
The update, which weights 100 percent of matches played since May 2025 and 50 percent of those from the preceding two years, saw Sri Lanka lose six rating points and slip to ninth. Afghanistan sit at 10th, just one point behind Sri Lanka.
India retained the No. 1 position with 275 rating points, though their lead over second-placed England has narrowed to 13 points. Australia remain third with 258 points, followed by New Zealand (247), South Africa (244), Pakistan (240) and West Indies (233). The top seven positions remain unchanged.
In women’s cricket, Bangladesh strengthened their standing despite remaining in 10th place. They gained five rating points and are now just one point behind ninth-placed Ireland in the ODI rankings released on May 1.
Australia continue to dominate the women’s rankings with 287 points, ahead of England (275) and India (264). New Zealand, South Africa and West Indies occupy fourth to sixth places, while Sri Lanka are seventh, just one point behind West Indies. No changes were recorded in the top 16 positions.
Among other movers, the United States rose to 13th in the men’s rankings, surpassing the Netherlands and Scotland. Nepal advanced to 17th after overtaking the United Arab Emirates, while Oman moved up to 19th ahead of Canada. Italy (23rd), Spain (26th), Cyprus (53rd) also registered notable gains.
The latest update reduced the number of ranked men’s teams from 102 to 98, with Fiji, Gambia, Greece and Israel dropping out after failing to meet the minimum requirement of eight T20Is over the past three years. Mozambique recorded the steepest fall, slipping 15 places, reports BSS.