After a staggering 128-year absence, cricket is officially returning to the Olympic Games, and this time it’s not a one-off sideshow. The International Cricket Council (ICC), in collaboration with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), has locked in the dates, venue, and format for the much-anticipated cricket event at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
The tournament will feature T20 cricket, widely considered the sport’s most accessible and fast-paced format—a natural fit for the global Olympic audience.
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📅 Dates & Structure:
Tournament Begins: July 12, 2028
Venue: Temporary cricket stadium at the Fairplex in Pomona, roughly 50 km from downtown LA
Men’s Final: July 29
Women’s Final: July 20
Match Timings: Two games daily—9:00 AM and 6:30 PM (local time)
Rest Days: No matches on July 14 and July 21
The format includes six teams per gender, each squad with 15 players. Teams will be divided into two groups of three, followed by a crossover knockout stage. The top team in one group will face the second or third from the opposite group, creating high-stakes clashes early in the tournament.
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🏏 A Comeback Century in the Making
The last time cricket featured in the Olympics was Paris 1900, with just one match played between Great Britain and France. Since then, the sport’s absence from the Games has been a point of debate—until now.
ICC Chairman Greg Barclay has called the sport’s inclusion “a historic moment,” underscoring cricket’s push for globalization and its growing footprint, especially in North America.
“This is not just about showcasing cricket to the world—it’s about being part of the world’s biggest sporting platform,” Barclay said earlier this year.
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🌍 Who Gets to Play?
With only six spots per gender, qualification is expected to be intense. The top-ranked T20I nations will likely get direct entry, with room for regional representation and the host nation (USA) expected to get automatic qualification.
While final qualification criteria are still being finalized, the goal is clear: a streamlined, high-intensity event that captures the spirit of cricket without dragging on like a five-day Test.
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🎬 Why It Matters
For cricket fans, it’s not just about medals—it’s about recognition. Cricket at the Olympics means visibility in new markets, increased youth participation, and an official spot on the world’s biggest athletic stage.
And for those watching from LA in 2028? Expect cricket under the Californian sun, where yorkers and sixes will share space with sprints and swims.
After 128 years, cricket’s back in the Olympics—and this time, it’s playing for gold.
