Dates | 10 May 2015 – 2 December 2017 |
---|---|
Administrator(s) | International Cricket Council |
Cricket format | First-class cricket |
Tournament format(s) | Round-robin |
Host(s) | Various (home and away) |
Champions | Afghanistan (2nd title) |
Participants | 8 |
Matches | 28 |
Most runs | Babar Hayat (712) |
Most wickets | Ahmed Raza (32) |
The 2015–2017 ICC Intercontinental Cup was the seventh edition of the ICC Intercontinental Cup, an international first-class cricket tournament between leading associate members of the International Cricket Council (ICC). The tournament took place during 2015 to 2017. It ran in parallel with the 2015–17 ICC World Cricket League Championship, but with slightly different teams. As Ireland and Afghanistan had qualified for the ICC One Day International Championship ranking qualification process, they were replaced by Kenya and Nepal in the limited over event; however they continued to play the four-day event.
As a result of changes to the structure of international cricket announced by the ICC in January 2014, the winner of the 2015-17 Intercontinental Cup (and following editions of the tournament) were originally scheduled to play four five-day matches against the bottom ranked Test nation (two home and two away matches), an event known as the 2018 ICC Test Challenge.[1][2][3][4] Should the winner of the Intercontinental Cup go on to win the ICC Test Challenge, they would have become the 11th Test nation.[5]
However, in February 2017 following an ICC Board meeting, changes were agreed in principle to expand the number of Test nations to twelve. Both Afghanistan and Ireland were likely to be granted Test status before the proposed 2018 ICC Test Challenge.[6][7] In June 2017, the ICC awarded both Afghanistan and Ireland Full Member status, making them eligible to play Test match cricket.[8][9] As a result, the planned Test Challenge was scrapped.[10]
Afghanistan won the competition, after beating the United Arab Emirates by 10 wickets in their final game.[11] They finished with 121 points, with Ireland as runners-up on 109 points.[12] Rashid Khan, man of the match for Afghanistan in the final fixture, said that winning the Intercontinental Cup was "good preparation for Test cricket for us".[13]
The following are the 8 teams participating in the competition based on the results from 2011–13 ICC World Cricket League Championship, 2014 Cricket World Cup Qualifier and the 2015 ICC World Cricket League Division Two.
Of the eight teams participating in the 2015–17 ICC Intercontinental Cup, only Papua New Guinea has never played a first-class match before.[14] Afghanistan, Ireland, Namibia, Scotland, The Netherlands and the UAE had all appeared before in the previous Intercontinental Cup of 2011–2013, while Hong Kong had last appeared in the 2005 Intercontinental Cup and last played in an international multi-day cricket tournament in late 2006 at the 2006/07 ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament.
Though never having played a first-class match, Papua New Guinea (PNG) have played two-day cricket in the South Australian Premier League in 2013 and 2014. Though finishing at the bottom of the league in both seasons, the experience seems to have hardened the team as they convincingly beat Hong Kong in a three-day match in Australia and one of PNG's openers admitted that participation in the league had been critical to exposing the players to multi-day cricket.[14]
The breakdown of fixtures is as follows:[15]
Pos | Team[16] | Pld | W | L | T | D | A | FI | Pts | NRR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Afghanistan | 7 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 121 | 2.187 |
2 | Ireland | 7 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 109 | 1.369 |
3 | Netherlands | 7 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 72 | 0.958 |
4 | Hong Kong | 7 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 59 | 0.915 |
5 | United Arab Emirates | 7 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 47 | 0.816 |
6 | Scotland | 7 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 46 | 0.840 |
7 | Papua New Guinea | 7 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 43 | 0.806 |
8 | Namibia | 7 | 1 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 27 | 0.672 |
The fixtures for round one were announced on 5 May 2015.[17]
10–13 May 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
2–5 June 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
2–5 June 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
16–19 June 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
The fixtures for round two were announced in August 2015.[21]
8–11 September 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
11–14 November 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
21–24 November 2015
Scorecard |
v
|
||
The fixtures for round three were announced in December 2015.[22]
21–24 January 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
21–24 January 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
31 January–3 February 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
The fixtures for round four were announced in April 2016.[27][28]
29 July–1 August 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
9–12 August 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
30 August–2 September 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
16–19 October 2016
Scorecard |
v
|
||
The fixture between Afghanistan and Ireland was announced by Cricket Ireland in July 2016.[33] The fixture between Hong Kong and the Netherlands was announced by the Koninklijke Nederlandse Cricket Bond in December 2016.[34] Cricket Scotland confirmed the venue for their fixture in February 2017.[35]
10–13 February 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
28–31 March 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
7–10 April 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
6–9 June 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
15–18 August 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
16–19 September 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
1–4 October 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
20–23 October 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
The ICC announced the dates and venues for the final round of fixtures on 23 October 2017.[45]
29 November–2 December 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
29 November–2 December 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
21/0 (5.3 overs)
Ihsanullah 18* (16) |
29 November–2 December 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||
29 November–2 December 2017
Scorecard |
v
|
||