International Cricket Council

The
International Cricket Council (ICC) is the governing body for international
Test match and
One-day International cricket. It is headquartered at
Lord's cricket ground.
Historical background
\nOn June 15, 1909 representatives from England, Australia and South Africa met at Lords and founded the Imperial Cricket Conference. Membership was confined to the governing bodies of cricket within the Commonwealth where Test cricket was played.
In 1926, India, New Zealand and West Indies were elected as Full Members, thus increasing the number of Test-playing nations to six.
After the formation of Pakistan in 1947, it was given Test status in 1953 becoming the seventh Test-playing nation. In 1961, South Africa ceased to be a member of the ICC on leaving the British Commonwealth.
In 1965, the Conference was renamed the International Cricket Conference and new rules adopted to permit the election of countries from outside the British Commonwealth. This led to the expansion of the Conference, with the admission of Associate Members. Associates were each entitled to one vote, while the Foundation and Full Members were entitled to two votes on ICC resolutions. Foundation Members retained a right of veto. Sri Lanka was admitted in 1981.
In 1989, new rules were adopted and the name changed to the current name, the International Cricket Council. In 1991, South Africa was re-elected as a Full Member of the ICC, followed by the admission of Zimbabwe in 1992. Rather controversially, Bangladesh was admitted as the tenth Test-playing nation in 2000.
Members
\nThe ICC has three classes of membership: Full Members, Associate Members and Affiliate Members.
Full Members
\nFull Members are the governing bodies for cricket recognised by ICC of a country, or countries associated for cricket purposes, or a geographical area, from which representative teams are qualified to play official Test matches.
{| cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" border="1" style="margin-left:1em"\n|- \n|\n| Governing Body\n| Date of joining\n|- \n| Australia\n| Cricket Australia\n| June 15, 1909\n|- \n| Bangladesh\n| Bangladesh Cricket Board\n| June 26, 2000\n|- \n| England\n| England and Wales Cricket Board\n| June 15, 1909\n|- \n| India\n| Board of Control for Cricket in India\n| May 31, 1926\n|- \n| New Zealand\n| New Zealand Cricket\n| May 31, 1926\n|- \n| Pakistan\n| Pakistan Cricket Board\n| July 28, 1953\n|- \n| South Africa\n| United Cricket Board of South Africa\n| June 15, 1909
readmitted July 10, 1991\n|- \n| Sri Lanka\n| Sri Lanka Cricket\n| July 21, 1981\n|- \n| West Indies\n| West Indies Cricket Board of Control\n| May 31, 1926\n|- \n| Zimbabwe\n| Zimbabwe Cricket Union\n| July 6, 1992\n|}
Associate Members
\nThese are countries where cricket is firmly established and organised but do not qualify for Full Membership. There are 27 Associate Members. They are Argentina (1974), Bermuda (1966), Canada (1968), Cayman Islands (2002), Denmark (1966), Fiji (1965), France (1998), Germany (1999), Gibraltar (1969), Hong Kong (1969), Ireland (1993), Israel (1974), Italy (1995), Kenya (1981), Malaysia (1967), Namibia (1992), Nepal (1996), The Netherlands (1966), Nigeria (2002), Papua New Guinea (1973), Scotland (1994), Singapore (1974), Tanzania (2001), Uganda (1998), United Arab Emirates (1990), United States (1965), Zambia (2003).
Affiliate Members
\nThese are countries where the ICC recognises that cricket is played according to the Laws of Cricket.
There are 55 Affiliate Members. For a complete listing, see List of Affiliate Members from ICC website
Regional Bodies
\nThese regional bodies aim to organize, promote and develop the game of Cricket:\n*Asian Cricket Council\n*East and Central Africa Cricket Council\n*European Cricket Council\n*West Africa Cricket Council
Competitions and awards
\nThe ICC organises various first-class and one-day cricket competitions:\n*First Class\n**ICC Test Championship\n**ICC Intercontinental Cup\n*One Day\n**ICC ODI Championship\n**ICC Cricket World Cup\n**ICC Champions Trophy\n**ICC U-19 Cricket World Cup\n**ICC Six Nations Challenge\n**ICC Trophy
The ICC has instituted the ICC Awards to recognise and honour the best international cricket players of the previous 12 months. The inaugural ICC Awards ceremony will be held on 7 September, 2004, in London.
See also
\n*International structure of cricket
External Link
\n*Official website of the ICC
Category:Cricket administration