With Australia taking on Oman in the final group stage game of the T20 World Cup on Friday, the marquee event will see the more crucial Super 8 stage begin on Saturday, February 21, with the top eight
teams of the competition, till now, all set to fight for the four semifinal spots.
The Super Eight line-up for the T20 World Cup was confirmed on Wednesday, with all qualifying teams now locked in. But no points are carried forward, meaning every team starts the Super 8s on a clean slate.
There are no special rules for these matches. If a game ends in a tie, it will be decided by a Super Over. Should that be tied as well, additional Super Overs will be played until a winner is determined.
The ICC implemented a pre-seeding system for the T20 World Cup, meaning teams’ Super 8 routes were mapped out even before the first delivery was bowled. Rather than Super 8 qualification and match-ups being determined by group-stage standings, multiple major teams were pre-assigned specific slots because of logistical considerations.
For instance, India were pre-assigned the A1 slot in the group stage, irrespective of whether they finished first or second. Australia (B1), England (C1) and New Zealand (D1) were locked into top positions, while Sri Lanka (B2), West Indies (C2) and Pakistan (A2) were also allotted fixed spots in advance.
If any of those teams couldn’t qualify, the team replacing them would take over that designated slot in the next round, as Zimbabwe did by moving into Australia’s assigned position.
The format carries into the Super 8s as well. India were pre-slotted as X1, England as Y1, Australia as X2, New Zealand as Y2, West Indies as X3, Pakistan as Y3, South Africa as X4 and Sri Lanka as Y4.
These pre-assigned codes shape the games and potential knockout pathways in advance.
The logic behind the move is logistical. With games split between India and Sri Lanka, organisers require clarity on venues, broadcast plans, travel and ticketing for marquee teams.
While this approach streamlines planning, it also takes away some of the unpredictability that fuels the drama of a T20 World Cup group stage.
Let’s take a look at the Super 8 schedule:
Feb 21: New Zealand vs Pakistan, Colombo, 7 pm
Feb 22: England vs Sri Lanka, Pallekele, 3 pm; India vs South Africa, Ahmedabad, 7 pm
Feb 23: Zimbabwe vs West Indies, Mumbai, 7 pm
Feb 24: England vs Pakistan, Pallekele, 7 pm
Feb 25: New Zealand vs Sri Lanka, Colombo, 7 pm
Feb 26: West Indies vs South Africa, Ahmedabad, 3 pm; India vs Zimbabwe, Chennai, 7 pm
Feb 27: England vs New Zealand, Colombo, 7 pm
Feb 28: Pakistan vs Sri Lanka, Pallekele, 7 pm
Mar 1: Zimbabwe vs South Africa, New Delhi, 3 pm; India vs West Indies, Kolkata, 7 pm












