Friday 29 July 2016

Dynamin Junior is Essential for your Children

Dynamin Junior is Essential for your Children 


 Vitamins are very important elements for a child to complete the nutritional requirements. When your child takes Dynamin junior multivitamin, it’s just like a life insurance. The way we process and cook the food we eat nowadays makes us lose some useful vitamins and minerals, hence the need for vitamin supplement. Because the body is unable to produce the amount of vitamins and minerals required for daily use, the vitamin supplement is the alternative to complete the vitamin needed by the body daily. Some child have erratic feeding habit or poor appetite, such child will essentially need Dynamin junior multivitamin to make him or her grow at normal rate. Even when your child is eating a complete diet (balanced diet), they still need vitamin supplement as a backup. Many parents are already familiar with giving their children vitamin supplement. The diet of many children does not contain the adequate amount of minerals and vitamins. Parents are working but do not have much time to focus on their kid’s nutritional value, when a kid is not getting the required amount of vitamins needed, it can result to parent paying huge hospital bills because of the sickness it can result in. Children eat too much-processed snacks and energy drinks because of the busy schedules of parents. Young children can benefit from the added protection of dynamin junior multivitamin because many children eat nutrient-void and sugar-laden foods daily. The children need vitamin supplement because much of our soil is depleted; therefore, the foods we buy are very low in quality. The Dynamin junior multivitamin helps you child body system to promote the formation of red blood cell and assist in other metabolic activities. It also strengthens the muscles, connective tissues and helps the wound to heal quickly. Its ability to increase the resistance to infections is another outstanding way it can help your children when taking it daily. The fact that Dynamin junior comes with different taste that your children can choose from is why people are demanding for it every day. The flavor ranges from; orange to pineapple and strawberry. It is important to give the vitamin supplement to your children because of the risk of malnutrition. In conclusion, you need to help your children body system by giving them Dynamin junior multivitamin daily to keep them healthy. You can make up for your inability to provide the food that will provide all necessary vitamins and minerals for your children by giving them the supplement daily.

Tuesday 8 March 2016

Facebook Canvas Ads

Facebook has something new for advertisers and brands. They have launched the Facebook Canvas. Canvas is a form of an ad which fills a need in the market that other types of ads have been unable to fulfill.
ad-canvas
It supports full screen on mobile devices and provides a better experience for the users when they want to view an ad and learn more about the brand.
According to Facebook, “Canvases open from Facebook ads in News Feed to reveal a full-screen experience where advertisers can use a mix of video, still images, text and call-to-action buttons to build beautiful and effective brand and product experiences on mobile.”
Facebook Canvas opens up like a website on landing page after someone clicks on a standard looking Facebook ad. In this case, all the content is hosted on Facebook servers and they make sure that the page loads as fast as possible.
The canvas is a collection of images, videos and call to action buttons. The call to action button will lead to your website.

Create Your First Canvas

To access Facebook Canvas, you have to go to your page and then click on Publishing Tools. Inside publishing tools, click on Canvas.
publishing tools canvas
Click on Create and start building your first canvas. You have to select a theme, upload the header photo, upload some photos and create a Call to Action.
header
You can check Facebook’s Canvas landing page for more information.

Who Should Use Facebook Canvas Ads?

Facebook’s canvas has been introduced for brands to tell their stories and build a relationship with their audience. From what I can see, it is more useful for branding than lead generation or direct response marketing.
Automobile brands, real estate, vacation & holiday packages, food brands and similar B2C brands will find the Canvas a great tool for branding and story telling. B2B brands can also use Canvas ads if they can get the targeting right.
According to Facebook, brands like Coco Cola and Asus have found great success with Canvases. You can read about it here.
If you are doing direct response marketing, Facebook Lead Ads should be where you put your money on. Or you can create a landing page and direct users to that page to generate leads.
I may not yet start a Canvas ad for my brand because I find direct response marketing to be more powerful than branding to get the word out.
However for certain brands, branding via ads is very important to maintain their market leadership. Facebook Canvas is definitely a much better branding tool than Video ads or Display ads.
Facebook Canvas ads creates brand experience and engagement than just brand impressions. Read more about branding via brand engagement.
I will probably publish another post with more details on how to run a Canvas ad after I run an experiment myself. Stay tuned!

Sunday 6 March 2016

icc player ranking

Test Batsmen


Test Bowlers


Test Allrounders


ODI Batsmen


ODI Bowlers


ODI Allrounders


Twenty20 Batsmen


Twenty 20 Bowlers


Twenty20 Allrounders
































































History of the ICC World Twenty20

The ICC World Twenty20 was first held in 2007. It was first decided that every two years an ICC World Twenty20 tournament is to take place, except in the event of an ICC Cricket World Cup being scheduled in the same year, in which case it will be held the year before. The first tournament was in 2007 in South Africa where India defeated Pakistan in the final. Two Associate teams had played in the first tournament, selected through the 2007 ICC World Cricket League Division One, a 50-over competition. In December 2007 it was decided to hold a qualifying tournament with a 20-over format to better prepare the teams. With six participants, two would qualify for the 2009 World Twenty20 and would each receive $250,000 in prize money.[1] The second tournament was won by Pakistan who beat Sri Lanka by 8 wickets in England on 21 June 2009. The 2010 ICC World Twenty20 tournament was held in West Indies in May 2010, where Englanddefeated Australia by 7 wickets. The 2012 ICC World Twenty20 was won by the West-Indies, by defeating Sri Lanka at the finals. For the first time, a host nation competed in the final of the ICC World Twenty20. There were 12 participants for the title including Ireland andAfghanistan as 2012 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. It was the first time the World Twenty20 tournament took place in an Asian country.Pakistan was the only team to reach the last four in the first four editions of the tournament. 2014 saw the expansion to 16 teams featuring three teams making their debuts. Sri Lanka yet again made it to the Finals this time winning after their two other appearances in previous finals. The ICC World Twenty20 has had five champions from five tournaments.

Background

When the Benson & Hedges Cup ended in 2002, the ECB needed another one day competition to fill its place. Cricketing authorities were looking to boost the game's popularity with the younger generation in response to dwindling crowds and reduced sponsorship. It was intended to deliver fast paced, exciting cricket accessible to thousands of fans who were put off by the longer versions of the game. Stuart Robertson, the marketing manager of the ECB, proposed a 20 over per innings game to county chairmen in 2001 and they voted 11–7 in favour of adopting the new format.

Regional tournaments

The first official Twenty20 matches were played on 13 June 2003 between the English counties in the Twenty20 Cup The first season of Twenty20 in England was a relative success.[4] The first Twenty20 match held at Lord's, on 15 July 2004 between Middlesex and Surrey, attracted a crowd of 27,509, the largest attendance for any county cricketgame at the ground other than a one-day final since 1953.
Soon after with the adoption of Twenty20 matches by other cricket boards, the popularity of the format grew with unexpected crowd attendance, new regional tournaments such as Pakistan's Faysal Bank T20 Cup and Stanford 20/20 tournament and the financial incentive in the format. West Indies regional teams competed in what was named theStanford 20/20 tournament. The event was financially backed by billionaire Allen Stanford, who gave at least US$28,000,000 funding money. It was intended that the tournament would be an annual event.[6][7] A spin-off tournament, the Stanford Super Series was held in October 2008 between Middlesex and Trinidad and Tobago, the respective winners of the English and Caribbean Twenty20 competitions, and a Stanford Superstars team formed from West Indies domestic players.On 1 November, the Stanford Superstars played England in what was expected to be the first of five fixtures in as many years with the winner claiming a US$20,000,000 in each match.
Professional era
Indian Premier League (IPL) is a Twenty20 cricket tournament where 8 city based franchise teams from India participate for the title. The tournament started in 2008 and from then it usually takes place every year in the months of April to June.[12] IPL is the most-watched Twenty20 cricket league in the world and also known for its commercial success. During the sixth IPL season (2013) its brand value was estimated to be around US$3.03 billion.[13][14] Live rights to the event are syndicated around the globe, and in 2010, the IPL became the first sporting event to be broadcast live on YouTube.[15]

Twenty20 Internationals

On 17 February 2005 Australia defeated New Zealand in the first men's full international Twenty20 match, played at Eden Park in Auckland. The game was played in a light-hearted manner – both sides turned out in kit similar to that worn in the 1980s, the New Zealand team's a direct copy of that worn by the Beige Brigade. Some of the players also sported moustaches/beards and hair styles popular in the 1980s taking part in a competition amongst themselves for best retro look, at the request of the Beige Brigade. Australia won the game comprehensively, and as the result became obvious towards the end of the NZ innings, the players and umpires took things less seriously – Glenn McGrath jokingly replayed the Trevor Chappell underarm incident from a 1981 ODI between the two sides, and Billy Bowden showed him a mock red card (red cards are not normally used in cricket) in response.

Inaugural tournaments

2007

ICC World T20 2007 BAN vs RSA
This was the first World Twenty20, where 12 teams participated, divided into four groups of three, then two groups of four in quarter-finals; top two into semi-finals. Besides the 10 full members, Kenya and Scotland were the other two teams participating in this tournament that was played on three different grounds, WanderersKingsmead and Newlands. The tournament was a huge success. It had everything required for top quality entertainment, including the world's best players and packed out stadiums. The tournament got underway with a stunning display of power hitting from Chris Gayle against South Africa. He clouted 117 off 57 balls, including 10 sixes. Shaun Pollock, Makhaya Ntini- nobody was spared. If this wasn't enough, Yuvraj Singh achieved cricketing nirvana by hitting England's Stuart Broad for six sixes in an over, during a barnstorming and unlikely 12-ball fifty. It wasn't entirely all batsmen-led action however, as Brett Lee claimed the first hat-trick in Twenty20 internationals, for Australia against Bangladesh. The breathless tournament culminated in a final that thrilled from start to finish, as India and Pakistan battled it out for the trophy. The match went down to a final-over thriller, with Pakistan needing six from the last four balls. But India eventually triumphed as Misbah-ul-Haq's attempted scoop off Joginder Singh landed in the hands of Sreesanth at short fine-leg. Mathew Hayden was the top run getter with 265 runs and Umar Gul took the most wickets, 13. Craig McMillan hit 13 sixes in the tournament, highest by any player.

2009

Format in this tournament was same as the first one: four groups of three, then two groups of four in quarter-finals; top two into semi-finals. This competition was played in London, Lord's and Oval, and Nottingham. Out of the 10 full members, Zimbabwe withdrew its participation. Ireland, Netherlands and Scotland qualified for the tournament. It was full of surprise victories, as favourites fell at the hands of underdogs. The hosts, England, set the ball rolling in the first match of the tournament as they were embarrassed by Netherlands in a final-ball thriller. Australia were dominated by West Indies, largely thanks to a thunderous innings by Chris Gayle, as he hit 88 off 50 balls, including some of the largest sixes seen in England. Australia were then defeated by Sri Lanka, who bowled tightly and batted with dominance, including quick-fire half centuries from Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara. Ireland beat Bangladesh in the Group Stage to qualify for the Super Eight. Previous champions, India, lost all its matches of the Super Eight Stage. South Africa hadn't lost a group stage match going in to the semi-finals against Pakistan, but Shahid Afridi produced a match winning performance with both bat and ball. He blasted his way to 51 and bagged two wickets for 16 runs to secure victory. The final at Lord's was a repeat of a group stage match between Sri Lanka and Pakistan; the latter lost the previous encounter. Pakistan managed to remove Dilshan, the Player of the Series for his 317 runs, without scoring, which had a big impact on the Sri Lanka innings. Sangakkara put up a fight scoring an unbeaten 64, but a target of 138 wasn't going to be easy to defend. Afridi proved this to be correct, hitting an unbeaten 54, which helped Pakistan win the trophy with 8 balls to spare. Umar Gul was the top wicket taker with 13 wickets, a repeat performance of 2007 edition. Yuvraj Singh hit the most sixes in the tournament.

2010

The West Indies hosted the third World Twenty20 a little over eight months after the previous tournament. The format in this tournament too same as in the previous two. The 12 teams consisted of the ten full members and two associates. England proved the surprise package, winning their first major limited-overs trophy with a comprehensive victory over Australia in the final. The Australians had provided amazing fireworks in the semi-final when Pakistan appeared on course for a second final only for Michael Hussey to smash 26 from five deliveries (in a 24-ball 60 not out) to win the game with a ball to spare. The significant strugglers were India and South Africa; one disturbed by the short ball, the other unable to pace a run chase. In this edition too, India lost all the three matches of the Super-8 stage. To the frustration of the commercial gurus in the game, India's elimination before the semi-finals again meant lost revenue. The two Associates - Ireland and Afghanistan - far from disgraced themselves. Mahela Jayawardene scored 302 runs, maximum in this edition of World T20. Dirk Nannes, the Dutch bowler who later qualified for Australian selection was the highest wicket taker with 14 wickets. Cameron White with 12 sixes topped the number of sixes chart.

Expansion to 16 teams

2012

The 2012 edition was to be expanded into a 16 team format however this was reverted to 12.[16] It was the first time the tournament took place in an Asian country, hosted by Sri Lanka in three cities; ColomboPallekele and Hambantota. It was played by the same 12 teams that played in the 2010 tournament, Ireland and Afghanistan and the ten full members. For the first time, a host nation managed to get on to the knock-out stage of the ICC World Twenty20. However the tournament was won by the West Indies, by defeating Sri Lanka by 36 runs. It was by the virtue of the power packed 78 scored by Marlon Samuels the followed some tight bowling by the slow bowlers. Ironically West Indies qualified for the Super-8 stage without winning even a single match in the initial round. Pakistan and Australia were the losing semi-finalists, with Pakistan making into last four on all the occasions and Australia missing only in 2009. India won both the matches of the first round becoming the only team not to lose even a single first round match in the first four editions of the ICC World Twenty20. Shane Watson topped the run charts with 249 runs. Chris Gayle struck 16 sixes, maximum by any player. Ajantha Mendis topped wickets chart with 16 wickets, including an all-time best performance of 6 for 8 against Zimbabwe

2014

The 2014 tournament, held in Bangladesh was the first to feature 16 teams including all ten full members and six associate members who qualified through the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. However the top eight full member teams in the ICC T20I Championship rankings on 8 October 2012 were given a place in the Super 10 stage. The remaining eight teams competed in the group stage, from which two teams advance to the Super 10 stage.[17][18] Three new teams (NepalHong Kong and United Arab Emirates) made their debut in this tournament. The tournament was won by Sri Lanka, who convincingly beat India by 6 wickets with 13 balls to spare. Imran Tahir of South Africa and Virat Kohli of India were the highest wicket taker and run scorer respectively.

Winning teams, captains, and coaches

YearHostWinning TeamCaptainHead coach
2007 South Africa IndiaMahendra Singh DhoniNone
2009 England PakistanYounis KhanIntikhab Alam
2010 West Indies EnglandPaul CollingwoodAndy Flower
2012 Sri Lanka West IndiesDarren SammyOttis Gibson
2014 Bangladesh Sri LankaDinesh Chandimal
Lasith Malinga
Paul Farbrace

ICC World Twenty20

The ICC World Twenty20 (also referred to as the World T20, and colloquially as the T20 World Cup) is the international championship of Twenty20 cricket. Organised by cricket's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC), the tournament currently consists of 16 teams, comprising all ten ICC full members and six other associate or affiliate members chosen through theWorld Twenty20 Qualifier. The event has generally been held every two years, although there is a four-year gap between the next two scheduled tournaments (2016 in India and 2020 in Australia). All matches played are accorded Twenty20 International status.
Five tournaments have so far been played, and no team has yet won the tournament on multiple occasions. The inaugural event, the2007 World Twenty20, was staged in South Africa, and won by India, who defeated Pakistan in the final at the Wanderers Stadium inJohannesburg. The 2009 tournament took place in England, and was won by the previous runner-up, Pakistan, who defeated Sri Lanka in the final at Lord's. The third tournament was held in 2010, hosted by the countries making up the West Indies cricket team.England defeated Australia in the final in Barbados, which was played at Kensington Oval. The fourth tournament, the 2012 World Twenty20, was held in Asia for the first time, with all matches played in Sri Lanka. The West Indies won the tournament by defeating Sri Lanka in the final, winning its first international tournament since the 2004 Champions Trophy.[3] The fifth tournament, the 2014 ICC World Twenty20, was hosted by Bangladesh, and was won by Sri Lanka, who became the first team to play in three finals.

Background

When the Benson & Hedges Cup ended in 2002, the ECB needed another one day competition to fill its place. Cricketing authorities were looking to boost the game's popularity with the younger generation in response to dwindling crowds and reduced sponsorship. It was intended to deliver fast paced, exciting cricket accessible to thousands of fans who were put off by the longer versions of the game. Stuart Robertson, the marketing manager of the ECB, proposed a 20 over per innings game to county chairmen in 2001 and they voted 11–7 in favour of adopting the new format.[4]
Regional tournaments
ICC World T20 2007 BAN vs RSA
The first official Twenty20 matches were played on 13 June 2003 between the English counties in the Twenty20 Cup.[5] The first season of Twenty20 in England was a relative success, with the Surrey Lions defeating the Warwickshire Bears by 9 wickets in the final to claim the title.[6] The first Twenty20 match held at Lord's, on 15 July 2004 between Middlesex and Surrey, attracted a crowd of 27,509, the largest attendance for any county cricket game at the ground other than a one-day final since 1953.[7]
Soon after with the adoption of Twenty20 matches by other cricket boards, the popularity of the format grew with unexpected crowd attendance, new regional tournaments such as Pakistan's Faysal Bank T20 Cup and Stanford 20/20 tournament and the financial incentive in the format.
The West Indies regional teams competed in what was named the Stanford 20/20 tournament. The event was financially backed by convicted fraudster Allen Stanford, who gave at least US$28,000,000 funding money, the fruit of his massive Ponzi scheme. It was intended that the tournament would be an annual event. Guyana won the inaugural event, defeating Trinidad and Tobagoby 5 wickets, securing US$1,000,000 in prize money.[8][9] A spin-off tournament, the Stanford Super Series, was held in October 2008 between Middlesex and Trinidad and Tobago, the respective winners of the English and Caribbean Twenty20 competitions, and a Stanford Superstars team formed from West Indies domestic players; Trinidad and Tobago won the competition, securing US$280,000 prize money.[10][11] On 1 November, the Stanford Superstars played England in what was expected to be the first of five fixtures in as many years with the winner claiming a US$20,000,000 in each match.[12][13]
Twenty20 Internationals:
On 17 February 2005 Australia defeated New Zealand in the first men's full international Twenty20 match, played at Eden Park in Auckland. The game was played in a light-hearted manner – both sides turned out in kit similar to that worn in the 1980s, the New Zealand team's a direct copy of that worn by the Beige Brigade. Some of the players also sported moustaches/beards and hair styles popular in the 1980s taking part in a competition amongst themselves for best retro look, at the request of the Beige Brigade. Australia won the game comprehensively, and as the result became obvious towards the end of the NZ innings, the players and umpires took things less seriously – Glenn McGrath jokingly replayed the Trevor Chappell underarm incident from a 1981 ODI between the two sides, and Billy Bowden showed him a mock red card (red cards are not normally used in cricket) in response.

Inaugural tournaments

Lasith Malinga bowling to Shahid Afridi in the 2009 Final at Lord's.
It was first decided that every two years an ICC World Twenty20 tournament is to take place, except in the event of an Cricket World Cupbeing scheduled in the same year, in which case it will be held the year before. The first tournament was in 2007 in South Africa whereIndia defeated Pakistan in the final. Two Associate teams had played in the first tournament, selected through the 2007 ICC World Cricket League Division One, a 50-over competition. In December 2007 it was decided to hold a qualifying tournament with a 20-over format to better prepare the teams. With six participants, two would qualify for the 2009 World Twenty20 and would each receive $250,000 in prize money.[14] The second tournament was won by Pakistan who beat Sri Lanka by 8 wickets in England on 21 June 2009. The 2010 ICC World Twenty20 tournament was held in West Indies in May 2010, where England defeated Australia by 7 wickets. The 2012 ICC World Twenty20 was won by the West-Indies, by defeating Sri Lanka at the finals. For the first time, a host nation competed in the final of the ICC World Twenty20. There were 12 participants for the title including Ireland and Afghanistan as 2012 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. It was the first time the T20 World Cup tournament took place in an Asian country.

Expansion to 16 teams

The 2012 edition was to be expanded into a 16 team format however this was reverted to 12.[15] The 2014 tournament, held in Bangladesh was the first to feature 16 teams including all ten full members and six associate members who qualified through the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. However the top eight full member teams in the ICC T20I Championship rankings on 8 October 2012 were given a place in the Super 10 stage. The remaining eight teams competed in the group stage, from which two teams advance to the Super 10 stage.[16][17] Three new teams (Nepal, Hong Kong and UAE) made their debut in this tournament.

Format

Qualification

All Test-playing nations achieve automatic qualification to the tournament, with the remaining places filled by other ICC members through a qualification tournament. Qualification for the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 came from the results of the first cycle of the World Cricket League, a 50-over league for non-Test playing nations. The two finalists of theDivision One tournament (Kenya and Scotland) qualified for the inaugural tournament alongside the Test-playing nations. For subsequent tournaments, qualification has been achieved through the World Twenty20 Qualifier, with Afghanistan (2010 and 2012 2014)Ireland (2009, 2010, and 2012 and 2014) Netherlands (2009), and Scotland (2009) each having qualified through this process.T20 World Cup 2016 qualifications would be held in Scotland and Ireland.

Final tournament

Within each group (both Group Stage & Super Eight Stage), teams are ranked against each other based on the following criteria:[18]
  1. Higher number of points
  2. If equal, higher number of wins
  3. If still equal, higher net run rate
  4. If still equal, lower bowling strike rate
  5. If still equal, result of head to head meeting.
In case of a tie (that is, both teams scoring the same number of runs at the end of their respective innings), a Super Over would decide the winner. In the case of a tie occurring again in the Super Over, the match is won by the team that has scored the most sixes in their innings. This is applicable in all stages of the tournament, having been implemented during the 2009 tournament. During the 2007 tournament, a bowl-out was used to decide the loser of tied matches.[19]

Hosts

The International Cricket Council's executive committee votes for the hosts of the tournament after examining bids from the nations which have expressed an interest in holding the event. After South Africa in 2007, England, West Indies and Sri Lanka hosted the tournament in 2009, 2010 and 2012 respectively. The last tournament was hosted byBangladesh in 2014.[20] India will host the 2016 tournament.[21]
In December 2015, Tim Anderson, the ICC's head of global development, suggested that a future tournament be hosted by the United States. He believed that hosting the event could help spur growth of the game in the country, where it is relatively obscure and faces competition by other sports such as baseball.[22]

Results

YearHost(s)Final venueFinal
WinnerResultRunner-up
2007
Details
 South AfricaJohannesburg India
157/5 (20 overs)
India won by 5 runs
Scorecard
 Pakistan
152 all out (19.4 overs)
2009
Details
 EnglandLondon Pakistan
139/2 (18.4 overs)
Pakistan won by 8 wickets
Scorecard
 Sri Lanka
138/6 (20 overs)
2010
Details
 West IndiesBridgetown England
148/3 (17 overs)
England won by 7 wickets
Scorecard
 Australia
147/6 (20 overs)
2012
Details
 Sri LankaColombo West Indies
137/6 (20 overs)
West Indies won by 36 runs
Scorecard
 Sri Lanka
101 all out (18.4 overs)
2014
Details
 BangladeshDhaka Sri Lanka
134/4 (17.5 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 6 wickets
Scorecard
 India
130/4 (20 overs)
2016
Details
 IndiaKolkata
2020
Details
 Australia

Summary of all teams in all tournaments

SourceCricinfo[23]
TeamAppearancesBest resultStatistics
TotalFirstLatestPlayedWonLostTieNRWin%
 Afghanistan320102014Round 1 (2012)7160014.28
 Australia520072014Runner-up (2010)2514110056.00
 Bangladesh520072014Round 2 (2007)183150016.66
 England520072014Champions (2010)2611140144.00
 Hong Kong120142014Round 1 (2014)3120033.33
 India520072014Champions (2007)281791(1)164.81
 Ireland420092014Round 2 (2009)12370230.00
 Kenya120072007Round 1 (2007)202000.00
   Nepal120142014Round 1 (2014)3210066.66
 Netherlands220092014Round 2 (2014)9450044.44
 New Zealand520072014Fourth place (2007)2511122(0)048.00
 Pakistan520072014Champions (2009)3018111(0)061.66
 Scotland220072009Round 1 (2007)403010.00
 South Africa520072014Third place (2009)2616100061.53
 Sri Lanka520072014Champions (2014)312191(1)069.35
 UAE120142014Round 1 (2014)303000.00
 West Indies520072014Champions (2012)2512111(1)152.08
 Zimbabwe420072014Round 1 (2007)9360033.33
The number in bracket indicates number of wins in tied matches by Super OverBowl out or any other c, however these are considered as half a win regardless of the result. The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties (irrespective of a tiebreaker) as half a win.

Team results by tournament

The ICC does not adjudicate rankings but only rounds a team achieves e.g. Semis, round one etc. The table below provides an overview of the performances of teams in the ICC World Twenty20.
Legend
  • 1st — Champions
  • 2nd — Runners-up
  • 3rd — Third place
  • 4th — Fourth place
  • R2 — Round 2 (Super 8s, Super 10s)
  • R1 — Round 1
  • q — Qualified for upcoming tournament
  •  ••  — Qualified but withdrew
  •  •  — Did not qualify
  •  ×  — Did not enter / Withdrew / Banned
  •    — Hosts
The team ranking in each tournament is according to ICC.
For each tournament, the number of teams in each finals tournament (in brackets) are shown.
Team2007
(12)
2009
(12)
2010
(12)
2012
(12)
2014
(16)
2016
(16)
Total
 Afghanistan××R1R1R1q4
 Australia3rdR12nd3rdR2q6
 BangladeshR2R1R1R1R2q6
 EnglandR2R21stR2R2q6
 Hong Kong×××R1q2
 India1stR2R2R22ndq6
 IrelandR2R1R1R1q6
 KenyaR11
   Nepal×××R11
 NetherlandsR1R2q3
 New Zealand4thR2R2R2R2q6
 Pakistan2nd1st4th4thR2q6
 Oman×××q1
 ScotlandR1R1q3
 South AfricaR23rdR2R24thq6
 Sri LankaR22nd3rd2nd1stq6
 United Arab Emirates××R11
 West IndiesR14thR21st3rdq6
 ZimbabweR1••R1R1R1q5

Debut of teams

Team appearing for the first time, in alphabetical order per year.
YearDebutantsTotal
2007 Australia Bangladesh England India Kenya New Zealand Pakistan Scotland South Africa Sri Lanka West Indies Zimbabwe12
2009 Ireland Netherlands2
2010 Afghanistan1
2012none0
2014 Hong Kong   Nepal United Arab Emirates3
2016 Oman1
Total19

Other results