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West Indies Slip Out of 2027 World Cup Qualification Zone in Latest ICC Rankings
Written by Sports Desk. Posted in Windies. | 06 July 2025 | 1033 Views
Tags: Icc Rankings, Windies, 2027 ICC World Cup

The West Indies have suffered a significant setback on the international stage, falling out of the automatic qualification zone for the 2027 ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup in the latest ODI team rankings released this week.

Following Bangladesh’s spirited six-run win over Sri Lanka in the second ODI in Colombo—highlighted by a match-winning spell of 5-39 from Taijul Islam—the Tigers have climbed to ninth in the ICC ODI rankings, leapfrogging the West Indies, who now sit in 10th with a rating of 77.

This shift has serious implications for the Caribbean side. Only the top eight teams, excluding hosts South Africa and Zimbabwe, are guaranteed direct entry to the 2027 ODI World Cup. With the West Indies now outside that threshold, their path to qualification has become uncertain, raising the grim possibility of returning to the qualifying tournament—a route that cost them a World Cup berth in 2023.

In that 2023 campaign, the Men in Maroon were eliminated in the qualifiers by Sri Lanka and the Netherlands, missing the World Cup for the first time in history. A repeat would further underscore the team’s ongoing struggles in the 50-over format and compound pressure on the Cricket West Indies administration to arrest the slide.

The latest rankings reflect an increasingly competitive mid-tier. While India remain atop the table with a rating of 124, and Australia and New Zealand are tied at 109 points in second and third, the lower half of the top ten continues to shift dramatically with each series.

Sri Lanka, despite their loss to Bangladesh, sit fifth with a 102 rating, while Pakistan (104) moved up to fourth. South Africa (96), Afghanistan (91), and England (88) round out the current top eight.

Bangladesh’s rise to ninth came at the perfect time, with their final ODI against Sri Lanka still to come. Meanwhile, West Indies—whose rating dropped to 77 despite playing the same number of matches (32) as Bangladesh—must now regroup with urgency if they hope to climb back into the top eight before the qualification cutoff date of March 31, 2027.

While South Africa and Zimbabwe have already secured their spots as co-hosts of the 2027 edition, Namibia, the third co-host, must still qualify through regular channels as they are not an ICC Full Member.

With a 14-team format for the next ODI World Cup, four remaining spots will be determined via a 10-team qualifier tournament. If the West Indies fail to improve their ranking in time, they will once again find themselves in the high-risk battle for those final places—a path no former world champion wants to tread.

The road ahead is now clearer—and tougher—for the two-time world champions. Their fate lies in consistent performances in the next two years, or risk becoming a cautionary tale of cricket’s changing landscape.