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ICC T20 World Cup 2026 – Who will win the trophy?

Who will win the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026?

  • Pakistan

    Votes: 20 36.4%
  • India

    Votes: 23 41.8%
  • Australia

    Votes: 1 1.8%
  • South Africa

    Votes: 9 16.4%
  • England

    Votes: 1 1.8%
  • New Zealand

    Votes: 1 1.8%
  • Afghanistan

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Sri Lanka

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • West Indies

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Zimbabwe

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    55
  • Poll closed .

BouncerGuy

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The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 is set to kick off on 7 February, bringing together 20 teams across Sri Lanka and India in what promises to be a thrilling month of cricket. India enters the tournament as defending champions after their 2024 triumph over South Africa, while they remain strong contenders. With a format that includes group stages, Super Eight, and knockouts, fans can expect high drama, packed stadiums, and plenty of surprises as established giants and emerging sides battle for supremacy.

Recent editions have shown how unpredictable this format can be, with Australia lifting the trophy in 2021, England in 2022, and India breaking a long drought in 2024. The 2026 edition will test whether India can defend their crown, whether South Africa or Australia can reclaim dominance, or if a dark horse like Afghanistan or the Netherlands can shock the cricketing world. With fresh talent debuting across squads and seasoned stars returning, the stage is set for another unforgettable chapter in T20 history.
 
Pakistan.

- We have a huge advantage in playing pretty much all our games in one city.
- The squad selected for this WC is surprisingly pragmatic with 5 genuine spin bowlers in each game, batters that excel against spin and a plethora of all-rounders.
- We have the added support and prayers of the Bangladeshi brothers and sisters, along with the support we always get in Sri Lanka. Each game will feel like a home game, maybe even the game against India.
- All the other big teams are a big disadvantage playing in the subcontinent. India is the only true threat but due to all the reasons provided above, I think we beat them twice and win the trophy.
 
Pakistan.

- We have a huge advantage in playing pretty much all our games in one city.
- The squad selected for this WC is surprisingly pragmatic with 5 genuine spin bowlers in each game, batters that excel against spin and a plethora of all-rounders.
- We have the added support and prayers of the Bangladeshi brothers and sisters, along with the support we always get in Sri Lanka. Each game will feel like a home game, maybe even the game against India.
- All the other big teams are a big disadvantage playing in the subcontinent. India is the only true threat but due to all the reasons provided above, I think we beat them twice and win the trophy.
'Glass half full kinda guy' suna tha, ye toh 'Balti all full' nikal gaya 😂
 
You guys are voting based on patriotism but not intelligence. How come Pakistan is winning? that too without Rizwan :ishant
 
Why no option for the 2nd most loveable team by indian in this tournament - Scotland. :qdkcheeky:kp
 
Due to added Duas and prayers from Bangladesh and additional advantage of not travelling as evident from CT, I'm voting for Pakistan to win it.
 
Depends on how many matches Babar will warm the bench

Longer he stay on bench

Greater our chances
 
India, Australia, SA look good.

I think Pakisan will play well on low scoring SL wickets.
 
Pak’s best chance is sluggish wickets where Babar can play an anchoring role and spin bowlers can trouble SENA teams. On flat wickets, they just don’t have the fire power.
 
England. Theres no doubting the potential and the match winning ability they pocess in white balls T20 format. And on any given day, they can take the game away from any opposition. Having said that, beating india will be a big challenge.
 
England. Theres no doubting the potential and the match winning ability they pocess in white balls T20 format. And on any given day, they can take the game away from any opposition. Having said that, beating india will be a big challenge.
England bowling barring Rashid is trash
 
Pakistan will win T20 World Cup defeating India in the final (Source : Grape 🍇 Analysis by a Teacher)
 
India is gonna win it the way they are playing... Their batting is absolute beast... Abhishek, ishan, surya is back in form, pandya, tilak if he is fit now, dube etc etc

Tough to beat them.
 
India is gonna win it the way they are playing... Their batting is absolute beast... Abhishek, ishan, surya is back in form, pandya, tilak if he is fit now, dube etc etc

Tough to beat them.
For some reason i think we will slip up on a specific day.
 
I voted for Pakistan.

Agha ji - Has been unleashed and he cannot be denied.

Abrar - Game changing spinner

Sahebzada + Saim - Great opening pair

Babar+Fakhar - Reliable anchors

Naseem - Talented wicket taking pacer

Shadab - Match winning AR

Tariq - Wildcard

Mike Hessen - Coach of the year candidate

Mohsin Maqvi - Board President of the year front runner


This team had got all basis covered.
 
Mostly Aus. India has peaked too early and i don't have confidence in Indian bowling. India may also lose match against Pak, although i am hoping they will win it barely
 
They are likely to Play super -8 game against Pakistan, NZ and Lanka and mostly in Lanka. :kp
Yeah. SL pitches can throw up some interesting results.

On Indian pitches, I'd lock Australia, NZ, India and ENG for semis but on SL pitches it's not very clear. :kp
 
Yeah. SL pitches can throw up some interesting results.

On Indian pitches, I'd lock Australia, NZ, India and ENG for semis but on SL pitches it's not very clear. :kp
I'd put South Africa ahead of NZ and England on Indian pitches
 
As long as India do not win, I am happy. :dav

I think South Africa and Pakistan are the dark horses.
 
Nah after this dominant display against Aussies Pak to start as firm favourites. Bowling is top notch and Agha 2.0 and Babar 3.0 as unleashed today along with Saim and Farhan and lower order fire power of Shadab. Stars are aligning well for Pakistan.
I dunno if Pakistan have ever been the favorites in an ICC tournament in recent history barring 2021 T20 World Cup, when they genuinely had the best team in the tournament considering the conditions. Pakistan definitely have a big advantage of playing all their games in Sri Lanka and key players hitting form at the right time is a plus too, but there are a few other teams that are ahead of Pakistan
 
Pak have fair chance with potent spin attack for SL pitches but our batting is not that great
 
Pak have fair chance with potent spin attack for SL pitches but our batting is not that great

Batting is also good enough.

Pakistan posted 175+ in all 3 games against Australia. They crossed 200 in one of the games.
 
𝗔𝘂𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗮𝗹𝗶𝗮

Before 2007WC
Lost ODI Series & Won 🏆

Before 2021 T20WC
Lost T20I Series & Won 🏆

Before 2023 WTC Final
Lost Test Series & Won 🏆

Before 2023WC
Lost ODI Series & Won 🏆

Before 2026 T20WC ?
Lost T20I Series (Today)*

:kp
 
ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026: Group A preview

Group A gets the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 underway when Pakistan face the Netherlands in Colombo on 7 February.

The group also features one of the hosts of the tournament as defending champions India look to do something they have never done in World Cups and retain the trophy.

The 2024 surprise package were the USA, who will once again be fierce competitors, as will Namibia, who round out the group.

India

The number one-ranked side in both T20Is and ODIs, India are the force to be reckoned with in the white-ball formats.

In their batting ranks, they have Abhishek Sharma, who in just 37 matches has made 1,267 runs, including two hundreds.

He possesses the highest career strike rate in T20Is with a staggering 194.92.

Sharma is the next cab off the ranks as India continue their new era following the retirements of Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma after the victory in 2024.

In the bowling department, Jasprit Bumrah is still going strong and Varun Chakravarthy’s mystery spin is a vital asset.

Test and ODI captain Shubman Gill has missed out on selection so Ishan Kishan is likely to vie with Sanju Samson for the wicket-keeping gloves, while Samson will assume opener duties alongside Sharma.

With three of their four group games in India, the co-hosts will hope to make the most of home advantage.

Namibia

Namibia are competing in their fourth straight ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.

Their best result came in their debut in 2021 as they reached the Super 12 stage, beating the Netherlands, who they will face again this year.

Last time out in the West Indies and the USA, Namibia triumphed in their opener, beating Oman in a super over. Ruben Trumpelmann took four wickets in that match and is back for more.

Also back at the World Cup is Craig Williams. Already an Eagles legend as a player, Williams has now stepped into the role of head coach as the African side prepare to co-host the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup in 2027.

Before they can think of that, they must face both India and Pakistan for only the second time, and will hope to improve on their 0-2 record against the USA.

Netherlands

The men in orange can often be picked out as a tricky team to beat.

Now embarking on their seventh ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, the Netherlands have twice reached the second round, doing so most recently in 2022.

In that tournament, Bas de Leede took 13 wickets to end joint second in the wicket-taking column, while Max O’Dowd’s 242 runs put him just behind Virat Kohli in the run charts.

Both are back in the squad for the 2026 edition, with Scott Edwards leading the side.

Supreme experience comes from Roelof van der Merwe, one of six 40-plus-year-olds in the tournament.

The wily slow left-arm spinner has been playing international cricket since 2009 and was instrumental in the 2023 Cricket World Cup win over South Africa.

Pakistan

Pakistan will be looking to put their previous T20 World Cup campaign behind them.

The 2009 champions failed to get out of the group stages for the first time after defeats to rivals India and newcomers the USA.

They will hope it is just a blip, having reached the final and the semi-finals in their two appearances before 2024.

Now led by Mike Hesson, Pakistan sit sixth in the T20 team rankings.

They will be captained by Salman Ali Agha, who is deftly handling increased attention on Babar Azam, who has returned to the squad having been dropped for the Asia Cup, where Pakistan finished as runners-up to India.

Despite having played T20 for four years already, Naseem Shah is the youngest member of the squad and will be searching for a return to his best form that saw him take three for 21 against India in a thriller in 2024.

USA


Having made a name for themselves two years ago, the USA will be searching to back it up on foreign soil.

With home advantage, they beat neighbours Canada in their first World Cup match before defeating Pakistan in a super over to finish second in their group behind India and advance to the Super 8 stage, before losing all three games.

Since then, they have won a thrilling North America T20 Cup final against Canada, also triumphing 3-0 in a series against Oman last February.

Monank Patel will again lead the side, having made a half-century against Pakistan in 2024.

Saiteja Mukkamalla is the side’s highest-ranked batter at 25th in the world, sitting above the likes of Harry Brook and Cameron Green.

The 21-year-old already has international hundreds in both white-ball formats and possesses an average of 42.60 in T20s.
 
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India will win but they need to beat two out of Australia, South Africa & West Indies in Super 8's in dewy conditions to advance to the semis. Then again dewy conditions at Wankhede in the semi-final & panauti stadium in the final.
 
The win against Pakistan has always given the Indian team an extra confidence boost in world tournaments. They will have to work harder this time.
 
India are clear favourites.

Cricinfo’s headline says this: “India bring that 2007 Aussie World Cup aura.

But this is exactly the problem. India seem almost too obsessed with Australia, constantly measuring themselves against that legendary 2000s Australian side. It creates unnecessary pressure. Becoming like Australia isn’t easy — that team was relentlessly switched on, especially when it mattered most.

India were cruising in the last 50 overs World Cup, playing brilliant cricket, but one bad game and the entire campaign was forgotten. That’s how heavy the expectations are when you keep chasing the Australian standard.

Let’s see if they can take it up a level this time. Home conditions, IPL-hardened players, fearless batters, the Bumrah factor, excellent spinners… they have everything they need. No excuses at all.
 
India are clear favourites.

Cricinfo’s headline says this: “India bring that 2007 Aussie World Cup aura.

But this is exactly the problem. India seem almost too obsessed with Australia, constantly measuring themselves against that legendary 2000s Australian side. It creates unnecessary pressure. Becoming like Australia isn’t easy — that team was relentlessly switched on, especially when it mattered most.

India were cruising in the last 50 overs World Cup, playing brilliant cricket, but one bad game and the entire campaign was forgotten. That’s how heavy the expectations are when you keep chasing the Australian standard.

Let’s see if they can take it up a level this time. Home conditions, IPL-hardened players, fearless batters, the Bumrah factor, excellent spinners… they have everything they need. No excuses at all.
Everyone should follow the Australian cricket culture. They are beast in World cricket .:kp
 
Because its a Pakistani forum… Wheres yours?!???

Come here begging for approval as usual..
These 🤡 talk without the context , a poster said add Uganda as an option because Pakistan is boycotting the tournament , if they boycotted,, how can they win it ?

Pad liya kar Munna :klopp :kp
 
So according to ICC group fixing, if none of the big teams fall to the minnows the Super 8 should be:

India, Australia, South Africa, West Indies
Pakistan, England, Sri Lanka, New Zealand/Afghanistan

Pakistan should be pretty happy with that because it's the other group that is the more dangerous group. On top of that, playing England and New Zealand on pitches that aren't flat roads, and where spin is more of a threat allows Pakistan to close the gap that exists between them and these teams on most other types of pitches.
 
So according to ICC group fixing, if none of the big teams fall to the minnows the Super 8 should be:

India, Australia, South Africa, West Indies
Pakistan, England, Sri Lanka, New Zealand/Afghanistan

Pakistan should be pretty happy with that because it's the other group that is the more dangerous group. On top of that, playing England and New Zealand on pitches that aren't flat roads, and where spin is more of a threat allows Pakistan to close the gap that exists between them and these teams on most other types of pitches.
NZ is very underrated in subcontinent condition , india defeated them 4-1 but still they are way better than than result showed.

They have covered most of the bases.

Allen, seifert- Destructive openers

Rachin, Philips, Mitchell, Chapman - Sold middle order player's

Santner is a quality spinners and more than handy Batsman

Bracewell - utility spin allrounder for subcontinent condition

Henry, Duffy, Ferguson - quality Pacers

For me they are second favourite team to win the tournament.

:kp
 
NZ is very underrated in subcontinent condition , india defeated them 4-1 but still they are way better than than result showed.

They have covered most of the bases.

Allen, seifert- Destructive openers

Rachin, Philips, Mitchell, Chapman - Sold middle order player's

Santner is a quality spinners and more than handy Batsman

Bracewell - utility spin allrounder for subcontinent condition

Henry, Duffy, Ferguson - quality Pacers

For me they are second favourite team to win the tournament.

:kp
On Indian pitches this NZ side would destroy Pakistan. On Sri Lankan pitches, where 170 can be a winning score and spin plays a larger role, Pakistan may have a better chance of beating them. Generally speaking, Pakistan tend to do well against NZ in ICC tournaments. In T20 World Cups they have a 5-2 H2H record against them.
 
On Indian pitches this NZ side would destroy Pakistan. On Sri Lankan pitches, where 170 can be a winning score and spin plays a larger role, Pakistan may have a better chance of beating them. Generally speaking, Pakistan tend to do well against NZ in ICC tournaments. In T20 World Cups they have a 5-2 H2H record against them.
Pakistan Might beat them still I think they will qualify for the semi.

Anyway Pakistan can knockout from group stages as weather is not great in Lanka as I checked the weather.

One washout is enough for them to eliminate as after india BOYCOTT they have to win every game's.

NNR is going to effect badly due to boycott of India game.

Basically they scored 0 runs in 20 overs. So think about it.

:kp
 
Who I want to win- India

Who I think is going to win- South Africa.

Darkhorse- not a jinx- Pakistan has a great team for these conditions. Dark horse for me.

Never count Aussies out but they look washed up, Nzl team also looks average. Afghan batting has gone down, SL will take it if they make semis playing in home conditions. WI depends on what surfaces they are playing but they might do better in matches that happen in India. England- semis at best. Rest of the minnows- 0 chance.
 
Who I want to win- India

Who I think is going to win- South Africa.

Darkhorse- not a jinx- Pakistan has a great team for these conditions. Dark horse for me.

Never count Aussies out but they look washed up, Nzl team also looks average. Afghan batting has gone down, SL will take it if they make semis playing in home conditions. WI depends on what surfaces they are playing but they might do better in matches that happen in India. England- semis at best. Rest of the minnows- 0 chance.
Sri Lanka's batting and fielding is too poor for them to even get to the semis. They will shell it at key moments against good teams eventhough they are playing the World Cup at home.
 
Who I want to win- India

Who I think is going to win- South Africa.

Darkhorse- not a jinx- Pakistan has a great team for these conditions. Dark horse for me.

Never count Aussies out but they look washed up, Nzl team also looks average. Afghan batting has gone down, SL will take it if they make semis playing in home conditions. WI depends on what surfaces they are playing but they might do better in matches that happen in India. England- semis at best. Rest of the minnows- 0 chance.
Pakistan are not only losing 2 points to india but this will also affect their NRR, as forfeit matches overs are counted in NRR calculations.

Even if one match is rain affected, they are out.
 
Group B Preview: Co-hosts' big opportunity at T20 World Cup

What an opportunity co-hosts Sri Lanka have to qualify in pole position of the Super Eight stage of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026.

There is no question they saw what happened when Australia, Group B's top-ranked team, recently toured Pakistan. The Aussies are struggling for form and won't be at full strength.

This group is there for the taking and may prove to deliver some shock results.

All four groups have been announced for the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026.

Sri Lanka, a well established cricketing force, sit eighth in the current ICC T20I Rankings. Individually, they have some of the top-ranked batters on the planet and highly-ranked bowler Wanindu Hasaranga. The leg-spinner also doubles as the side's key all-rounder.

The Sri Lankans will pose a massive threat to Australia, who are currently the second-ranked T20I team. But after being stunningly outplayed in Pakistan, the Aussies have never looked more vulnerable.

The rest of Group B, consisting of Ireland, Zimbabwe and Oman, will all see a potential opening to shock the world and cause a boilover or two.

Group B Teams

Australia, Sri Lanka, Ireland, Zimbabwe, Oman

One Player to Watch

Pathum Nissanka (Sri Lanka)


Nissanka was the 10th-fastest to 2000 runs in T20I cricket history and the Sri Lankan opener will be tasked with setting the tone for the co-hosts' batting innings.

He averages a tick above 30, across 84 games, with a strike rate of 127.25 against all opponents. In their recent three-game series against England, he scored a combined 80 runs at 148.14 SR.

Nissanka is firmly inside the T20I batting rankings top 10.

In 10 innings against Group B rivals Australia, his strike rate sits at only 108. Nissanka will be hungry to aggressively take down their bowlers in conditions he'll be all-too familiar in.

Look out for his trademark rope-clearing switch hit prowess.

Group B Squads

Australia:
Mitchell Marsh (c), Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Ben Dwarshuis, Cameron Green, Nathan Ellis, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Glenn Maxwell, Matthew Renshaw, Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa

Sri Lanka: Dasun Shanaka (c), Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis, Kamindu Mendis, Kusal Janith Perera, Charith Asalanka, Janith Liyanage, Pavan Rathnayake, Wanindu Hasaranga, Dunith Wellalage, Maheesh Theekshana, Dushmantha Chameera, Matheesha Pathirana, Eshan Malinga

Zimbabwe: Sikandar Raza (c), Brian Bennett, Ryan Burl, Graeme Cremer, Bradley Evans, Clive Madande, Tinotenda Maposa, Tadiwanashe Marumani, Wellington Masakadza, Tony Munyonga, Tashinga Musekiwa, Blessing Muzarabani, Dion Myers, Richard Ngarava, Brendan Taylor

Ireland: Paul Stirling (c), Mark Adair, Ross Adair, Ben Calitz, Curtis Campher, Gareth Delany, George Dockrell, Matthew Humphreys, Josh Little, Barry McCarthy, Harry Tector, Tim Tector, Lorcan Tucker, Ben White, Craig Young

Oman: Jatinder Singh (c), Vinayak Shukla, Mohammad Nadeem, Shakeel Ahmad, Hammad Mirza, Wasim Ali, Karan Sonavale, Shah Faisal, Nadeem Khan, Sufyan Mehmood, Jay Odedra, Shafiq Jan, Ashish Odedara, Jiten Ramanandi, Aamir Kaleem

ICC
 
Sri Lanka, Australia will certainly qualify for Super 8's but even Zimbabwe have an outside chance to advance from this group.
 
I had voted for Pakistan before they pulle dout of the India game.

Now i would like to change my vote. I think South Africa or NZ might win it this year.
Paistan got afraid of losing to India again, cowardice cannot be the sign of a champion team brother.
 
Group C Preview: Contenders and an epic T20WC debut clash

Group C is going to be one to watch at the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026.

Not only are England and the West Indies two of three sides to have won this tournament twice, not to mention have played in some epics over the years, but the other contenders are set to bring plenty of compelling storylines.

Greats of the game, Mel Jones, Nasser Hussain and Ian Bishop weigh in on Italy making their debut at the ICC Men's T20 World Cup.

Italy are the lone debutants for this edition, after their remarkable qualification run. Their first T20 World Cup appearance will be against Scotland in a Qualification grudge match (for more on that, keep reading).

But England are the heavyweights. They are ranked 3rd in T20Is and are stacked with talent, which will be unpacked.

Here is how it's all shaping up in Group C at the ICC Men's T20 World Cup.

Group C Teams

England, West Indies, Italy, Nepal, Scotland

One Player to Watch

Adil Rashid (England)


Given the importance of spin in the Indian and Sri Lankan conditions, the wily veteran will spearhead England's bowling arsenal.

Rashid is the ICC's fourth-ranked T20I bowler, up two spots from last week, after producing five wickets at an impressive economy in his side's recent three-game series with Sri Lanka, which formed part of their tournament preparations.

England are one of the World Cup heavyweights. But while they have plenty of hitting power, Rashid will be a pivotal bowling option. Captain Harry Brook will turn to him in key moments in the field and expect results.

Group C Squads

England:
Harry Brook (c), Rehan Ahmed, Jofra Archer, Tom Banton, Jacob Bethell, Jos Buttler, Sam Curran, Liam Dawson, Ben Duckett, Will Jacks, Jamie Overton, Adil Rashid, Phil Salt, Josh Tongue, Luke Wood

England have a team and squad capable of going all the way in India and Sri Lanka. They are part of an exclusive club that includes India and the West Indies as teams that have won the T20 World Cup more than once; the English did it in 2010 and 2022.

Harry Brook is in charge, having taken over the reins left by Jos Buttler last year. Both power hitters will be crucial to England's chances of posting big totals, along with opener Phil Salt who is also amongst the world's elite.

The aforementioned Adil Rashid will be an important bowling option, along with speed demon Jofra Archer, who has successfully recovered from a side strain in England's Ashes campaign in Australia. All-rounder Sam Curran was Player of the Tournament in 2022 and he's in the mix as well. Match-winners everywhere you look.

West Indies: Shai Hope (c), Shimron Hetmyer, Johnson Charles, Roston Chase, Matthew Forde, Jason Holder, Akeal Hosein, Shamar Joseph, Brandon King, Gudakesh Motie, Rovman Powell, Sherfane Rutherford, Quentin Sampson, Jayden Seales, Romario Shepherd

It's been too long since the West Indies reached the knockout stage of a T20 World Cup, dating back to 2016 when they clinched their second title to, at the time, become the first two-time champion.

It's the performance variance that may haunt the West Indies; their best is world-beating, but they would love to find that output more consistently. It's often the top order that dictates their fortunes, with captain Shai Hope, fellow opener Brandon King and in-form hitter Shimron Hetmyer that hold the keys.

There are widespread expectations that the Windies will make it the the Super Eight. But can they go further and return to the high pressure nature of knockout tournament cricket?

Italy: Wayne Madsen (c), Marcus Campopiano, Gian Piero Meade, Zain Ali, Ali Hasan, Crishan Jorge Kalugamage, Harry Manenti, Anthony Mosca, Justin Mosca, Syed Naqvi, Benjamin Manenti, Jaspreet Singh, JJ Smuts, Grant Stewart, Thomas Draca

We cannot wait to see Italy in action at an ICC World Cup for the first time.

After their epic qualification journey, capped off with a stunning 12-run victory over Scotland in the European Qualifier, the Italians will have attention of the world in their debut match on February 9. That game just so happens to be against the Scots, who gained 11th hour tournament entry, in what will be billed as a grudge match of high interest.

English county stalwart Wayne Madsen, 42, leads the side. He's recently coming off a 61* that will help with his confidence.

Harry Manenti took five wickets in the Qualifier final against Scotland, while his brother Ben is also a known quantity on the cricketing scene. Both are dual citizens and have Big Bash League experience. Ben played for the Sydney Sixers in the recent BBL final.

Scotland: Richie Berrington (c), Tom Bruce, Matthew Cross, Bradley Currie, Oliver Davidson, Chris Greaves, Zainullah Ihsan, Michael Jones, Michael Leask, Finlay McCreath, Brandon McMullen, George Munsey, Safyaan Sharif, Mark Watt, Bradley Wheal. Travelling reserves: Jasper Davidson, Jack Jarvis. Non-travelling reserves: Mackenzie Jones, Chris McBride, Charlie Tear

Scotland's 11th hour entry, replacing Bangladesh, marks a fifth consecutive appearance at Men's T20 World Cups. They will be committed to justifying their call up and making waves.

Veteran captain Richie Berrington, who has a T20I ton to his name, will be pulling the reins. 26-year-old batter Brandon McMullen will be crucial, boasting seven international fifties to his name. While Mark Watt is 11 scalps short of reaching 100 T20I wickets, a milestone he will be targeting at the tournament.

Nepal: Rohit Paudel (c), Dipendra Singh Airee, Sandeep Lamichhane, Kushal Bhurtel, Aasif Sheikh, Sundeep Jora, Aarif Sheikh, Basir Ahamad, Sompal Kami, Karan KC, Nandan Yadav, Gulshan Jha, Lalit Rajbanshi, Sher Malla, Lokesh Bam

Nepal and their fans always bring the energy at major cricket tournaments and this will be no exception.

Former Australian international Stuart Law is in charge of this group that continues to put on competitive displays when given the opportunity in major tournaments.

Vice-captain Dipendra Singh Airee has a T20I century to his name, while Sandeep Lamichhane was Nepal’s leading wicket taker last year, taking 21 wickets.

ICC
 
Group D Preview: Three high-ranked teams battle at T20WC

At least one team from Group D will be leaving the sub-continent most likely disappointed, having not progressed past the group stage. Such is the quality of the teams competing out of this pool.

Of all four ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 groups, Group D is the only one featuring three sides from the Rankings' current top 10; New Zealand (4th), South Africa (5th) and Afghanistan (10th), who of course made a magic run to the semi-finals two years ago in the tournament's last edition.

Afghanistan famously progressed, denying the Black Caps a spot in the T20 World Cup's next phase. The grudge match should be fascinating.

Canada and the UAE are no easy-beats either, and they will be desperate to prove their worth at the World Cup.

But despite the Proteas and Black Caps' neck-and-neck rankings, this group runs through South Africa until further notice. They were finalists at the last edition, going down to India.

And despite going down to the Indians in a recent warm-up contest, the Proteas look every bit the contender they were two years ago.

Here is the lay of the land in Group D.

Group D Teams

South Africa, New Zealand, Afghanistan, UAE, Canada

One Player to Watch

Mitchell Santner (New Zealand)


We might be looking back and wondering whether anyone in Group D had more impact than the Kiwis captain.

Known more for his restrictive orthodox bowling (an economy of 4.81 across 124 T20Is), it was his lower order batting that recently caught the eye in New Zealand's five-game series with India. In five digs, the 34-year-old smashed a total of 105 runs off 65 balls (161.5 strike rate), clearing the rope at will. He often arrived at the crease with his side under immense pressure, but never wilted.

If he leads and bowls to his usual standard, plus plays a few innings-finishing cameos with the bat like he has been asked to recently, and digs his team out of a hole, it's hard to imagine anyone leaves more of an imprint on Group D than the Hamilton product.

Group D Squads

South Africa:
Aiden Markram (c), Corbin Bosch, Dewald Brevis, Quinton de Kock, Marco Jansen, George Linde, Keshav Maharaj, Kwena Maphaka, David Miller, Lungi Ngidi, Anrich Nortje, Kagiso Rabada, Ryan Rickelton, Jason Smith, Tristan Stubbs

The Proteas are one team with genuine T20 World Cup winning claims. It's also not inconceivable that South Africa's recent ICC World Test Championship success has helped ease the pressure on this team, given the well-publicised trophy drought that had previously followed them and loomed large at tournaments.

Arguably the best cricketing nation yet to win a Men's T20 World Cup, alongside - coincidentally - Group D rivals New Zealand, the Proteas will be hoping to go one better than their efforts in the USA and Caribbean two years ago where they finished as runner-up to India. And that was their first time reaching the T20 World Cup final.

Aiden Markram will captain at team littered with hard hitters and quality bowlers. But veteran Quinton de Kock hasn't lost a step and looks a pivotal piece of their batting plans. Three of his last five T20I innings, against top-line competition, have yielded scores of 115 (v West Indies), 65 (v India) and 90 (v India).

The luxury the Proteas possess, unlike most opponents, is a batting lineup stacked with game-wreckers.

If there are any lingering doubts, it's the spin bowling options behind Keshav Maharaj, given the spinning necessity the subcontinental conditions will demand.

But it's widely believed this South Africa team will put up one huge fight this World Cup.

New Zealand: Mitchell Santner (c), Finn Allen, Michael Bracewell, Mark Chapman, Devon Conway, Jacob Duffy, Lockie Ferguson, Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson, Daryl Mitchell, James Neesham, Glenn Phillips, Rachin Ravindra, Tim Seifert, Ish Sodhi

After a loss to Afghanistan, along with some weather misfortune, buried their hopes in 2024, the Kiwis will be on high alert from the very start of their T20 World Cup campaign. And they better be; they've drawn who else but Afghanistan first up, in a heavyweight contest straight off the bat.

The aforementioned Santner will lead a side that features plenty of hitting, like the Proteas, plus some quality slow bowling options that could end up being the advantage that carries them deeper than two years ago.

Remember when Lockie Ferguson became the first player in T20 World Cup history in 2024 to bowl four maiden overs? New Zealand would love a bit more of that magic this tournament.

Afghanistan: Rashid Khan (c), Noor Ahmad, Abdullah Ahmadzai, Sediqullah Atal, Fazal Haq Farooqi, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Naveen Ul Haq, Mohammad Ishaq Rahimi, Shahidullah Kamal, Mohammad Nabi, Gulbadin Naib, Azmatullah Omarzai, Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Darwish Rasooli, Ibrahim Zadran. Reserves: AM Ghazanfar, Ijaz Ahmad Ahmadzai, Zia Ur Rahman Sharifi

Any team that takes Afghanistan lightly will be quickly put in their place. Not only did they beat New Zealand at the last T20 World Cup, as has been mentioned, but their victory over Australia set up their epic run to the semi-final stage.

This team will be buoyed by their campaign two years ago, even more ready for the big moments this tournament will throw at them, and go into every group game entirely unafraid of the opposition side.

Rahmanullah Gurbaz features again, after finishing as the top run-scorer at the 2024 T20 World Cup (281 runs). And an Afghanistan player also topped that tournament's wicket tally, with Fazalhaq Farooqi claiming 17 scalps along with India's Ashdeep Singh to share the spoils.

Ibrahim Zadran is currently Afghanistan's top-ranked T20I batter, moving up three spots this week to enter the tournament in 11th spot, four spots ahead of Gurbaz.

Rashid Khan captains what is a squad stacked with quality. Rashid will spearhead their spin bowling ranks along with Mujeeb Ur Rahman; they're two of the best spinners on the globe.

UAE: Muhammad Waseem (c), Alishan Sharafu, Aryansh Sharma, Dhruv Parashar, Haider Ali, Harshit Kaushik, Junaid Siddique, Mayank Kumar, Muhammad Arfan, Muhammad Farooq, Muhammad Jawadullah, Muhammad Zohaib, Rohid Khan, Sohaib Khan, Simranjeet Singh

The United Arab Emirates are as strong as ever, entering their third T20 World Cup and looking to at least double up on their tournament wins; their one victory coming against Namibia in 2022.

The UAE beat Bangladesh in a series last May to help illustrate their steady improvement on the world stage.

It's all eyes on Muhammad Waseem their captain, whose resume stacks up against anyone on the world stage. The soon-to-be 32-year-old has struck the second-most sixes in T20I history (190), behind only Rohit Sharma (205).

Waseem was the third-fastest all time to 2,500 T20I runs (67 innings) behind only Pakistani pair Babar Azam (62) and Mohammad Rizwan (65). He also has the 5th-most T20I hundreds (three) and 7th-most career T20I fifties (28).

If the UAE can cause any World Cup havoc in Group D, their history-chasing captain will be a central figure.

Canada: Dilpreet Bajwa (c), Ajayveer Hundal, Ansh Patel, Dilon Heyliger, Harsh Thaker, Jaskarandeep Singh, Kaleem Sana, Kanwarpal Tathgur, Navneet Dhaliwal, Nicholas Kirton, Ravinderpal Singh, Saad Bin Zafar, Shivam Sharma, Shreyas Movva, Yuvraj Samra

Canada are back, after being a T20 World Cup debutant two years ago. They claimed a win in their first ever tournament match too, downing Ireland.

They went unbeaten through this cycle's qualification, winning all six of their Americas Regional contests, including the Final.

Dilpreet Bajwa, who has been a crucial cog in their qualifying journey, has taken over the captaincy from Nicholas Kirton who also remains an important piece in their upcoming campaign.

Their tournament kicks off on February 10 against South Africa.

ICC
 
I don’t mind if India lose this tournament or fail to reach the finals.
We have already won the last three major T20 tournaments (T20 World Cup, Champions Trophy, Asia Cup).
If not India, I’m rooting for South Africa and West Indies.

I am waiting for IPL :ab
 
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