ICC Men's ODI All-Rounder Rankings 2026
- Last Updated: June 17, 2026
Follow the latest ICC Men’s ODI All-Rounder Rankings 2026 with live ratings, player movement and current order for cricket’s most complete 50-over performers. This page focuses on ratings, role value and match impact, so readers can see which players are contributing with both bat and ball rather than relying on reputation alone.
| # | Team | Rating | Chg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 131 | - | |
| 2 | 119 | - | |
| 3 | 104 | - | |
| 4 | 102 | - | |
| 5 | 102 | - | |
| 6 | 86 | - | |
| 7 | 78 | - | |
| 8 | 75 | - | |
| 9 | 68 | - | |
| 10 | 10 | - |
Rankings are not available at present for this selection.
ODI all-rounder rankings reward players who can shape long spells, middle-over phases and late-innings pressure. A top all-rounder may score important runs in the lower or middle order, bowl full spells, break partnerships and keep control across different stages of a 50-over match. That is why players such as Azmatullah Omarzai, Sikandar Raza, Mohammad Nabi, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Rashid Khan and Mitchell Santner can remain highly valuable even when their batting and bowling roles differ from team to team.
ODI All-Rounder Rankings: Current Rating Picture
The leading men’s ODI all-rounder list has recently featured Azmatullah Omarzai at No. 1 with a rating around 329, followed by strong multi-skill performers including Sikandar Raza, Mohammad Nabi, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Rashid Khan, Michael Bracewell, Brandon McMullen, Mitchell Santner, Wanindu Hasaranga and Axar Patel. The gap between the top few names often changes after bilateral series because ODI all-rounders depend on opportunity: batting time, bowling overs, match conditions and whether their side needs them in both disciplines.
Afghanistan’s rise has made ODI all-rounder rankings especially interesting. Omarzai, Nabi and Rashid bring different types of value: seam-bowling balance, spin control, lower-order hitting and wicket-taking threat. Raza and Mehidy have also stayed relevant because they carry heavy responsibility for their teams across batting and bowling phases.
How ODI All-Rounder Ratings Measure Dual Impact
ODI all-rounder ratings are not a simple career summary. They are built around recent performance and the quality of contribution in both disciplines. A player who scores 35 under pressure and bowls ten economical overs can gain more all-rounder value than someone who delivers one isolated highlight. The system is designed to measure current influence, which is why role clarity matters so much.
In ODIs, an all-rounder has enough overs to influence several phases, but still needs to keep the innings moving. Batting at No. 5, 6 or 7 can mean rebuilding after early wickets or accelerating in the final 15 overs. Bowling can mean new-ball support, middle-over spin control or death-over variation. The most valuable ODI all-rounders tend to offer at least two reliable pathways into a game.
Recent Men's ODI All-Rounder Era
The recent men’s ODI all-rounder era has been shaped by adaptable players rather than one fixed profile. Shakib Al Hasan and Mohammad Nabi offered years of spin-bowling stability with dependable batting. Ravindra Jadeja, Mitchell Santner and Mehidy Hasan Miraz showed how left-arm or off-spin control can combine with useful lower-order runs. Sikandar Raza became a major modern example of a senior player carrying both innings responsibility and bowling workload.
Since 2023 and 2024, Azmatullah Omarzai has become one of the clearest examples of the new ODI all-rounder: a seam-bowling option who can bat with range, support the top order and still influence the ball in hand. Rashid Khan and Wanindu Hasaranga show a different model, where wicket-taking spin and late hitting keep them in the all-rounder conversation even when their batting positions vary.
Top 10 Most Valuable ODI Allrounders
Career all-round value is different from current rating, but it helps explain why certain names define the ODI format. The table below highlights players who combined long batting records with meaningful bowling impact. Active or recently active players are shown with plus signs to avoid making the table dependent on every future update.
| Player | Team | ODI Runs | ODI Wickets | All-Rounder Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sanath Jayasuriya | Sri Lanka | 13,000+ | 300+ | Explosive opener and left-arm spin option |
| Jacques Kallis | South Africa | 11,000+ | 270+ | Elite batting base with seam-bowling depth |
| Shakib Al Hasan | Bangladesh | 7,000+ | 300+ | Long-term spin-bowling all-round dominance |
| Shahid Afridi | Pakistan | 8,000+ | 390+ | Power hitting and attacking leg spin |
| Chris Gayle | West Indies | 10,000+ | 160+ | Top-order match winner with useful off spin |
| Abdul Razzaq | Pakistan | 5,000+ | 260+ | Seam-bowling finisher across eras |
| Ravindra Jadeja | India | 2,000+ | 220+ | Control, fielding and lower-order runs |
| Mohammad Nabi | Afghanistan | 3,000+ | 170+ | Senior spin all-rounder and finisher |
| Sikandar Raza | Zimbabwe | 4,000+ | 90+ | Batting responsibility plus off-spin value |
| Azmatullah Omarzai | Afghanistan | runs+ | wickets+ | Modern seam-bowling ODI all-rounder |
Why Conditions Matter for ODI Allrounders
Conditions can change an ODI all-rounder’s value dramatically. On slow pitches, spin-bowling all-rounders who can bat through the middle overs become especially useful because they control scoring and extend batting depth. On greener surfaces, seam-bowling all-rounders gain importance because they can share new-ball or first-change work while still adding balance to the batting order.
Boundary size, dew, pitch pace and match location all affect how all-rounders are judged. A player who bowls eight overs for control on a flat surface may be as valuable as a batter who adds a quick 40 in the final overs. That is why ODI all-rounder ratings often reward steady two-way involvement rather than one spectacular performance.
World Cup Pressure and ODI All-Rounder Value
Major ODI tournaments place extra value on players who cover more than one role. In World Cups and Champions Trophy-style events, teams often prefer an all-rounder because selection balance becomes harder across different venues. A fifth bowler may be targeted, a top order can collapse, or an injury can force a captain to stretch resources. A genuine all-rounder gives the side a safety net without reducing attacking options.
This is one reason players such as Kallis, Jayasuriya, Shakib, Afridi, Jadeja, Nabi and Raza stand out in ODI memory. Their value was not only in runs or wickets, but in allowing captains to build flexible XIs. In the modern game, Omarzai and similar players continue that trend by offering batting depth and a realistic bowling role in the same selection.
Frequently Asked Questions — ICC Men's ODI All-Rounder Rankings
Azmatullah Omarzai has recently led the men’s ODI all-rounder rankings, with Sikandar Raza, Mohammad Nabi and Mehidy Hasan Miraz among the closest challengers in the current rating picture.
ODI all-rounder ratings reflect current batting and bowling value in the format. Recent performances, consistency, role impact and quality of contribution all influence a player’s rating.
The ranking measures present influence, not just lifetime volume. A player with a defined batting role and regular bowling workload can rank highly if recent ODI performances are strong.
Sanath Jayasuriya, Jacques Kallis, Shakib Al Hasan, Shahid Afridi, Chris Gayle, Abdul Razzaq, Ravindra Jadeja and Mohammad Nabi are among the most influential ODI all-rounders across different eras.
Pitch pace, spin, dew and boundary size can change whether a seam-bowling or spin-bowling all-rounder brings more value. Conditions also affect batting tempo and bowling workload.
ICC ranking histories show long periods of dominance from elite all-rounders, especially Shakib Al Hasan in ODIs. Exact longest-streak records are not always presented as a single official public table.
Related ODI Rankings
Men ODI Team Rankings | Men ODI Batsman Rankings | Men ODI Bowler Rankings