Monday 9 February 2015

Cricket World Cup

This article is about the main tournament. For the women's tournament, see Women's Cricket World Cup. For the most recent and next tournaments, respectively, see 2011 Cricket World Cup and 2015 Cricket World Cup.
ICC Cricket World Cup
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council(ICC)
FormatOne Day International
First tournament1975 (England)
Last tournament2011 (IndiaBangladesh and Sri Lanka)
Next tournament2015 (Australia and New Zealand)
Tournament format↓various
Number of teams19 (all tournaments)
14 (most recent)
Current champion India (2nd title in 2011)
Most successful Australia (4 titles)
Most runsIndia Sachin Tendulkar(2,278)
Most wicketsAustralia Glenn McGrath (72)
The ICC Cricket World Cup is the international championship of One Day International (ODI) cricket. The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), with preliminary qualification rounds leading up to a finals tournament held every four years. The tournament is one of the world's most viewed sporting events and is considered the "flagship event of the international cricket calendar" by the ICC.[1]
The first World Cup was organised in England in June 1975, with the first ODI cricket match having been played only four years prior. However, a separate Women's Cricket World Cup had been held two years before the first men's tournament, and a tournament involving multiple international teams had been held as early as 1912, when a triangular tournament of Test matcheswas played between AustraliaEngland and South Africa. Each of the first three World Cups were held in England. From the 1987 tournament onwards, hosting has been shared between countries under an unofficial rotation system, with fourteen ICC members having hosted at least one match in the tournament.
The finals of the World Cup are contested by the ten full members of the ICC (all of which are Test-playing teams) and a number of teams made up from associate and affiliate members of the ICC, selected via the World Cricket League and a later qualifying tournament. A total of 19 teams have competed in the ten editions of the tournament, with 14 competing in the 2011 tournament. Australia has won the tournament four times, with the West Indies, India (twice each), Pakistan and Sri Lanka (once each) also having won the tournament. The best performance by a non-full-member team came when Kenya made the semi-finals of the 2003 tournament.

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