Cricket

Facts

Discipline of Cricket
Participants 24
NOCs 2
Competitions held 1 (Venues)
Distinct events 1
IF International Cricket Council

Description

Cricket was contested only at the 1900 Olympics, when a British squad beat a French team, which was mostly actually made up of British residents of France. Cricket is governed by the International Cricket Council (ICC), which was founded as Imperial Cricket Conference on 15 June 1909, in London, with three founding members: England, Australia, and South Africa. From 1965 to 1989, the organization was known as the International Cricket Conference. As of 2022, the ICC has 106 national member federations, representing 111 member countries – 12 Full Members (those that play Test cricket) and 94 Associate Members.

The ICC is currently recognized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), but there is little chance cricket will return to the Olympic Program iin the form of Test cricket where the matches can last up to five days, as the sport will not fit well into a 2-week program. However, the ICC has promoted the idea of cricket as an Olympic sport by using a shorter format called Twenty20 (also known as T20), with limited overs (20), and only a single innings, and in which each match can be played in 2-3 hours. At the 141st IOC Session in Mumbai, India in October 2023, T20 cricket was approved to be on the Olympic Programme at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

All-time medal table

Olympic Games

NOC Gold Silver Bronze Total
Great Britain GBR 1 0 0 1
France FRA 0 1 0 1

Most successful competitors

Olympic Games

Athlete Nat Gold Silver Bronze Total
Charles Beachcroft GBR 1 0 0 1
Arthur Birkett GBR 1 0 0 1
Alfred Bowerman GBR 1 0 0 1
George Buckley GBR 1 0 0 1
Francis Burchell GBR 1 0 0 1
Frederick Christian GBR 1 0 0 1
Harry Corner GBR 1 0 0 1
Frederick Cuming GBR 1 0 0 1
William Donne GBR 1 0 0 1
Alfred Powlesland GBR 1 0 0 1
John Symes GBR 1 0 0 1
Montagu Toller GBR 1 0 0 1

Event types

Name Gender Still contested? Times held?
Cricket Men 1