions bowling reviews and other ICC regulations The ICC does not have copyright to the Laws of Cricket only the MCC may change the Laws though this is usually done in consultation with the game s global governing body citation needed The ICC maintains a set of playing conditions for international cricket which make slight amendments to the Laws They also have a Code of Conduct to which teams and players in international matches are required to adhere Where breaches of this code occur the ICC can apply sanctions usually fines In 2008 the ICC imposed 19 penalties on players citations needed Umpires and referees EditThe ICC appoints international umpires and match referees who officiate at all sanctioned Test matches One Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals The ICC operates three panels of umpires the Elite Panel the International Panel and the Associates and Affiliates Panel As of March 2012 the Elite Panel included twelve umpires In theory two umpires from the Elite Panel officiate at every Test match while one Elite Panel umpire stands in ODI matches together with an umpire from the International Panel In practice members of the International Panel stand in occasional Test matches as this is viewed as a good opportunity to see whether they can cope at the Test level and whether they should be elevated to the Elite Panel Members of the Elite Panel are full time employees of the ICC although they do still very occasionally umpire first class cricket in their country of residence The average annual officiating schedule for Elite Umpires is 8 10 Test matches and 10 15 ODIs a potential on field workload of 75 days per year plus travel and preparation time 23 The International Panel is made up of officials nominated from each of the ten Test playing cricket boards The Panel Members officiate in ODI matches in their home country and assist the Elite Panel at peak times in the cricket calendar when they can be appointed to overseas ODI and Test matches International Panel members also undertake overseas umpiring assignments such as the ICC Under 19 Cricket World Cup to improve their knowledge and understanding of overseas conditions and help them prepare for possible promotion to the Elite Panel Some of these umpires also officiate in the Cricket World Cup Each of the Test cricket boards nominates a third umpire who can be called upon to review certain on field decisions through instant television replays All third umpires are first class umpires in their own country and the role is seen as a step onto the International Panel and then the Elite Panel 24 The inaugural ICC Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel was formed in June 2006 It superseded the ICC Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel created in 2005 and serves as the pinnacle for umpires from non Test playing Members with selection achieved through each of the five ICC Development Program Regional Umpires Panels Members of the Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel are eligible for appointments to ODIs involving ICC Associate Members ICC Intercontinental Cup matches and other Associate and Affiliate tournaments High performing umpires may also be considered for other ICC events including the ICC U 19 Cricket World Cup and could also be invited to be involved in the ICC Champions Trophy and ICC Cricket World Cup 25 There is also an Elite Panel of ICC Referees who act as the independent representative of the ICC at all Test and ODI matches As of January 2009 it had 6 members all highly experienced former international cricketers The Referees do not have the power to report players or officials which has to be done by the umpires but they are responsible for conducting hearings under the ICC Code of Conduct and imposing penalties as required at matches ranging from an official reprimand to a lifetime ban from cricket Decisions can be appealed but the original decision is upheld in most cases The Council failed to achieve consensus among the cricket playing nations as of June 2012 on the universal application of an Umpire s Decision Review System due to opposition by BCCI It will continue to be applied subject to mutual agreement of the playing countries 26 In July 2012 ICC decided to send a delegation to show the ball tracking research done by Dr Ed Rosten an expert on computer vision and technology to BCCI to remove the scepticism about the use of DRS technology 27 28 Regional bodies EditThese regional bodies aim to organise promote and develop the game of cricket Asian Cricket Council European Cricket Council African Cricket Association ICC Americas ICC East Asia PacificTwo further regional bodies were disestablished following the creation of the African Cricket Association East and Central Africa Cricket Council West Africa Cricket CouncilRankings Competitions and awards EditMain article International cricket Rankings Edit The ICC publishes team rankings for all three formats of the game and updates the same periodically ICC Men s Test Team Rankings ICC Men s ODI Team Rankings ICC Men s T20I Team Rankings ICC Women s ODI Rankings ICC Women s T20I RankingsThe ICC Player Rankings are a widely followed system of rankings for international cricketers based on their recent performances ICC Men s Player Rankings ICC Women s Player RankingsInternational Tournaments Edit Tournaments Edit The ICC organizes various international Test One Day and Twenty20 cricket competitions Format Test One Day Twenty20Men ICC World Test Championship ICC Men s Cricket World Cup ICC Men s T20 World CupICC Men s Champions TrophyWomen ICC Women s Cricket World Cup ICC Women s T20 World CupICC Women s T20 Champions TrophyUnder 19 Men ICC Under 19 Cricket World Cup Under 19 Women ICC Under 19 Women s Twenty20 World CupThe ICC in association with Commonwealth Games Federation and International Olympic Committee also conducts Twenty20 Cricket Tournament for Women in Commonwealth Games Qualifiers Edit The ICC organizes qualifying tournaments for various international main events for lower tanked teams mostly including the associate members Format One Day Twenty20Men ICC Men s Cricket World Cup Qualifier ICC Cricket World Cup Super League ICC Men s T20 World Cup QualifierWomen ICC Women s Cricket World Cup Qualifier ICC Women s T20 World Cup QualifierAwards Edit The ICC has instituted the ICC Awards to recognize and honor the best international cricket players of the previous 12 months The inaugural ICC Awards ceremony was held on 7 September 2004 in London 29 In 2020 ICC announced a special one off edition the ICC Awards of the Decade to honor the best performers and performances in the last 10 years 30 Anti corruption and security EditThe ICC has also had to deal with drugs and bribery scandals involving top cricketers Following the corruption scandals by cricketers connected with the legal and illegal bookmaking markets the ICC set up an Anti Corruption and Security Unit ACSU in 2000 under the retired Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police Lord Condon Among the corruption on which they have reported was that of former South African captain Hansie Cronje who had accepted substantial sums of money from an Indian bookmaker for under performing or ensuring that certain matches had a pre determined result Similarly the former Indian captain Mohammad Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja were investigated found guilty of match fixing and banned from playing cricket for life and for five years respectively The ACSU continues to monitor and investigate any reports of corruption in cricket and protocols have been introduced which for example prohibit the use of mobile telephones in dressing rooms Prior to the 2007 Cricket World Cup ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed warned against any corruption and said that the ICC would be vigilant and intolerant against it 31 Following a scandal that occurred during the 2010 Pakistan tour of England 3 Pakistani players Mohammad Amir Mohammad Asif and Salman Butt were found to be guilty of spot fixing and were banned for 5 years 7 years and 10 years respectively On 3 November 2011 jail terms were handed down of 30 months for Butt one year for Asif six months for Amir and two years eight months for Majeed the sports agent that facilitated the bribes 32 33 34 35 In 2019 an investigation by Aljazeera revealed match fixing in Sri Lanka India England Australia and other cricket playing nations 36 The ICC launched an investigation corcerning the report Global Cricket Academy EditMain article ICC Global Cricket Academy The ICC Global Cricket Academy GCA is located at Dubai Sports City in the United Arab Emirates The GCA s facilities include two ovals each with 10 turf pitches outdoor turf and synthetic practice facilities indoor practice facilities including hawk eye technology and a cricket specific gymnasium Rod Marsh has been appointed as the academy s Director of Coaching The opening originally planned for 2008 took place in 2010 ICC Cricket World Program EditMain article ICC Cricket World Program The International Cricket Council telecasts a weekly program on television called ICC Cricket World It is produced by Sportsbrand It is a weekly 30 minute program providing the latest cricket news recent cricket action including all Test and One Day International matches as well as off field features and interviews Criticism EditIn 2015 Sam Collins and Jarrod Kimber made the documentary Death of a Gentleman on the internal organisation of the ICC saying that the richer member countries were running the organisation to the detriment of the other members 37 See also Edit Cricket portalAssociation of Cricket Officials Federation of International Cricketers Associations International structure of cricket List of International Cricket Council presidents Position dissolved since 2014 References Edit Cricket chiefs move base to Dubai 7 March 2005 ICC appoints Geoff Allardice as CEO on permanent basis Cricbuzz Retrieved 21 November 2021 ICC Annual Report 10 October 2021 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 13 June 2022 Retrieved 10 October 2021 ICC Members ICC Retrieved 31 October 2017 International Cricket Council ICC Events ICC Cricket Rankings Live Cricket Scores PDF Icc cricket com Archived from the original PDF on 12 July 2007 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Laws www lords org Retrieved 12 July 2018 Srinivasan elected as the new Chairman of ICC from July 2014 onwards Jagran Prakashan 10 February 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Mustafa Kamal quits as ICC president after World Cup snub BBC Sport 1 April 2015 Retrieved 1 April 2015 Zaheer Abbas Appointed ICC President Gulf News 25 June 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2015 ICC Office Bearers www icc cricket com Retrieved 7 September 2020 a b c International Cricket Council www icc cricket com Retrieved 10 July 2018 a b International Cricket Council www icc cricket com Retrieved 12 July 2018 International Cricket Council www icc cricket com Retrieved 23 July 2018 Three new countries receive ICC Membership status www icc cricket com Retrieved 27 July 2022 Kumar Manoj 27 July 2022 Cambodia Uzbekistan and Cote D Ivoire receive membership status from ICC CricTracker Retrieved 27 July 2022 Cricket chiefs move base to Dubai BBC News 7 March 2005 Cricket s home moves closer to the money Asia Times Online 23 April 2005 Archived from the original on 22 April 2005 Retrieved 18 August 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link ICC rights go to ESPN Star Cricinfo ESPN 9 December 2006 Retrieved 8 May 2011 ICC set to cash in on sponsorship rights Cricinfo ESPN 18 January 2007 Retrieved 8 May 2011 Biggest player in the game flexes muscle The Age Melbourne 7 January 2006 Murgatroyd Brian ICC 6 November 2006 ICC President thanks India for outstanding ICC Champions Trophy Cricinfo ESPN Retrieved 18 August 2017 When the cricket did all the talking Cricinfo ESPN 7 November 2006 Retrieved 18 August 2017 Match officials www icc cricket com Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Retrieved 18 November 2013 Emirates International Panel of ICC Umpires www icc cricket com Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 18 November 2013 ICC Associate and Affiliate International Umpires Panel www icc cricket com Archived from the original on 2 June 2016 Retrieved 18 November 2013 No decision yet on universal application of DRS The Times of India 27 June 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Research on DRS to be shown to BCCI The Times of India 10 July 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Ireland and Afghanistan ICC newest full members amid wide ranging governance reform icc cricket com ICC Retrieved 22 June 2017 World s best players and teams to be honoured at cricket s Oscars ESPN com 29 June 2004 Retrieved 3 June 2021 ICC Awards of the Decade announced www icc cricket com Retrieved 3 June 2021 Speed warns against corruption during World Cup The Jamaica Star 13 February 2007 Archived from the original on 1 February 2009 Pakistan cricketers and agent jailed for betting scam BBC News 3 November 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Pakistan spot fixing players and agent sentenced to lengthy jail terms The Guardian UK 3 November 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Kelso Paul 3 November 2011 Pakistan spot fixing scandal convictions of Salman Butt Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir just one step on a long road The Daily Telegraph UK Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Cricketers jailed for match fixing The Independent UK 3 November 2011 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Cricket match fixers suspended amid calls for police probe Al Jazeera Investigative Unit Retrieved 6 September 2021 Miller Andrew 22 February 2016 Cricket documentary Death of a Gentleman scoops prestigious Sports Journalists Association award ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 21 September 2020 External links Edit The dictionary definition of International Cricket Council at Wiktionary Media related to International Cricket Council at Wikimedia Commons Official website Portals Cricket Sport Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Cricket Council amp oldid 1136502292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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