Opportunity for South Africa to move up rankings

23 Sep 2016 | Cricket
Fourth-ranked South Africa has a chance to climb up to second position in the MRF Tyres ICC ODI Team Rankings when it hosts number-one ranked world champions Australia in a five-match series from 30 September to 12 October.

A busy limited-overs cricket period, which starts this weekend with the Bangladesh versus Afghanistan ODI in Mirpur and the one-off South Africa versus Ireland ODI in Benoni and culminates with the third ODI between Bangladesh and England in Mirpur and fifth ODI between South Africa and Australia in Cape Town on 12 October, will see 16 matches being played between eight teams on the ICC ODI rankings with a year to go before the determination of which seven highest-ranked sides along with England to qualify automatically for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019.

While Australia and South Africa will aim to consolidate their positions, Bangladesh, the West Indies  and Pakistan will target moving up the ladder.

World champion Australia is currently on 124 points and without an immediate threat to its top ranking with New Zealand second on 113 points.

But a series win for South Africa, which is fraction of a point behind India, against Australia could help it move ahead of the reigning ICC Champions Trophy winner. A 3-2 series win will put South Africa in third position on 112 points, while a 4-1 series win will lift it to second position on 114 points.

For Australia, a 3-2 series win will maintain its current 124 points with a maximum drop to 118 points in the case of a 5-0 series whitewash. Even if it also loses its preceding one-off match to Ireland and gets blanked by South Africa, Australia will retain number-one position at 116 points with South Africa behind it on decimal points.

For Bangladesh, which is currently seventh-ranked with 98 points, a 3-0 win against Afghanistan and a 2-1 win against England could help it move to sixth place, ahead of Sri Lanka on decimal points. England will retain its fifth position, irrespective of how the series pans out.

Former world champion Pakistan, which is the top-ranked Test side but is struggling in ninth position, but can overtake eighth-ranked West Indies only with a 3-0 win. In that scenario, it will jump from 86 points to 89 points, while the West Indies will slide from 94 points to 88 points.

The ODI team rankings, unlike the Test rankings, are updated after each match. In the individual rankings, South Africa players will be in focus since they have four each in the top 10 in the list of batsmen and bowlers.

Captain AB de Villiers is top-ranked in the MRF Tyres ICC Player Rankings for ODI Batsmen, Hashim Amla is third-ranked while Quinton de Kock and Faf du Plessis are in ninth and 10th places, respectively.

In the MRF Tyres ICC Player Rankings for ODI Bowlers led by West Indies’ Sunil Narine, leg-spinner Imran Tahir is South Africa’s leading player at fifth position with the pace duo of Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada at joint-seventh place. Morne Morkel completes the team’s dominance in individual rankings at ninth slot.

South Africa return to play in Cardiff next summer after the ICC Champions Trophy fixtures, with a NatWest IT20 clash against England at The SSE SWALEC on 25th June, 11 days after the tournament semi-final in the Welsh capital. CLICK HERE to register for priority access to tickets for the match

Upcoming ODIs:

South Africa v Ireland:
September 25: Only ODI, Benoni

Bangladesh v Afghanistan:
September 25: 1st ODI, Mirpur
September 28: 2nd ODI, Bangladesh v Afghanistan, Mirpur
October 1: 3rd ODI, Bangladesh v Afghanistan, Mirpur

Australia v Ireland:
September 27: Only ODI, Benoni

South Africa v Australia:
September 30: 1st ODI, Centurion
October 2: 2nd ODI, Johnnesburg
October 5: 3rd ODI, Durban
October 9: 4th ODI, Port Elizabeth
October 12: 5th ODI, Cape Town

Pakistan v West Indies:
September 30: 1st ODI, Pakistan v West Indies, Sharjah
October 2: 2nd ODI, Pakistan v West Indies, Sharjah
October 5: 3rd ODI, Pakistan v West Indies, Abu Dhabi

Bangladesh v England:
October 7: 1st ODI, Bangladesh v England, Mirpur
October 9: 2nd ODI, Bangladesh v England, Mirpur
October 12: 3rd ODI, Bangladesh v England, Chittagong

MRF Tyres ICC ODI Team Rankings (as of 23 September 2016)

Rank   Team               Points
1.     Australia            124
2.     New Zealand     113
3.     India                  110
4.     South Africa      110
5.     England             107
6.     Sri Lanka           101
7.     Bangladesh          98
8.     West Indies          94
9.     Pakistan               86
10.  Afghanistan         49
11.  Zimbabwe           46
12.  Ireland                 43
(Developed by David Kendix)

MRF Tyres ICC ODI Player Rankings (as of 23 September 2016)

Batsmen (top 10)

Rank     Player                  Team     Pts         Avge      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         Joe Root               Eng        758       45.71     776 v Pak at Trent Bridge 2016
   5         K. Williamson     NZ         752       47.00     798 v SA at Centurion 2015
   6         Martin Guptill     NZ         751!      43.25     751 v Aus at Hamilton 2016
   7         Rohit Sharma      Ind         750       42.08     761 v Aus at Sydney 2016
   8         Shikhar Dhawan  Ind         737       43.97     794 v SA at Melbourne 2015
   9         Q. de Kock           SA         735       41.83     789 v Eng at Centurion 2016
  10=      Faf du Plessis      SA         716       40.56     730 v Aus at Barbados 2016
              T. Dilshan            SL          716       39.27     802 v Sco at Hobart 2015

Other selected rankings
 
Rank     Player                  Team     Pts        Avge      Highest Rating
13          David Warner      Aus        703       38.45     726 v SA at St Kitts 2016
15=        Aaron Finch         Aus        698       37.34     743 v Eng at Melbourne 2015
              Jos Buttler           Eng        698       38.37     706 v SA at Port Elizabeth 2016
17          George Bailey     Aus        695       42.50     867 v SA at Harare 2014
18          Steve Smith         Aus        687       41.25     709 v Ind at Canberra 2016
19          M. Rahim            Ban        661       31.61     671 v Zim at Mirpur 2015
22          Glenn Maxwell    Aus        636       33.26     735 v Ind at Canberra 2016
23          M. Hafeez            Pak        617       32.35     665 v Ban at Mirpur 2014
24          Tamim Iqbal        Ban        611       31.63     637 v WI at Khulna 2012
28          Ed Joyce              Ire          604       37.67     618 v Afg at Belfast 2016
34          M. Shahzad          Afg        578       36.81     593 v Ire at Belfast 2016

Bowlers (top 10)
 
Rank     Player                  Team     Pts         Avge      Eco        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         Mitchell Starc     Aus        711        19.61    4.78      783 v NZ at Melbourne 2015
   4         S. Al Hasan          Ban        699        27.89    4.30      717 v Zim at Chittagong 2009
   5         Imran Tahir         SA         693       23.13    4.64      735 v SL at Sydney 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        Adil Rashid         Eng        609*     40.21    5.66      612 v Pak at Headingley 2016