This is a list of the squads picked for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. [2] All 10 teams were required to submit a 15-member squad by 23 April, 2019 [3] with changes to the squad allowed to be made up to 22 May. [4] New Zealand were the first team to name their squad, naming their team on 3 April 2019. [5] The West Indies were the last team to name their squad, announcing their team on 24 April 2019, one day after the initial deadline set by the International Cricket Council (ICC). [6]
Two cricketers, New Zealand's Tom Blundell and Bangladesh's Abu Jayed, had not played in a One Day International (ODI) prior to being named in their team's squad. [7] [8] On 13 May 2019, Jayed made his ODI debut against the West Indies, in the fifth match of the tri-series in Ireland. [9] Three captains, England's Eoin Morgan, the West Indies' Jason Holder and Bangladesh's Mashrafe Mortaza, had led their respective teams in the previous tournament. [10]
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
S/N | Shirt number of the player in ODI |
Player | Player name, as used on their own Wikipedia article. Also shows if they are team's designated captain or vice-captain. |
Date of Birth | Date of birth, and age as of 30 May 2019. |
ODIs | The number of One Day Internationals played as of 30 May 2019. [lower-alpha 1] |
Role | Bowler, batter, all-rounder or wicket-keeper |
Batting | Hand they bat with |
Bowling style | Type(s) of bowling employed |
List A or domestic team | Either List A team, or domestic one-day team if the country's one-day matches do not have List A status. |
Afghanistan announced their 15-man squad on 22 April. [11] Following Afghanistan's second match, Mohammad Shahzad was ruled out of the tournament due to injury. He was replaced by Ikram Alikhil. [12] On 27 June 2019, Aftab Alam was ruled out of the tournament due to "exceptional circumstances" and was replaced by Sayed Shirzad. [13]
Coach: Phil Simmons
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | Gulbadin Naib (c) | 16 March 1991 (aged 28) | 55 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Mis Ainak Region |
19 | Rashid Khan (vc) | 20 September 1998 (aged 20) | 59 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Speen Ghar Region |
55 | Aftab Alam | 30 November 1992 (aged 26) | 24 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Speen Ghar Region |
44 | Asghar Afghan | 22 February 1987 (aged 32) | 102 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Kabul Region |
10 | Dawlat Zadran | 19 March 1988 (aged 31) | 77 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Amo Region |
66 | Hamid Hassan | 1 June 1987 (aged 31) | 33 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Band-e-Amir Region |
50 | Hashmatullah Shahidi | 4 November 1994 (aged 24) | 31 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Band-e-Amir Region |
3 | Hazratullah Zazai | 23 March 1998 (aged 21) | 8 | Batsman | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Band-e-Amir Region |
7 | Mohammad Nabi | 3 March 1985 (aged 34) | 112 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Amo Region |
77 | Mohammad Shahzad (wk) | 31 January 1988 (aged 31) | 82 | Wicket-keeper | Right | — | Speen Ghar Region |
88 | Mujeeb Ur Rahman | 28 March 2001 (aged 18) | 30 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm off spin | Speen Ghar Region |
1 | Najibullah Zadran | 18 February 1993 (aged 26) | 56 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Boost Region |
15 | Noor Ali Zadran | 10 July 1988 (aged 30) | 48 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Mis Ainak Region |
8 | Rahmat Shah | 16 March 1991 (aged 28) | 61 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Mis Ainak Region |
45 | Samiullah Shinwari | 31 December 1987 (aged 31) | 81 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Boost Region |
Australia announced their 15-man squad on 15 April. [14] Jhye Richardson was originally included in the squad but on 8 May 2019, he was ruled out of the tournament with a dislocated shoulder and replaced by Kane Richardson. [15] Cricket Australia named Mitchell Marsh as cover for Marcus Stoinis, ahead of Australia's match against Pakistan on 12 June 2019. [16] Stoinis was ruled out of the fixture due to an injury, with Cricket Australia waiting to see if he's ruled out of the rest of the tournament. [17] Ahead of Australia's final group-stage match, Shaun Marsh was ruled out of the rest of the tournament with a fractured forearm. Peter Handscomb was named as his replacement. [18] Usman Khawaja picked up a hamstring injury during Australia's final group-stage match, ruling him out of the rest of the tournament. Matthew Wade was named as cover for him. [19]
Coach: Justin Langer
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | Aaron Finch (c) | 17 November 1986 (aged 32) | 109 | Batsman | Right | Left-arm orthodox | Victoria |
4 | Alex Carey (vc, wk) | 27 August 1991 (aged 27) | 19 | Wicket-keeper | Left | — | South Australia |
30 | Pat Cummins (vc) | 8 May 1993 (aged 26) | 48 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast | New South Wales Blues |
65 | Jason Behrendorff | 20 April 1990 (aged 29) | 6 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm fast-medium | Western Warriors |
6 | Nathan Coulter-Nile | 11 October 1987 (aged 31) | 27 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Western Warriors |
1 | Usman Khawaja | 18 December 1986 (aged 32) | 31 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Queensland Bulls |
67 | Nathan Lyon | 20 November 1987 (aged 31) | 25 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm off spin | New South Wales Blues |
9 | Shaun Marsh | 9 July 1983 (aged 35) | 71 | Batsman | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Western Warriors |
32 | Glenn Maxwell | 14 October 1988 (aged 30) | 100 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Victoria |
47 | Kane Richardson | 12 February 1991 (aged 28) | 20 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | South Australia |
49 | Steve Smith | 2 June 1989 (aged 29) | 108 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm leg spin | New South Wales Blues |
56 | Mitchell Starc | 30 January 1990 (aged 29) | 75 | Bowler | Left | Left-arm fast | New South Wales Blues |
17 | Marcus Stoinis | 16 August 1989 (aged 29) | 33 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium | Western Warriors |
31 | David Warner | 27 October 1986 (aged 32) | 106 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm leg spin | New South Wales Blues |
63 | Adam Zampa | 31 March 1992 (aged 27) | 44 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | South Australia |
60 | 20 September 1996 (aged 22) | 12 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Western Warriors |
Bangladesh announced their 15-man squad on 16 April. [20]
Coach: Steve Rhodes
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Mashrafe Mortaza (c) | 5 October 1983 (aged 35) | 209 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm medium | Abahani Limited |
75 | Shakib Al Hasan (vc) | 24 March 1987 (aged 32) | 198 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Abahani Limited |
28 | Tamim Iqbal | 20 March 1989 (aged 30) | 193 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Mohammedan Sporting |
16 | Litton Das | 13 October 1994 (aged 24) | 28 | Wicket-keeper | Right | — | Mohammedan Sporting |
15 | Mushfiqur Rahim (wk) | 9 May 1987 (aged 32) | 205 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right-arm medium | Legends of Rupganj |
30 | Mahmudullah | 4 February 1986 (aged 33) | 175 | Batsman | Right | Right arm off spin | Abahani Limited |
8 | Mohammad Mithun | 13 February 1990 (aged 29) | 18 | Batsman | Right | — | Abahani Limited |
1 | Sabbir Rahman | 22 November 1991 (aged 27) | 61 | Batsman | Right | Right arm leg spin | Abahani Limited |
53 | Mehidy Hasan | 25 October 1996 (aged 22) | 28 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Abahani Limited |
59 | Soumya Sarkar | 25 February 1993 (aged 26) | 44 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm medium | Abahani Limited |
34 | Rubel Hossain | 1 January 1990 (aged 29) | 97 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Abahani Limited |
74 | Mohammad Saifuddin | 1 September 1996 (aged 22) | 13 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm medium-fast | Abahani Limited |
32 | Mosaddek Hossain | 10 December 1995 (aged 23) | 26 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Abahani Limited |
90 | Mustafizur Rahman | 6 September 1995 (aged 23) | 46 | Bowler | Left | Left-arm fast-medium | Shinepukur |
17 | Abu Jayed | 2 August 1993 (aged 25) | 2 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Prime Doleshwar |
England announced their 15-men squad on 17 April. [21] It originally included Alex Hales, though he was later withdrawn following a ban for recreational drug use. [22] England announced their final squad on 21 May, with Jofra Archer, Liam Dawson and James Vince replacing David Willey, Joe Denly and Alex Hales. [23]
Coach: Trevor Bayliss
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | Eoin Morgan (c) | 10 September 1986 (aged 32) | 222 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Middlesex |
63 | Jos Buttler (vc, wk) | 8 September 1990 (aged 28) | 131 | Wicket-keeper | Right | — | Lancashire |
18 | Moeen Ali | 18 June 1987 (aged 31) | 96 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm off spin | Worcestershire |
22 | Jofra Archer | 1 April 1995 (aged 24) | 3 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Sussex |
51 | Jonny Bairstow | 26 September 1989 (aged 29) | 63 | Wicket-keeper | Right | — | Yorkshire |
59 | Tom Curran | 12 March 1995 (aged 24) | 17 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Surrey |
83 | Liam Dawson | 1 March 1990 (aged 29) | 3 | All-rounder | Right | Left-arm orthodox | Hampshire |
17 | Liam Plunkett | 6 April 1985 (aged 34) | 82 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Surrey |
95 | Adil Rashid | 17 February 1988 (aged 31) | 88 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Yorkshire |
66 | Joe Root | 30 December 1990 (aged 28) | 132 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off/leg spin | Yorkshire |
20 | Jason Roy | 21 July 1990 (aged 28) | 76 | Batsman | Right | — | Surrey |
55 | Ben Stokes | 4 June 1991 (aged 27) | 84 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm fast-medium | Durham |
14 | James Vince | 14 March 1991 (aged 28) | 10 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium | Hampshire |
19 | Chris Woakes | 2 March 1989 (aged 30) | 88 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Warwickshire |
33 | Mark Wood | 11 January 1990 (aged 29) | 41 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Durham |
24 | 16 March 1986 (aged 33) | 13 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Kent | |
10 | 3 January 1989 (aged 30) | 70 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium | Nottinghamshire | |
15 | 28 February 1990 (aged 29) | 46 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm fast-medium | Yorkshire |
India announced their 15-man squad on 15 April. [24] They have also named Ambati Rayudu, Rishabh Pant, Axar Patel, Navdeep Saini and Ishant Sharma as stand-by players for the team, who can be drafted in the event of injuries to any player. [25] Rishabh Pant was called up to India's squad as cover for Shikhar Dhawan, after Dhawan suffered a hairline fracture on his left thumb during India's game against Australia. [26] On 19 June 2019, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) confirmed that Dhawan had been ruled out for the rest of the tournament, with Pant confirmed as his replacement. [27] Vijay Shankar was ruled out of India's final two round-robin matches due to an injury, with Mayank Agarwal named as his replacement. [28]
Coach: Ravi Shastri
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | Virat Kohli (c) | 5 November 1988 (aged 30) | 227 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium | Delhi |
45 | Rohit Sharma (vc) | 30 April 1987 (aged 32) | 206 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Mumbai |
7 | MS Dhoni (wk) | 7 July 1981 (aged 37) | 341 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right-arm medium | Jharkhand |
1 | KL Rahul (wk) | 18 April 1992 (aged 27) | 14 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right arm medium | Karnataka |
21 | Dinesh Karthik (wk) | 1 June 1985 (aged 33) | 91 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right arm off spin | Tamil Nadu |
17 | Rishabh Pant (wk) | 4 October 1997 (aged 21) | 3 | Wicket-keeper | Left | Right arm medium | Delhi |
25 | 5 December 1985 (aged 33) | 128 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Delhi | |
59 | Vijay Shankar | 26 January 1991 (aged 28) | 9 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium | Tamil Nadu |
81 | Kedar Jadhav | 26 March 1985 (aged 34) | 59 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Maharashtra |
3 | Yuzvendra Chahal | 23 July 1990 (aged 28) | 41 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Haryana |
23 | Kuldeep Yadav | 14 December 1994 (aged 24) | 44 | Bowler | Left | Left-arm unorthodox | Uttar Pradesh |
15 | Bhuvneshwar Kumar | 5 February 1990 (aged 29) | 105 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Uttar Pradesh |
93 | Jasprit Bumrah | 6 December 1993 (aged 25) | 49 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Gujarat |
33 | Hardik Pandya | 11 October 1993 (aged 25) | 45 | All-rounder | Right | Right arm medium-fast | Baroda |
8 | Ravindra Jadeja | 6 December 1988 (aged 30) | 151 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Saurashtra |
11 | Mohammed Shami | 3 September 1990 (aged 28) | 63 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Bengal |
New Zealand announced their 15-man squad on 3 April 2019. [29]
Coach: Gary Stead
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
22 | Kane Williamson (c) | 8 August 1990 (aged 28) | 139 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Northern Districts |
48 | Tom Latham (vc, wk) | 2 April 1992 (aged 27) | 85 | Wicket-keeper | Left | Right-arm medium | Canterbury |
38 | Tim Southee | 11 December 1988 (aged 30) | 139 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Northern Districts |
66 | Tom Blundell (wk) | 1 September 1990 (aged 28) | 0 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right-arm off spin | Wellington Firebirds |
18 | Trent Boult | 22 July 1989 (aged 29) | 79 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm fast-medium | Northern Districts |
77 | Colin de Grandhomme | 22 July 1986 (aged 32) | 28 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Northern Districts |
87 | Lockie Ferguson | 13 June 1991 (aged 27) | 27 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Auckland Aces |
31 | Martin Guptill | 30 September 1986 (aged 32) | 169 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Auckland Aces |
21 | Matt Henry | 14 December 1991 (aged 27) | 43 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Canterbury |
82 | Colin Munro | 11 March 1987 (aged 32) | 51 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Auckland Aces |
50 | James Neesham | 17 September 1990 (aged 28) | 49 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm medium | Wellington Firebirds |
86 | Henry Nicholls | 15 November 1991 (aged 27) | 41 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Canterbury |
74 | Mitchell Santner | 5 February 1992 (aged 27) | 59 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Northern Districts |
61 | Ish Sodhi | 31 October 1992 (aged 26) | 30 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Northern Districts |
3 | Ross Taylor | 8 March 1984 (aged 35) | 218 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off break | Central Stags |
Pakistan announced their initial World Cup squad on 18 April. [30] They announced their final squad on 20 May, with Junaid Khan, Faheem Ashraf and Abid Ali replaced by Wahab Riaz, Mohammad Amir and Asif Ali. [31]
Coach: Mickey Arthur
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
54 | Sarfaraz Ahmed (c, wk) | 22 May 1987 (aged 32) | 106 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right-arm off spin | Sindh |
56 | Babar Azam (vc) | 15 October 1994 (aged 24) | 64 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Islamabad |
45 | Asif Ali | 1 October 1991 (aged 27) | 16 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium-fast | Sindh |
39 | Fakhar Zaman | 10 April 1990 (aged 29) | 36 | Batsman | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Federally Administered Tribal Areas |
89 | Haris Sohail | 15 October 1989 (aged 29) | 34 | Batsman | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Federal Areas |
26 | Imam-ul-Haq | 12 December 1995 (aged 23) | 28 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm leg spin | Habib Bank |
8 | Mohammad Hafeez | 17 October 1980 (aged 38) | 210 | All-rounder | Right | Right arm off spin | Sui Northern Gas Pipelines |
29 | Shadab Khan | 4 October 1998 (aged 20) | 34 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Khyber Pakhtunkhwa |
18 | Shoaib Malik | 1 February 1982 (aged 37) | 284 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Punjab |
9 | Imad Wasim | 18 December 1988 (aged 30) | 46 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Islamabad |
32 | Hasan Ali | 7 February 1994 (aged 25) | 49 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast medium | Islamabad |
5 | Mohammad Amir | 13 April 1992 (aged 27) | 51 | Bowler | Left | Left-arm fast | Sui Southern Gas Company |
87 | Mohammad Hasnain | 5 April 2000 (aged 19) | 5 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Sindh |
40 | Shaheen Afridi | 6 April 2000 (aged 19) | 14 | Bowler | Left | Left-arm fast | Baluchistan |
47 | Wahab Riaz | 28 June 1985 (aged 33) | 79 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm fast | Khyber Pakhtunkhwa |
60 | 16 October 1987 (aged 31) | 3 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | |
41 | 16 January 1994 (aged 25) | 23 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm fast-medium | Faisalabad | |
83 | 24 December 1989 (aged 29) | 76 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm fast | Sindh |
South Africa announced their World Cup squad on 18 April. [32] Anrich Nortje was originally included in the squad but on 7 May 2019, he was ruled out of the tournament with a hand injury and replaced by Chris Morris. [33] Dale Steyn was ruled out of the tournament due to an ongoing shoulder injury, and was replaced by Beuran Hendricks. [34]
Coach: Ottis Gibson
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | Faf du Plessis (c) | 13 July 1984 (aged 34) | 134 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Titans |
12 | Quinton de Kock (vc, wk) | 17 December 1992 (aged 26) | 106 | Wicket-keeper | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Titans |
1 | Hashim Amla | 31 March 1983 (aged 36) | 174 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Cape Cobras |
4 | Aiden Markram | 4 October 1994 (aged 24) | 18 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm off spin | Titans |
72 | Rassie van der Dussen | 7 February 1989 (aged 30) | 9 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Lions |
10 | David Miller | 10 June 1989 (aged 29) | 120 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Dolphins |
21 | JP Duminy | 14 April 1984 (aged 35) | 194 | All-rounder | Left | Right arm off spin | Cape Cobras |
23 | Andile Phehlukwayo | 3 March 1996 (aged 23) | 36 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm fast-medium | Dolphins |
29 | Dwaine Pretorius | 29 March 1989 (aged 30) | 19 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Lions |
8 | Dale Steyn | 27 June 1983 (aged 35) | 125 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Titans |
25 | Kagiso Rabada | 25 May 1995 (aged 24) | 64 | Bowler | Left | Right-arm fast | Lions |
22 | Lungi Ngidi | 29 March 1996 (aged 23) | 13 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Titans |
20 | 16 November 1993 (aged 25) | 4 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Warriors | |
2 | Chris Morris | 30 April 1987 (aged 32) | 34 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Titans |
99 | Imran Tahir | 27 March 1979 (aged 40) | 98 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Dolphins |
26 | Tabraiz Shamsi | 18 February 1990 (aged 29) | 5 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm wrist spin | Titans |
Sri Lanka announced their World Cup squad on 18 April. [35] Nuwan Pradeep was ruled out of Sri Lanka's last two matches of the tournament, after contracting chickenpox. He was replaced by Kasun Rajitha. [36]
Coach: Chandika Hathurusingha
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | Dimuth Karunaratne (c) | 21 April 1988 (aged 31) | 18 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Sinhalese |
75 | Dhananjaya de Silva (vc) | 6 September 1991 (aged 27) | 33 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm off spin | Tamil Union |
69 | Angelo Mathews | 2 June 1987 (aged 31) | 204 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Colts |
28 | Avishka Fernando | 5 April 1998 (aged 21) | 6 | Batsman | Right | Right-arm medium | Colts |
66 | Lahiru Thirimanne | 9 August 1989 (aged 29) | 118 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Ragama |
2 | Kusal Mendis | 2 February 1995 (aged 24) | 63 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Colombo |
55 | Kusal Perera (wk) | 17 August 1990 (aged 28) | 88 | Wicket-keeper | Left | Left-arm medium | Colts |
1 | Thisara Perera | 3 April 1989 (aged 30) | 154 | All-rounder | Left | Right arm medium | Sinhalese |
17 | Isuru Udana | 17 February 1988 (aged 31) | 6 | All-rounder | Right | Left-arm fast-medium | Chilaw Marians |
46 | Jeffrey Vandersay | 5 February 1990 (aged 29) | 11 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm leg spin | Sinhalese |
86 | Jeevan Mendis | 15 January 1983 (aged 36) | 55 | All-rounder | Left | Right-arm leg spin | Tamil Union |
57 | Milinda Siriwardana | 4 December 1985 (aged 33) | 26 | All-rounder | Left | Left-arm orthodox | Chilaw Marians |
99 | Lasith Malinga | 28 August 1983 (aged 35) | 218 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Nondescripts |
82 | Suranga Lakmal | 10 March 1987 (aged 32) | 82 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Tamil Union |
63 | Nuwan Pradeep | 19 October 1986 (aged 32) | 35 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Sinhalese |
West Indies announced their World Cup squad on 24 April. [37] On 19 May 2019, Sunil Ambris, Dwayne Bravo, John Campbell, Jonathan Carter, Roston Chase, Shane Dowrich, Keemo Paul, Khary Pierre, Raymon Reifer and Kieron Pollard were all named as reserve players by Cricket West Indies. [38] On 24 June 2019, Andre Russell was ruled out of the rest of the tournament, due to a knee injury, and was replaced by Sunil Ambris. [39]
Coach: Floyd Reifer
S/N | Player | Date of birth (age) | ODIs | Role | Batting | Bowling style | List A or domestic team |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8 | Jason Holder (c) | 5 November 1991 (aged 27) | 95 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium | Barbados |
45 | Chris Gayle (vc) | 21 September 1979 (aged 39) | 289 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm off spin | Jamaica |
97 | Fabian Allen | 7 May 1995 (aged 24) | 7 | All rounder | Right | Left-arm orthodox | Jamaica |
26 | Carlos Brathwaite | 18 July 1988 (aged 30) | 33 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm medium | Barbados |
46 | Darren Bravo | 6 February 1989 (aged 30) | 107 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Trinidad and Tobago |
19 | Sheldon Cottrell | 19 August 1989 (aged 29) | 14 | Bowler | Right | Left-arm fast-medium | Jamaica |
85 | Shannon Gabriel | 28 April 1988 (aged 31) | 22 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast | Trinidad and Tobago |
2 | Shimron Hetmyer | 26 December 1996 (aged 22) | 25 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm leg spin | Guyana |
4 | Shai Hope (wk) | 10 November 1993 (aged 25) | 54 | Wicket-keeper | Right | Left-arm medium | Barbados |
17 | Evin Lewis | 27 December 1991 (aged 27) | 35 | Batsman | Left | Right-arm medium | Trinidad and Tobago |
5 | Ashley Nurse | 22 December 1988 (aged 30) | 50 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm off spin | Barbados |
29 | Nicholas Pooran (wk) | 2 October 1995 (aged 23) | 1 | Wicket-keeper | Left | — | Trinidad and Tobago |
24 | Kemar Roach | 30 June 1988 (aged 30) | 85 | Bowler | Right | Right-arm fast-medium | Barbados |
12 | Andre Russell | 29 April 1988 (aged 31) | 52 | All-rounder | Right | Right-arm fast | Jamaica |
42 | Oshane Thomas | 18 February 1997 (aged 22) | 9 | Bowler | Left | Right-arm fast | Jamaica |
Fewest caps [lower-alpha 2] | Most caps [lower-alpha 2] | ||
---|---|---|---|
Tom Blundell | 0 | MS Dhoni | 341 [lower-alpha 3] |
Nicholas Pooran | 1 | Chris Gayle | 289 [lower-alpha 4] |
Abu Jayed | 2 | Shoaib Malik | 284 |
Jofra Archer | 3 | Virat Kohli | 227 |
Liam Dawson | Eoin Morgan | 222 [lower-alpha 5] |
Youngest players [lower-alpha 6] [40] | Oldest players [lower-alpha 6] [41] | ||
---|---|---|---|
Mujeeb Ur Rahman | 18 years, 63 days | Imran Tahir | 40 years, 64 days |
Shaheen Afridi | 19 years, 54 days | Chris Gayle | 39 years, 251 days |
Mohammad Hasnain | 19 years, 55 days | Mohammad Hafeez | 38 years, 225 days |
Shadab Khan | 20 years, 238 days | MS Dhoni | 37 years, 327 days |
Rashid Khan | 20 years, 252 days | Shoaib Malik | 37 years, 118 days |
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The 2015 Cricket World Cup was the 11th Cricket World Cup, jointly hosted by Australia and New Zealand; India were the defending champions, having won the tournament in 2011. The 2015 Cricket World Cup Final took place at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and was won by Australia, who defeated New Zealand by 7 wickets in the final.
The 2018 ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier was a cricket tournament that took place during March 2018 in Zimbabwe. It formed the final part of the Cricket World Cup qualification process for the 2019 World Cup in England and Wales. The top two teams, Afghanistan national cricket team and the West Indies, qualified for the World Cup, joining the hosts and the seven teams who had already qualified through their ranking in the ICC ODI Championship. Afghanistan won the tournament, beating the West Indies by 7 wickets in the final. Afghanistan’s Mohommad Shahzad was named the player of the match and Zimbabwe’s Sikandar Raza was named the player of the tournament.
Rishabh Rajendra Pant is an Indian international cricketer who plays for the Indian cricket team as a wicket-keeper batter. Having played all formats for India, he is best known for his consistency to score runs in Test cricket. Pant plays for Delhi in domestic cricket and captains Delhi Capitals in the Indian Premier League. He was a member of the Indian team that won the 2024 T20 World Cup. He was the vice-captain of the India U-19 team that was runner-up at the 2016 Under-19 Cricket World Cup.
Thomas Ackland Blundell is a New Zealand cricketer. He made his international debut for the New Zealand national cricket team in January 2017. He also plays first-class cricket for Wellington. In April 2019, he was named in New Zealand's One Day International (ODI) squad for the 2019 Cricket World Cup, despite being uncapped in an ODI match. Blundell was a member of the New Zealand team that won the 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship. He was one of the recipients of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year award in 2023.
The 2018 Asia Cup was a One-Day International (ODI) cricket tournament that was held in the United Arab Emirates in September 2018. It was the 14th edition of the Asia Cup and the third time the tournament was played in the United Arab Emirates, after the 1984 and 1995 tournaments. India were the defending champions, and retained their title, after beating Bangladesh by three wickets in the final.
Hasan Ali is a Pakistani cricketer who plays for the national team in all formats. He made his first-class debut for Sialkot in October 2013. He made his international debut for Pakistan in August 2016 in a One Day International (ODI) match against Ireland. The following summer, he was named in Pakistan's squad for the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy. Pakistan went on to win the tournament with Ali named player of the tournament after taking thirteen wickets, and took the final wicket of Jasprit Bumrah. He became the quickest bowler for Pakistan to take 50 wickets in ODIs. In August 2018, he was one of thirty-three players to be awarded a central contract for the 2018–19 season by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).
Hayden Rashidi Walsh is an American cricketer who has represented both the United States and the West Indies cricket teams in international cricket. He was born in the United States Virgin Islands to an Antiguan father, Hayden Walsh Sr. He is a left-handed batsman and right-arm leg-spin bowler.
Akeal Jerome Hosein is a Trinidadian cricketer who has played for Trinidad and Tobago in West Indian domestic cricket, as well as representing the Trinbago Knight Riders in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL).
Shadab Khan is a Pakistani international cricketer who plays for the Pakistan national cricket team. He captains Islamabad United in the Pakistan Super League (PSL), and under his leadership they won the PSL 2024 for a record third time in the tournament's history. An all-rounder, Khan is Pakistan's most successful T20I bowler. He is also regarded as one of the best fielders in Pakistan. As of 2022, he has been among the players centrally contracted by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB). Khan was a member of the Pakistan team that won the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy.
Ikram Alikhil is an Afghan cricketer. He made his international debut for Afghanistan in March 2019.
The West Indies cricket team toured India from September to November 2018 to play two Tests, five One Day Internationals (ODIs) and three Twenty20 International (T20I) matches. Ahead of the Test series, there was a two-day practice match in Vadodara.
Tumi Sphindile Sekhukhune is a South African cricketer who plays as a right-arm fast-medium bowler. She made her international debut for South Africa in September 2018.
Fatima Sana is a Pakistani cricketer who plays primarily as a right-arm medium-fast bowler for Pakistan. Fatima is the current captain of the Pakistan Women's Cricket Team. She has played domestic cricket for Karachi, Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited, Barbados Royals and Canterbury Magicians. In April 2019, she was named in Pakistan's squad for their series against South Africa. She made her Women's One Day International (WODI) debut for Pakistan against South Africa on 6 May 2019. She made her Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) debut for Pakistan against South Africa on 15 May 2019. In January 2020, she was named in Pakistan's squad for the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup in Australia. In December 2020, she was shortlisted as one of the Women's Emerging Cricketer of the Year for the 2020 PCB Awards.
The West Indies cricket team toured India in December 2019 to play three One Day Internationals (ODIs) and three Twenty20 International (T20I) matches. In November 2019, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) swapped the venues for the first and third T20I matches. Ahead of the tour, Chris Gayle confirmed that he would not be playing in the ODIs for the West Indies, after he announced he would be taking a break from cricket.
The 2021 ICC Men's T20 World Cup was the seventh ICC Men's T20 World Cup tournament, which was held in United Arab Emirates and Oman. Each team selected a squad of fifteen players before 10 October 2021. The player ages are as on 17 October 2021, the opening day of the tournament, and where a player plays for more than one team in Twenty20 cricket, only their domestic team is listed.
The West Indian cricket team toured India in February 2022 to play three One Day International (ODI) and three Twenty20 International (T20I) matches. The ODI series formed part of the inaugural 2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League. In September 2021, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) confirmed the schedule for the tour.
The West Indian cricket team toured Australia from October to December 2022 to play two Test matches and two Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is). The T20Is formed part of both teams' preparations for the 2022 ICC Men's T20 World Cup, while the Test matches formed part of the 2021–2023 ICC World Test Championship. In May 2022, Cricket Australia confirmed the fixtures for the tour.