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United Arab Emirates national cricket team

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United Arab Emirates national cricket team
International Cricket Council
ICC statusAssociate member with ODI status (1989)
ICC regionAsia
WCLOne
International cricket
First international20 February 1976 v Pakistan International Airlines at Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium
As of 31 August 2008

The United Arab Emirates national cricket team (Arabic: فريق الإمارات الوطني للكريكيت) is the team that represents the country of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in international cricket matches. They became an affiliate member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) in 1989 and an associate member the following year.[1] Since 2005, the ICC's headquarters have been located in Dubai.

One of the emerging One Day International (ODI) teams,[2] the UAE won the ACC Trophy on four consecutive occasions between 2000 and 2006, and were runners-up in the other three times the tournament has been played in 1996, 1998[1] and 2008.[3] They won the ICC Trophy in 1994, and played their first ODIs that year, later playing in the 1996 Cricket World Cup.[1] Other ODI matches came in the 2004 and 2008 Asia Cups. At the 2014 World Cup Qualifier, the UAE placed second behind Scotland, qualifying for the 2015 World Cup and gaining ODI, and therefore Twenty20 International (T20I), status until 2018.[4]

History

Early days

In 1892, the United Kingdom took responsibility of the Sheikhdoms, and cricket was introduced by the British Army in what is now the UAE, but was then known as the "Trucial States". The game spread during World War II, as personnel from the British Royal Air Force and other Commonwealth forces (which included first-class and club cricketers from Australia and New Zealand) stationed in cities such as Ajman, Al Ain, Dubai and Sharjah, continued their favourite pastime. The pitches installed by them around the air base in Sharjah were used by British and other foreign nationals after the war ended.[2]

Sharjah residents began playing the Dubai residents in the local derbies which were held in Dubai. The Garden city of Al Ain has the oldest cricket council in the whole of the UAE. The popularity of the game declined after independence in 1971; however, when South Asians began settling in the country, they brought with them a wish to play cricket. The local Arab population, educated in India and Pakistan, set up clubs and domestic tournaments began in the 1980s.[2]

Making of the national side

The first match was played by the UAE national side in February 1976 against Pakistan International Airlines in Sharjah. The visitors scored 345/5 from their 50 overs and the UAE were on 88/4 from 28 overs when the game was abandoned due to rain.[2]

Wealthy locals began investing in the sport and an International standard cricket ground was constructed in Sharjah. The Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium hosted its first major event in 1984 when India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka contested the Asia Cup. The venue has gone on to host almost 200 ODIs[5] and four Test matches,[6] the Test matches having been held there due to security concerns in Pakistan.[2]

The Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) was established in 1989[2] and gained affiliate membership of the ICC the same year. They were quickly promoted to associate member status the following year.[1] Also in 1990 the national side returned to action, twice losing heavily to the Netherlands. These heavy defeats showed that much work needed to be done if the UAE were to be successful in the 1994 ICC Trophy and the ECB adopted a controversial policy.[2]

1994 ICC Trophy

Hoping to form a successful national side in time for the tournament in Kenya, the ECB attracted several players with first-class experience in India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to take up employment in the country so that they could satisfy the residential requirements to represent the UAE in the tournament.[2]

With just one native Arab selected in the shape of Sultan Zarawani, who captained the side, the UAE won the trophy and thus qualified for the 1996 World Cup.[2] UAE had beaten Kenya in the final,[7] and the Kenyan players and cricket board were very vocal in their anger at being defeated by what they and other observers described as a team of imported mercenaries.[2]

Whilst the ICC remained relatively silent on the controversy, the national team eligibility requirements were strongly tightened for all future ICC sanctioned tournaments.[2]

First ODIs

The UAE played their first ODIs in 1994 when they played against India and Pakistan in the Austral-Asia Cup, which they also hosted. They finished last in a tri-series against Kenya and the Netherlands the same year and also finished last in a tournament against the A sides of India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka in 1995. They returned to ODI cricket in the 1996 World Cup where they lost all matches except the one against the Netherlands, which was the first ever ODI between two associate members of the ICC.[1]

Later in 1996 the UAE were runners-up to Bangladesh in the first ACC Trophy. The tightened eligibility rules meant that they were unable to repeat their 1994 success when they finished tenth in the 1997 ICC Trophy in Malaysia.[1] They were beaten by Bangladesh in the semi-finals of the 1998 ACC Trophy.[8]

21st century

2000 – 2009

With Bangladesh being promoted to ICC full membership, the UAE began to establish themselves as the top associate side in Asia, though they often fell short against the top associates in Europe and North America, a position that remains to this day.[2] They won the ACC Trophy in 2000 and 2002, beating Hong Kong and Nepal in the respective finals, but finished fifth in the 2001 ICC Trophy in Canada.[1]

UAE hosted the ICC 6 Nations Challenge in 2004 and finished fifth, level on points with four other teams. The year was a busy one for the UAE cricketers as they played the first Intercontinental Cup match against Nepal, with Ali Asad taking nine wickets in the first innings. They beat Malaysia later in the tournament but lost to Canada in the semi-finals. They also won the ACC Trophy again, beating Oman in the final. They returned to ODI cricket, losing to India and Sri Lanka in the first round of the Asia Cup, and finished fourth in the Hong Kong Sixes, beating India and South Africa on the way.[1]

They reached the semi-finals of the ICC Intercontinental Cup again in 2005, also playing a series against England A at Sharjah, losing all four matches.[1] The 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland saw them finish sixth.[9] They beat Hong Kong in the final of the 2006 ACC Trophy, but began their 2006 ICC Intercontinental Cup campaign with an innings defeat by Namibia. The campaign continued with a draw against Scotland and a defeat by Ireland, again by an innings. They finished fourth in the first ACC Twenty20 Cup in 2007.[1]

Their campaign in the 2007-08 ICC Intercontinental Cup was unsuccessful, with just one win against Bermuda in their seven matches.[10] Things went better for them in Division Two of the World Cricket League in Windhoek in 2007, winning the tournament after beating Oman in the final.[11]

They again played in the Asia Cup in 2008, losing to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in the first round.[12] Their 2008 ACC Trophy Elite began with a shock defeat by Saudi Arabia, their first ACC Trophy defeat since the 1998 semi-final.[8] They lost to Hong Kong in the final, ending a run of four consecutive titles.[3]

The UAE hosted and were runners-up at the 2009 ACC Twenty20 Cup, losing the final to Afghanistan, after winning four group matches and accounting for Oman in their semi-final.[13]

2010 – present

In October 2010, the team announced that it had hired Kabir Khan to become its coach. Khan had major success with the Afghan Cricket Team during his one-year stint as the team became eligible to play ODIs. Kabir Khan also stated that his aim was to help UAE qualify for the 2012 ICC World Twenty20.[14]

In April 2011, the UAE hosted and won Division Two of the World Cricket League without losing a match.[15] In June/July 2011, they played Kenya at Nairobi for the first round of 2011–13 ICC Intercontinental Cup. In December, the UAE participated in the 2011 ACC Twenty20 Cup in Nepal.[16] Then in 2013, they traveled to Scotland to compete in the 2013 Cricket World Cup Qualifier, the final event of the 2009–13 World Cricket League.[17]

UAE finished third in the 2013 ACC Twenty20 Cup which after defeating Hong Kong in the play-off for third place. In November, they hosted 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier and finished fourth after losing to Nepal in the play-off for third place, and qualified for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20, defeating the Netherlands by 10 runs in the quarter-final.

UAE participated in the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 but were unsuccessful in the tournament, going without a win. UAE finished second in the 2014 ACC Premier League and qualified for the 2014 ACC Championship. They also qualified for 2015 Cricket World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

UAE qualified to play in the Cricket World Cup after a lapse of almost twenty years. Unlike other teams in the tournament, the squad of players mainly consisted of semi-professionals.[18] The team registered their highest ODI total ever at the 2015 Cricket World Cup in a group stage match played against Zimbabwe in Nelson, New Zealand.[19] However, they failed to register a win and were eliminated from the 2015 Cricket World Cup with 6 losses out of 6 matches in Pool B.[20]

Current international ranking

ICC Men's T20I Team Rankings
Team Matches Points Rating
 India 50 13,250 265
 Australia 37 9,580 259
 West Indies 43 10,937 254
 England 34 8,630 254
 South Africa 30 7,421 247
 New Zealand 49 12,113 247
 Pakistan 46 11,097 241
 Sri Lanka 37 8,508 230
 Bangladesh 47 10,657 227
 Afghanistan 35 7,686 220
 Ireland 46 8,974 195
 Zimbabwe 41 7,878 192
 Scotland 24 4,606 192
 Namibia 37 6,965 188
 Netherlands 21 3,873 184
 United Arab Emirates 42 7,386 176
 United States 17 2,900 171
   Nepal 39 6,601 169
 Oman 38 6,192 163
 Papua New Guinea 31 4,472 144
 Uganda 62 8,353 135
 Hong Kong 37 4,977 135
 Canada 21 2,700 129
 Malaysia 40 4,931 123
 Jersey 19 2,267 119
 Kuwait 31 3,677 119
 Bahrain 34 4,030 119
 Qatar 23 2,598 113
 Italy 18 1,944 108
 Bermuda 11 1,185 108
 Spain 13 1,376 106
 Saudi Arabia 30 3,142 105
 Kenya 40 4,189 105
 Germany 28 2,541 91
 Tanzania 42 3,797 90
 Nigeria 29 2,233 77
 Guernsey 15 1101 73
 Singapore 23 1,676 73
 Cayman Islands 9 646 72
 Denmark 21 1,430 68
 Cambodia 22 1,471 67
 Norway 15 985 66
 Portugal 17 1,071 63
 Isle of Man 14 857 61
 Belgium 25 1,512 60
  Switzerland 13 751 58
 Vanuatu 16 921 58
 Austria 30 1,691 56
 France 24 1,325 55
 Botswana 24 1,298 54
 Japan 28 1,504 54
 Malawi 15 728 49
 Romania 28 1,316 47
 Czech Republic 14 658 47
 Sweden 13 580 45
 Finland 16 684 43
 Argentina 8 340 43
 Philippines 17 701 41
 Indonesia 28 1,091 39
 Thailand 24 850 35
 Mozambique 16 522 33
 Rwanda 58 1,885 33
 Ghana 28 873 31
 Fiji 5 152 30
 Malta 41 1,188 29
 Luxembourg 28 753 27
 Sierra Leone 25 651 26
 Israel 7 178 25
 Bahamas 8 191 24
 Gibraltar 25 528 21
 Estonia 10 202 20
 Hungary 17 336 20
 Panama 9 257 17
 Serbia 13 176 14
 Bhutan 16 176 11
 Cyprus 8 77 10
 Bulgaria 21 154 7
 Eswatini 17 118 7
 China 11 53 5
 Maldives 21 61 3
 Cameroon 10 26 3
 Mongolia 8 0 0
 Turkey 9 0 0
 Seychelles 5 0 0
 Samoa 5 0 0
 Mali 6 0 0
 Lesotho 11 0 0
 Gambia 6 0 0
 Croatia 8 0 0
References: ICC T20I rankings, As of 17 June 2024
"Matches" is the number of matches played in the 12–24 months since the May before last, plus half the number in the 24 months before that.

International grounds

Locations of all stadiums which have hosted an international cricket match within UAE

Infrastructure

In terms of infrastructure, the UAE have the best stadiums as compared to other Associate members: Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium in Abu Dhabi; DSC Cricket Stadium, Dubai and Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium, Sharjah, which has hosted around 200 ODIs and Test matches.

International stadiums in Ajman and Al Ain are currently under development.

The following are the major cricket stadiums in UAE:

Tournament history

World Cup

World Cup record
Year Round Position P W L T NR Ref.
England 1975 Not eligible – not an ICC member [1]
England 1979
England 1983
IndiaPakistan 1987
Australia New Zealand 1992 Did not participate in qualifying [21]
India Pakistan Sri Lanka 1996 First Round 11/12 5 1 4 0 0 [1]
England 1999 Did not qualify [1][22]
South Africa Zimbabwe Kenya 2003
Cricket West Indies 2007
India Sri Lanka Bangladesh 2011
Australia New Zealand 2015 Group Stage 13/14 6 0 6 0 0 [18]
England 2019 -
India 2023 -
Total 0 Titles 11 1 10 0 0

ICC World Cup Qualifier

ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier

Intercontinental Cup

World Cricket League

Asia Cup

  • 1983 to 1988: Not eligible – Not an ACC member[1]
  • 1990/91: Did not participate[1]
  • 1995: Did not participate[1]
  • 1997: Did not qualify[1]
  • 2000: Did not qualify[1]
  • 2004: First round[1]
  • 2008: First round[12]
  • 2010: Did not qualify[1]
  • 2012: Did not qualify[1]
  • 2014: Did not qualify[1]
  • 2016: First round, 5th place

ACC Championship

ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament

ACC Premier League

ACC Trophy

ACC Twenty20 Cup

ACC Under-19 Cup

Coaches

For many coaches, the exact dates of their tenure are unavailable, although key tournaments are noted:

Name Appointed Resigned Tournaments and tours
India Madan Lal unknown 1996 1996 World Cup
United Arab Emirates Abdul Razzaq Kazim (acting) "after 1996 World Cup"[27] 1996 none
Sri Lanka Champaka Ramanayake 1996 1997[28] none
Pakistan Mushtaq Mohammad unknown 2000[29] 1998 ACC Trophy[30]
Pakistan Naved Anjum September 2000[31] 2001 2000 ACC Trophy
2001 ICC Trophy (June/July)
United Arab Emirates Irfan Ansari (acting) 2001/2002 2002 February 2002 tour of Bahrain[32]
India Syed Abid Ali April 2002[33] 2005 2005 ICC Intercontinental Cup (group stage)
2005 ICC Trophy[34]
United Arab Emirates Abdul Razzaq Karim (acting) "after 2005 ICC Trophy" December 2005[35] 2005 ICC Intercontinental Cup (semi-final)
Sri Lanka Chandika Hathurusingha December 2005[36] September 2006 2006 ACC Trophy
India Abey Kuruvilla June 2007[37] late 2007 none
Pakistan Kabir Khan late 2007[38] 2007/2008 2007 WCL (Div. 2)[39]
Barbados Vasbert Drakes April 2008[40] August 2008[41] 2008 Asia Cup (June)
2008 ACC Trophy (July/August)
England Colin Wells January 2009[42] July 2010[43] 2009 WCQ
Pakistan Kabir Khan October 2010 February 2012[44] 2011–13 Intercontinental Cup (rounds 1–3)
2011–13 WCL Championship (rounds 1–3)
Pakistan Aaqib Javed 1 April 2012[45] current 2011–13 Intercontinental Cup (rounds 4–7)
2011–13 WCL Championship (rounds 4–7)
2014 WCQ
2014 World Twenty20
2015 World Cup
2016 Asia Cup

Records and statistics

International Match Summary – United Arab Emirates[46][47]

Last updated 3 March 2016.
Playing Record
Format M W L T D/NR Inaugural Match
One Day Internationals 26 5 21 0 0 13 April 1994
Twenty20 Internationals 18 6 12 0 0 17 March 2014

One Day Internationals


ODI record versus other nations[46]

Records complete to ODI #3711. Last updated 18 November 2015.
Opponent M W L T NR First win
vs Test nations
v  Bangladesh 1 0 1 0 0
v  England 1 0 1 0 0
v  India 3 0 3 0 0
v  New Zealand 1 0 1 0 0
v  Pakistan 3 0 3 0 0
v  South Africa 2 0 2 0 0
v  Sri Lanka 2 0 2 0 0
v  West Indies 1 0 1 0 0
v  Zimbabwe 1 0 1 0 0
vs Associate/Affiliate Members
v  Afghanistan 5 3 2 0 0 28 November 2014
v  Hong Kong 3 1 2 0 0 4 May 2014
v  Ireland 1 0 1 0 0
v  Netherlands 1 1 0 0 0 1 March 1996
v  Scotland 1 0 1 0 0

Twenty20 Internationals


T20I record versus other nations[47]

Records complete to T20I #517. Last updated 3 March 2016.
Opponent M W L T NR First win
vs Test nations
v  Bangladesh 1 0 1 0 0
v  India 1 0 1 0 0
v  Pakistan 1 0 1 0 0
v  Sri Lanka 1 0 1 0 0
v  Zimbabwe 1 0 1 0 0
vs Associate/Affiliate Members
v  Afghanistan 2 1 1 0 0 19 February 2016
v  Hong Kong 1 1 0 0 0 21 February 2016
v  Ireland 3 1 2 0 0 16 February 2016
v  Netherlands 3 0 3 0 0
v  Oman 2 2 0 0 0 22 November 2015
v  Scotland 2 1 1 0 0 4 February 2016

ICC Trophy

Overall

Players

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai A Timeline of UAE cricket at CricketEurope
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Encyclopedia of World Cricket by Roy Morgan, Sportsbooks Publishing, 2007
  3. ^ a b c Scorecard of Hong Kong v UAE, 3 August 2008 at CricketArchive
  4. ^ "Scotland and UAE battle lock horns in final of ICC CWCQ 2014". International Cricket Council. 31 January 2014. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  5. ^ One-Day International Matches played on Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium at CricketArchive
  6. ^ Test Matches played at Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium at CricketArchive
  7. ^ Scorecard of Kenya v UAE, 6 March 1994 at CricketArchive
  8. ^ a b c Saudis stun champions, 25 July 2008, CricketEurope
  9. ^ a b Scorecard of Netherlands v UAE, 11 July 2005 at CricketArchive
  10. ^ 2007–08 ICC Intercontinental Cup at CricketEurope
  11. ^ a b Scorecard of Oman v UAE, 1 December 2007 at CricketArchive
  12. ^ a b 2008 Asia Cup Points Table at CricketArchive
  13. ^ Asian Cricket, Accessed 14 May 2011
  14. ^ "Kabir Khan to coach UAE". ESPN Cricinfo. 2 October 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  15. ^ Cricinfo, Accessed 14 May 2011
  16. ^ Asian Cricket, Accessed 14 May 2011
  17. ^ Cricket Europe, Accessed 14 May 2011
  18. ^ a b "Zimbabwe v UAE Preview, Match 8, Nelson". ICC. 18 February 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  19. ^ Monga, Sidharth (19 February 2015). "Williams, Ervine ruin UAE's spirited comeback". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  20. ^ "Standings / Cricket World Cup 2015 - ICC Cricket / Official Website". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  21. ^ a b 1990 ICC Trophy at Cricinfo
  22. ^ ICC, Accessed 15 May 2011
  23. ^ ICC, Accessed 15 May 2011
  24. ^ 2010 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier
  25. ^ 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier
  26. ^ 2015 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier
  27. ^ Pradeep Vijayakar (July 21 2004). "UAE cricket team manager gets nostalgic"Times of India. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  28. ^ Premasara Epasinghe (23 March 2011). "Champaka Ramanayake: Sri Lankan fast bowling coach"The Island. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  29. ^ "ECB is not being able to find proper coaches, first they had Mushtaq Mohammed [sic] and now they Naveed Anjum for six months…" (11 October 2000). "Expatriates should be allowed to represent UAE team on International level: Lt. Gen. Tauqir Zia" – UAECricket.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  30. ^ "Mushtaq, currently coach of the UAE, rushed to join the team's practice…" (7 October 1998). "ACC Trophy: 'Khel' at Dhulikhel (7 October 1998)" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  31. ^ (8 September 2000). "Anjum takes over as UAE cricket coach" – UAECricket.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  32. ^ (6 February 2002). "ECB on a mini-tour to Bahrain" – UAECricket.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  33. ^ (16 April 2002). "Abid Ali appointed ECB coach" – UAECricket.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  34. ^ (28 June 2005). "So much at stake" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  35. ^ "…Abdul Razzaque Kazim, the coach and manager of the team…" (11 October 2005). "UAE hit by player withdrawals" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  36. ^ (8 December 2005). "Hathurusingha retires from first-class cricket" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  37. ^ K. R. Nayar (1 June 2007)"Kuruvilla to coach UAE team" – gulfnews.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  38. ^ (23 January 2009). "Kabir Khan: advancing Afghanistan" – Asian Cricket Council. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  39. ^ "Pepsi ICC World Cricket League Division 2 was won by UAE in 2007, under Kabir…" (30 March 2011). "UAE ready to advance at home" – Asian Cricket Council. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  40. ^ "Vasbert Drakes appointed coach of UAE" – Cricket World. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  41. ^ Paul Radley (20 August 2008). "Drakes is gone, not forgotten"The National. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  42. ^ Tony Munro (22 January 2009). "Colin Wells to coach UAE" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  43. ^ Amith Passela (6 January 2014). "Colin Wells and Ijaz Ahmed take charge of UAE U19 side"The National. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  44. ^ "The UAE team have been training without a coach since Khan left immediately after that defeat to take charge of Afghanistan…" Amith Passela (5 March 2012). "Hard work starts now for the new UAE coach Aaqib Javed"The National. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  45. ^ Umar Farooq (7 March 2012). "Aaqib Javed signs as UAE coach" – ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  46. ^ a b "Records /United Arab Emirates / One-Day Internationals / Result summary". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  47. ^ a b "Records / United Arab Emirates / Twenty20 Internationals / Result summary". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  48. ^ ESPNCricinfo
  49. ^ ESPNCricinfo
  50. ^ "United Arab Emirates – Records – One-Day Internationals / Best bowling figures in an innings". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  51. ^ "UAE ODI Career Batting". Cricinfo.
  52. ^ "UAE ODI Career Bowling". Cricinfo.
  53. ^ ESPNCricinfo
  54. ^ ESPNCricinfo
  55. ^ "United Arab Emirates – Records – Twenty20 Internationals / Best bowling figures in an innings". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  56. ^ "UAE T20I Career Batting". Cricinfo.
  57. ^ "UAE T20I Career Bowling". Cricinfo.
  58. ^ UAE totals of 200 and more in an innings in the ICC Trophy at CricketArchive
  59. ^ Individual scores of 100 and more in an innings for UAE in the ICC Trophy at CricketArchive
  60. ^ Four or more wickets in an innings for UAE in the ICC Trophy at CricketArchive
  61. ^ a b Scorecard of Brunei v UAE, 14 August 2006 at CricketArchive
  62. ^ Scorecard of UAe v Nepal, 25 March 2004 at CricketArchive

External links