How the ICC Rankings actually work
The ICC rankings are not a simple league ladder. They are a rolling rating system in which every player and team carries a points figure that rises and falls with each performance, weighted by the quality of the opposition. Beat a top-ranked side and you gain more than you would for the same result against a lower-ranked one — which is why these tables reward consistency against strong teams, not just big numbers against weak ones.
Ratings, not just positions
Each entry shows a rating (a points value), and the rank is simply the order of those ratings. Two players can sit one place apart but be separated by a single point, or by thirty — the gap matters as much as the position. For batters and bowlers the calculation blends runs or wickets with context: the match situation, the strength of the opponent, and how the rest of the field performed in the same conditions.
Separate tables for each format
Test, ODI and T20I cricket are ranked independently because they reward different skills. A bowler who dominates the red ball over long spells may sit lower in the T20I list, where economy and death-overs control matter more. The same logic applies to teams and to the men's and women's games, each of which is tracked on its own rating scale.
Why rankings change even when a player rests
Ratings decay over time and older series are periodically weighted down or dropped, so a player can slip in the table without playing a single match — simply because the performances propping up their rating have aged out. This keeps the rankings a measure of current form rather than a career honours board.
Frequently asked questions
How often are the ICC rankings updated?
They are recalculated after every international match and refreshed here so you always see the latest standings.
Can a player be number one in two formats at once?
Yes, though it is rare — it requires sustained, format-spanning excellence, and only a handful of cricketers have managed it.
What is the difference between rating and ranking?
The rating is the underlying points score; the ranking is just where that score places you relative to everyone else.














