Cricket Returns to the Olympic Stage
After an absence of 128 years, cricket is officially coming back to the Olympic Games. On June 29, the International Olympic Committee Executive Board approved the qualification pathway for cricket at Los Angeles 2028, confirming the format that will govern the sport’s long-awaited return. The last time cricket featured at the Olympics was the Paris 1900 Games, making this one of the most significant additions to the modern Olympic programme.
The competition at LA28 will be played in the Twenty20 format, the shortest and most explosive version of the international game. Both the men’s and women’s tournaments will feature six teams, with squads of up to fifteen athletes each. In total, ninety quota places have been allocated per gender, giving the sport a compact but fiercely competitive field on the Olympic stage.
India Among the First to Qualify
For Indian cricket fans, the announcement carried an immediate reward. India’s women’s team secured one of the first quota places as Asia’s highest-placed eligible finisher at the ongoing ICC Women’s T20 World Cup. Although Harmanpreet Kaur’s side did not reach the semi-finals in 2026, they finished ahead of every other Asian nation, which was enough to claim the continent’s automatic Olympic berth.
India joins Australia, Great Britain, and South Africa as the first four women’s teams confirmed for the Games, each booking their place as a leading side from Africa, Asia, Europe, and Oceania. The fifth and sixth places in both the men’s and women’s competitions will be settled through a newly created ICC Olympics Qualifier, scheduled to take place in 2027.
A New Pathway and a Familiar Stage
The decision reflects months of coordination between the IOC and the International Cricket Council to design a system that balances regional representation with sporting merit. By tying initial qualification to performance at major ICC events, organisers have ensured that the road to Los Angeles begins on stages cricket fans already follow closely.
The return of cricket is widely viewed as a strategic move to broaden the Olympic audience, particularly across South Asia, where the sport commands enormous followings. India alone represents one of the largest television markets in world sport, and the prospect of an Olympic gold medal adds a powerful new dimension to an already storied cricketing culture.
Looking Ahead to 2028
While the men’s Indian side still has work to do to secure its own place, the women’s qualification offers an early glimpse of what the Los Angeles Games could mean for the sport. With the qualification framework now approved, attention turns to the 2027 qualifier and the teams still chasing the final berths.
When cricket finally takes the field in Los Angeles, it will do so as both a historic revival and a modern spectacle, uniting one of the world’s oldest team sports with the global reach of the Olympic Games.

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