ICC Future Tours Programme

International cricket tour programme From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ICC Future Tours Programme

The ICC Future Tours Programme (ICC FTP) is a schedule of international cricket tours and tournaments which structure the programme of cricket events for International Cricket Council (ICC) full members and associate members with One Day International (ODI) status, over a period of time.

The FTP schedules bilateral cricket tours with the objective of each team playing each other at least once at home and once away over a period of 10 years known as the "Ten Year Plan" since 2006. If the cricket boards of two individual countries reach an agreement, they can play more than two series.[1][2] The FTP also schedules associate tri-nation series with the objective of each team playing each other at least once at home, once away and once at a neutral venue over a cycle of four years since 2019.[3][4] If a team does not want to travel to a particular country for a bilateral or tri-nation series due to security reasons, then, by the mutual agreement of the respective boards, that series can be shifted to a neutral venue such as the United Arab Emirates or any other country where the facilities are deemed adequate.[5][6]

Additionally, it has also scheduled ICC tournaments over a period of four years known as an "ICC Events cycle" since 2024. Each cycle consists of one men's Cricket World Cup, one women's Cricket World Cup, one ICC Champions Trophy, one ICC Women's Champions Trophy, two men's T20 World Cups and two women's T20 World Cups.[7]

List of FTPs

  • As of January 2025, four Men's Future Tours Programmes have been announced.
    1. The 2006–2012 Men's FTP was announced on 9 May 2006. It was the first Men's FTP to be released under the ICC's "Ten Year Plan" and featured 10 nations.[8][9]
    2. The 2015–2019 Men's FTP was released on 30 November 2014, after the scheduling conflicts with the initial 2011–2020 Men's FTP draft were resolved and featured 10 nations.[10][11][12]
    3. The 2018–2023 Men's FTP was announced on 20 June 2018 and featured 13 nations.[13][14] Moreover, the ICC also granted T20I status to all then affiliate members promoting them as associate members with T20I status.[15][16]
    4. The 2023–2027 Men's FTP was announced on 17 August 2022 and it consisted of over 770 matches between 13 nations.[17][18]
  • As of January 2025, two Women's Future Tours Programmes have been announced.
    1. The 2022–2025 Women's FTP was announced on 16 August 2022. It was the first Women's FTP and it consisted of over 300 matches between 10 nations.[19][20][21][22]
    2. The 2025–2029 Women's FTP was announced on 4 November 2024 and it consisted of over 400 matches between 11 nations.[23][24][25][26]

ICC Events cycle

  • The 2024–2031 men's hosts cycle was announced on 16 November 2021, which included two events cycles (2024–2027 and 2028–2031).[29]
  • The 2024–2027 women's hosts cycle was announced on 26 July 2022, which included the 2024–2027 event cycle.[30]

Tournaments summary

Men's tournaments

More information FTP, Championship ...
Tournaments included in the ICC Men's Future Tour Programme
FTP Championship[a] ICC Events & Hosts[b] Other Events[c] Events cycle Hosts cycle
2006–2012[8][9] Oct – Nov 2006: Champions TrophyNov 2006: Afro-Asia Cup
(later cancelled)[31]
Mar – Apr 2007: Cricket World Cup
Sep 2007: World Twenty20
Jun 2007: Afro-Asia Cup
Sep 2008: Champions Trophy
(later postponed to 2009)[32]
Jun 2008: Asia Cup
Jun 2009: World Twenty20
Apr 2010: World Twenty20Jun 2010: Asia Cup
Feb – Mar 2011: Cricket World Cup
2012–2014[d] Sep – Oct 2012: World Twenty20
Sri Lanka
Mar 2012: Asia Cup
Bangladesh
Oct 2012: CLT20
Jun 2013: Champions Trophy
England
Sep 2013: CLT20
Mar –Apr 2014: World Twenty20
Bangladesh
Sep 2014: CLT20
2015–2019[10][11] 7 Feb – 29 Mar 2015: Cricket World Cup
Australia & New Zealand
11 Mar – 3 Apr 2016: World Twenty20
India
Mar 2016: Asia Cup
1 – 19 Jun 2017: Champions Trophy
England
2015–2019[10][11]
&
2018–2023[13][14]
Jun 2018: Asia Cup
2019–2021 WTC
2020–2023 Super League
30 May – 15 July 2019: Cricket World Cup
England
2018–2023[13][14] Oct – Nov 2020: World Twenty20
(later postponed to 2022)[33]
Sep 2020: Asia Cup
(later cancelled)[34]
2021–2023 WTC
2020–2023 Super League
Jun 2021: WTC Final
Oct – Nov 2021: T20 World Cup
Sep 2022: Asia Cup
2023–2027[17][18] 2023–2025 WTC Jun 2023: WTC Final
Jun – Jul 2023: CWC Qualifier
Oct – Nov 2023: Cricket World Cup
India
Sep 2023: Asia Cup
Jun 2024: T20 World Cup
West Indies & United States
2024–2027[29]2024–2031[29]
2025–2027 WTC Feb – Mar 2025: Champions Trophy
Pakistan
Jun 2025: WTC Final
Sep 2025: Asia Cup
Feb – Mar 2026: T20 World Cup
India & Sri Lanka
TBA 2027–2029 WTC 2027 WTC Final
2027 Cricket World Cup
South Africa, Zimbabwe & Namibia
2028 Men's T20 World Cup
Australia & New Zealand
2028–2031[29]
2029–2031 WTC 2029 WTC Final
2029 ICC Champions Trophy
India
2030 Men's T20 World Cup
England, Wales, Ireland & Scotland
TBA 2031 WTC Final
2031 Cricket World Cup
India & Bangladesh
Close

Women's tournaments

More information FTP, Championship ...
Tournaments included in the ICC Women's Future Tour Programme
FTP Championship[e] ICC Events & Hosts[b] Other Events[c] Events cycle Hosts cycle
2022–2025[19][20][21] 2022–2025[22] Jul – Aug 2022: Cricket World CupOct 2022: Twenty20 Asia Cup
Feb 2023: T20 World Cup
South Africa
Sep – Oct 2024: T20 World Cup
Bangladesh
(later moved to UAE)[35]
2024–2027[30]2024–2027[30]
2025–2029[23][24][25] 2025–2029[26] Oct 2025: Cricket World Cup
India
Jun – Jul 2026: T20 World Cup
England
Sep – Oct 2026: Twenty20 Asia Cup
Jun – Jul 2027: Champions Trophy
Sri Lanka
Sep 2028: T20 World Cup
Pakistan
Jun 2028: Twenty20 Asia Cup 2028–2031TBA
TBA TBA 2029 Women's Cricket World Cup
Close

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.