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Media Releases

Second place up for grabs in official ODI ratings

A 5-0 win against South Africa in the One Day International series starting in Lahore on 3 October 2003 will lift Pakistan above its opponent to second in the official ODI ratings

A 5-0 win against South Africa in the One Day International series starting in Lahore on 3 October 2003 will lift Pakistan above its opponent to second in the official ODI ratings.
A series whitewash would see Pakistan's rating climb to 114 while South Africa's would fall to 110. Pakistan is currently fourth in the ICC ODI Championship table with a rating of 107 and even a 3-2 or 4-1 series victory on home soil against South Africa will lift it above England to third in the standings.
Success for South Africa in the rescheduled tour will help it edge closer to leaders Australia, but even if it wins all of its matches its rating will only increase from 118 to 123 - still 12 behind the runaway leaders.
A convincing South Africa series win would reduce Pakistan's rating and its position in the table. With only three points currently separating the ratings of the middle six sides in the standings, a 4-1 away win would see Pakistan fall to seventh in the table, while a 5-0 thrashing would push them down to eighth behind all teams except Zimbabwe, Kenya and Bangladesh.
Team Rating
1 Australia 135
2 South Africa 118
3 England 107
4 Pakistan 107
5 West Indies 106
6 New Zealand 106
7 Sri Lanka 105
8 India 104
9 Zimbabwe 63
10 Kenya 28
11 Bangladesh 0
Developed by David Kendix
Clive Lloyd from the Emirates Elite Panel of ICC Referees will officiate on the series while Darrell Hair from the Emirates Elite Panel of ICC Umpires will stand in all five matches alongside officials appointed by the home board.
This will be the first series to use the Professional Edition of the Duckworth/Lewis method of target resetting.
How the ICC ODI ratings work:
The formula used by the ICC to determine points takes into account the following factors:
- results from all ODI matches played over the previous two to three years
- strength of opposition, with greater reward for beating higher ranked opponents
- greater importance is placed on more recent results, with older matches dropped every 12 months
- all matches have equal status, with no account taken of venue or margin of victory
The points awarded are then divided by the number of matches played in the valid period to produce a rating.
For the full formula and to predict the impact future results will have on the ratings visit www.icc.cricket.org
ICC media contacts:
Brendan McClements Jon Long
General Manager - Corporate Affairs Project Officer - Corporate Affairs
Mobile: + 44 (0) 7786 194974 Mobile: + 44 (0) 7946 545090
E Mail: jon.long@icc-cricket.com