HomeNewsCricketT20 World Cup 2022: What to expect as matches kick off today

T20 World Cup 2022: What to expect as matches kick off today

Why the Super 8 could be exciting—with West Indies and Sri Lanka finding themselves in this company of amateurs—requires a look back at the past.

October 16, 2022 / 10:57 IST
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Sri Lanka has played just one international match at Geelong ahead of Sunday's Super 8 clash against Namibia. (Image source: Twitter/T20WorldCup)
Sri Lanka has played just one international match at Geelong ahead of Sunday's Super 8 clash against Namibia. (Image source: Twitter/T20WorldCup)

The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup starting Sunday (October 16, 2022) in Australia might be a confusing mishmash of a format, but at least one thing that’s common to all International Cricket Council (ICC) events remains present—an India-Pakistan match.

The match, scheduled neatly on Sunday, 23 October, a day before Diwali, will be the showpiece of the event at Australia’s biggest stadium in Melbourne—unless the teams play each other at a later stage as well. When they played in last year’s World T20, Pakistan beat India by 10 wickets, for the first time in 13 ICC limited-overs tournaments. But then we are getting ahead of ourselves.

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The first rounds of the 2022 T20 World Cup that begin on Sunday pit eight teams, mostly the rookies, divided into two groups A and B, of which the two top teams from each group will proceed to the next stage. The more established teams lie in wait here, divided into groups 1 and 2, with India and Pakistan in the same group as Bangladesh and South Africa—three teams that traditionally play in green colours. These group matches begin October 22, with Australia taking on New Zealand first and the India-Pakistan match the next day.

To give it a more glamorous description, the A-B group stage is called the Super 8 followed by a Super 12 of six teams each. For those who dip in and out of cricket, the Super 8 includes teams such as Namibia and Scotland, though the Netherlands is the lowest ranked team at 18, which also means there are more than 18 teams that play international cricket.