It’s a T20 World Cup year, and anticipation is building. The 10th edition of the tournament takes place in India and Sri Lanka from 7 February to 8 March — a fitting stage for the sport’s most explosive format.
T20 cricket has become the global showcase: short, chaotic, frenetic, and thrilling, with fine margins separating contenders from champions. Here’s how the world’s top sides stack up heading into the biggest showpiece on the short-form calendar.
1. India
The favourites in the cricket odds, India have set a standard in T20 cricket that no other side has yet matched. They have occupied the No.1 ranking for an astonishing 1,433 days — by far the longest tenure at the summit. That figure dwarfs Pakistan’s 824-day reign from January 2018 to April 2020 and highlights a level of sustained excellence rarely witnessed in this format.
Their 2024 T20 World Cup triumph — a clinical win over South Africa in the final — reaffirmed their status as the team to beat. Since then, they’ve stitched together a formidable unbeaten streak, collecting series wins over England, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand, alongside a ninth T20 Asia Cup title. With depth in every role and a home-soil advantage for much of the upcoming tournament, India remain the benchmark against which all others are judged.
2. Australia
Australia’s consistency across formats remains remarkable. Top of the Test rankings and third in ODIs, they sit second in T20 cricket — an impressive symmetry to their three-format profile. The Aussies put together a commanding four-series winning run between the tail-end of 2024 and the close of 2025, whitewashing both Pakistan and the West Indies before dispatching South Africa 2-1. A 2-0 success over New Zealand followed, with the middle match abandoned as a no-contest.
While Australia last lifted the T20 World Cup trophy in 2021, their overall trajectory and recent form suggest they will arrive in India and Sri Lanka as genuine challengers. With reliable power hitters, fast-bowling depth, and a knack for peaking at events, they are justifiably second favourites behind India.
3. England
England occupy third spot in the T20 pecking order, though their storyline is arguably the most dramatic. The T20 World Cup looms as a referendum on the Brendon McCullum era. After a 4-1 Ashes defeat in Australia, questions over ‘Bazball’ have intensified, and McCullum’s future as head coach could hinge on performances in this tournament — England famously won it as recently as 2022.
England’s results in 2025 painted a mixed picture: a 4-1 loss to India stung, while a drawn series against South Africa offered little clarity either way. However, wins over South Africa and Ireland steadied the ship. England remain dangerous, capable of blistering batting and clever variations with the ball, but consistency remains their biggest hurdle.
4. New Zealand
New Zealand round out the top four and head into the tournament seeking a maiden T20 World Cup title. Their 2025 campaign featured plenty to admire: victory in the Zimbabwe Tri-Series against South Africa and Zimbabwe, plus wins over Pakistan and the West Indies, showcased their tactical nous and adaptability.
Yet cracks remain. Defeats to both Australia and England raised doubts about how the Black Caps cope against the very best. For a side renowned for structure, discipline, and match intelligence, the challenge now is to convert competence into a trophy-winning spike in performance. Do that, and a first T20 crown isn’t beyond reach — but the draw is unforgiving, and margins in T20 are razor thin.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.











































































