New Delhi: The International Cricket Council has announced a sweeping overhaul to the format of the 14-team Men’s ODI World Cup, introducing a multi-stage qualification blueprint designed to eliminate dead rubbers and heighten competitive intensity. The structural revision introduces a brand-new competitive flow that significantly alters how teams progress through the global tournament, ensuring high-stakes cricket from the opening boundary.
Under the revised framework, the tournament will begin with a preliminary round known as the Super Series. In this opening phase, the three lowest-ranked qualified teams, specifically teams 12, 13, and 14, will battle in a round-robin format. Only the top-performing side from this initial cluster will secure advancement to the main draw, while the remaining two teams will face early elimination from the competition.
The single advancing team from the preliminary round will then join the remaining 11 pre-qualified nations in the second round. These 12 teams will be split evenly into two groups of six, playing a total of 30 matches in a traditional round-robin setup. To progress further, teams must finish among the top three in their respective groups. The final spot in the subsequent stage will be awarded to the next-highest-placed team across both groups combined, ensuring that seven teams in total move forward.
The stakes will rise significantly in the third round, designated as the Super 7 stage. The seven qualifying teams will enter a unified pool and face each other once in a comprehensive 21-match round-robin league. This gruelling phase will heavily reward consistent performances, with the top four teams on the final leaderboard earning direct entry into the knockout stage.
The tournament will conclude with the semi-finals and the grand final. In the semi-finals, the first-placed team from the Super 7 stage will clash against the fourth-placed team, while the second-placed lineup will take on the third-placed squad. The winners of these two knockout fixtures will advance to the final to contest the world title, bringing a dramatic finish to the restructured global event.