ICC Champions Trophy

ICC Champions Trophy
Tournament logo
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council
FormatOne Day International
First edition1998 Bangladesh
Latest edition2025 Pakistan
Next edition2029 India
Tournament formatGroup stage and knockout
Current champion India (3rd title)
Most successful India (3 titles)
Most runsCricket West Indies Chris Gayle (791)[1]
Most wicketsNew Zealand Kyle Mills (28)[2]
Websiteicc-cricket.com

The ICC Champions Trophy, formerly known as the ICC Knock Out Trophy, is an international One Day International (ODI) cricket tournament organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC) contested by international men's teams.

Inaugurated in 1998, the ICC conceived the idea of the Champions Trophy – a short cricket tournament to raise funds for the development of the game in non-test playing countries. The first Champions Trophy was organised in Bangladesh in June 1998, with the Cricket World Cup having had existed for 23 years with six completed editions. The first two Champions Trophies were held in ICC Associate member nations – Bangladesh and Kenya, to increase the popularity of the sport in those countries and then use the funds collected for the development of their cricket. From the 2002 tournament onwards, hosting has been shared between countries under an unofficial rotation system, with six ICC members having hosted at least one match in the tournament. The current format involves a qualification phase, which takes place in the preceding edition of the Cricket World Cup, to determine which teams qualify for the tournament phase. The top eight ranked teams in the World Cup (including the hosts of the Champions Trophy) secure a berth for the tournament.

So far, a total of fourteen teams have competed in the nine editions of the tournament. India (2002,2013,2025) is the most successful team with three titles, Australia (2006,2009) has won it twice while South Africa (1998), New Zealand (2000), Sri Lanka (2002), West Indies (2004) and Pakistan (2017) have won it once each. The 2002 edition was shared between India and Sri Lanka after the final ended in a no-result due to rain.

India are the current champions after winning the 2025 edition.

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  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference MW was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

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