IPL-style eliminators, Super 7s: ICC announces major changes to ODI, T20 World Cups
The ICC's major tournament revamp introduces a unified Super 7 round-robin stage for the men's ODI World Cup and brings high-stakes, IPL-style crossover eliminators to an expanded Super 10 phase in the T20 World Cup. We have tried to explain the new formats. Read on.

Note: If you feel you need a degree in advanced mathematics to figure out who plays whom in cricket's upcoming World Cups, you are not alone. Behind the ICC's grand promises of global growth lies a dizzyingly complex new tournament blueprint that we break down below.
For years, global cricket tournaments have wrestled with a persistent, commercially draining paradox: how to expand the global footprint of the game without putting fans and broadcasters through weeks of predictable, low-stakes group fixtures. At its annual meetings in Edinburgh, the International Cricket Council (ICC) delivered its most radical structural answer yet. The changes were announced by the global cricket body on Wednesday, July 15.
Rejecting proposed plans to shrink the flagship Men's ODI Cricket World Cup from 14 back to 12 teams, the ICC Board has instead preserved the expanded tournament size but completely ripped up the traditional blueprint. Starting with the 2027 edition, co-hosted by South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Namibia, the ODI World Cup will introduce a ruthless four-round model featuring a pre-group "Super Series" and a gruelling "Super 7" phase.
Simultaneously, the 20-team Men's T20 World Cup is set for a massive facelift from 2028, abandoning the Super 8s for an expanded Super 10 stage punctuated by high-stakes wildcard "Eliminators".
The objective is clear: to inject high consequence and competitive tension into every single fixture, from opening night to the final.
1. The ODI World Cup: The New Super 7s
The 14-team format, last seen in 2015, was previously designed around two massive, seven-team round-robin groups. While democratic, it suffered from a bloated early schedule. The newly approved system introduces immediate, brutal stakes.
Round 1: The Super Series
Instead of launching straight into group play, the three lowest-ranked qualifiers (determined as Teams 12, 13, and 14) are immediately isolated. They will contest a cut-throat, round-robin Super Series. Only the table-topper survives to join the remaining 11 elite nations in the main draw. The other two are sent packing before the tournament proper even finds its rhythm.
Round 2: The Group Stage
The surviving 12 teams are split into two groups of six, playing 30 matches in total. The qualification math here is incredibly tight:
The top three teams from each group progress automatically.
To prevent teams from playing for safe draws, the final seventh spot is awarded to the next highest-placed team based on tournament-wide performance across both groups.
Round 3: The Super 7 Marathon
In place of the old system-which split the second round into two groups of three (the Super Sixes)-the ICC has introduced a unified Super 7 stage. Here, all seven qualifying nations will battle in a relentless, 21-match round-robin league.
Only the top four teams in this single table will earn semi-final berths.
WHAT ARE THE CHANGES
Round 1/Pre-Stage
- Previous: None (all teams entered group stage directly).
- New: Super Series round-robin between the bottom 3 teams; only the winner progresses.
Group Stage
- Previous: Two groups of 7 teams (42 matches total).
- New: Two groups of 6 teams (30 matches total).
Second Round
- Previous: Super Sixes (two groups of three teams playing 9 matches).
- New: Super 7 (a single 7-team round-robin playing 21 matches).
Knockouts
- Previous: Top two teams from each Super Six group advanced to the semi-finals.
- New: Top four teams from the unified Super 7 league table advance to the semi-finals.
2. T20 World Cup: IPL-Style Eliminators
The 20-team T20 World Cup has also undergone a dramatic rethink. While the tournament retains its 20-team canvas, the pathway to the trophy has been rebuilt to offer emerging associate nations a wider platform while increasing the late-stage drama.
A Leaner, Meaner Group Stage
In the previous format, 20 teams were drawn into four groups of five, generating a massive 40-match opening round where heavyweights often comfortably paced themselves. The new system compresses this into five groups of four, slashing the group stage to just 30 matches. The top two from each group still progress, but the margin for error is now razor-thin.
The Super 10 Expansion
Instead of narrowing the field down to a Super 8, the second round now expands to a Super 10 (comprising two groups of five). This guarantees at least two additional associates or emerging nations the high-profile opportunity to play guaranteed fixtures against elite cricket nations.
The IPL-style Eliminators
Under the old model, the top two teams in the Super 8 groups marched straight to the semi-finals. The new Super 10 format introduces a thrilling play-off layer.
- The first-placed team in each Super 10 group qualifies directly for the semi-finals.
- The teams finishing second and third in Group A will play crossover "Eliminator" playoff matches against the third and second-placed teams from Group B.
- The winners of these two sudden-death Eliminator clashes will claim the final two semi-final spots.
By designing a pathway where early games carry immediate survival stakes (the ODI Super Series) and middle-stage games offer direct qualification or playoff insurance (the T20 Eliminators), the ICC is gambling on structural intensity.
For the players, it is a demanding, highly competitive marathon. For the fans, it is a guarantee that the era of the tournament dead rubber is officially over.
Note: If you feel you need a degree in advanced mathematics to figure out who plays whom in cricket's upcoming World Cups, you are not alone. Behind the ICC's grand promises of global growth lies a dizzyingly complex new tournament blueprint that we break down below.
For years, global cricket tournaments have wrestled with a persistent, commercially draining paradox: how to expand the global footprint of the game without putting fans and broadcasters through weeks of predictable, low-stakes group fixtures. At its annual meetings in Edinburgh, the International Cricket Council (ICC) delivered its most radical structural answer yet. The changes were announced by the global cricket body on Wednesday, July 15.
Rejecting proposed plans to shrink the flagship Men's ODI Cricket World Cup from 14 back to 12 teams, the ICC Board has instead preserved the expanded tournament size but completely ripped up the traditional blueprint. Starting with the 2027 edition, co-hosted by South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Namibia, the ODI World Cup will introduce a ruthless four-round model featuring a pre-group "Super Series" and a gruelling "Super 7" phase.
Simultaneously, the 20-team Men's T20 World Cup is set for a massive facelift from 2028, abandoning the Super 8s for an expanded Super 10 stage punctuated by high-stakes wildcard "Eliminators".
The objective is clear: to inject high consequence and competitive tension into every single fixture, from opening night to the final.
1. The ODI World Cup: The New Super 7s
The 14-team format, last seen in 2015, was previously designed around two massive, seven-team round-robin groups. While democratic, it suffered from a bloated early schedule. The newly approved system introduces immediate, brutal stakes.
Round 1: The Super Series
Instead of launching straight into group play, the three lowest-ranked qualifiers (determined as Teams 12, 13, and 14) are immediately isolated. They will contest a cut-throat, round-robin Super Series. Only the table-topper survives to join the remaining 11 elite nations in the main draw. The other two are sent packing before the tournament proper even finds its rhythm.
Round 2: The Group Stage
The surviving 12 teams are split into two groups of six, playing 30 matches in total. The qualification math here is incredibly tight:
The top three teams from each group progress automatically.
To prevent teams from playing for safe draws, the final seventh spot is awarded to the next highest-placed team based on tournament-wide performance across both groups.
Round 3: The Super 7 Marathon
In place of the old system-which split the second round into two groups of three (the Super Sixes)-the ICC has introduced a unified Super 7 stage. Here, all seven qualifying nations will battle in a relentless, 21-match round-robin league.
Only the top four teams in this single table will earn semi-final berths.
WHAT ARE THE CHANGES
Round 1/Pre-Stage
- Previous: None (all teams entered group stage directly).
- New: Super Series round-robin between the bottom 3 teams; only the winner progresses.
Group Stage
- Previous: Two groups of 7 teams (42 matches total).
- New: Two groups of 6 teams (30 matches total).
Second Round
- Previous: Super Sixes (two groups of three teams playing 9 matches).
- New: Super 7 (a single 7-team round-robin playing 21 matches).
Knockouts
- Previous: Top two teams from each Super Six group advanced to the semi-finals.
- New: Top four teams from the unified Super 7 league table advance to the semi-finals.
2. T20 World Cup: IPL-Style Eliminators
The 20-team T20 World Cup has also undergone a dramatic rethink. While the tournament retains its 20-team canvas, the pathway to the trophy has been rebuilt to offer emerging associate nations a wider platform while increasing the late-stage drama.
A Leaner, Meaner Group Stage
In the previous format, 20 teams were drawn into four groups of five, generating a massive 40-match opening round where heavyweights often comfortably paced themselves. The new system compresses this into five groups of four, slashing the group stage to just 30 matches. The top two from each group still progress, but the margin for error is now razor-thin.
The Super 10 Expansion
Instead of narrowing the field down to a Super 8, the second round now expands to a Super 10 (comprising two groups of five). This guarantees at least two additional associates or emerging nations the high-profile opportunity to play guaranteed fixtures against elite cricket nations.
The IPL-style Eliminators
Under the old model, the top two teams in the Super 8 groups marched straight to the semi-finals. The new Super 10 format introduces a thrilling play-off layer.
- The first-placed team in each Super 10 group qualifies directly for the semi-finals.
- The teams finishing second and third in Group A will play crossover "Eliminator" playoff matches against the third and second-placed teams from Group B.
- The winners of these two sudden-death Eliminator clashes will claim the final two semi-final spots.
By designing a pathway where early games carry immediate survival stakes (the ODI Super Series) and middle-stage games offer direct qualification or playoff insurance (the T20 Eliminators), the ICC is gambling on structural intensity.
For the players, it is a demanding, highly competitive marathon. For the fans, it is a guarantee that the era of the tournament dead rubber is officially over.