The Hong Kong men's cricket team (), officially Hong Kong, China, represents Hong Kong in international cricket competitions. It played its first match in 1866 and has been an associate member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) since 1969.
Hong Kong played its first One Day Internationals in the 2004 Asia Cup, and in January 2014 was granted ODI status until 2018, as a result of finishing third in the 2014 Cricket World Cup Qualifier. The team gained Twenty20 International status in November 2013, as a result of qualifying for the 2014 ICC World Twenty20. Hong Kong lost their ODI status in March 2018 after losing to the Netherlands in a play-off match during the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier. They did, however, play two further ODI matches at the 2018 Asia Cup in September 2018 after winning the 2018 Asia Cup Qualifier, as the ICC announced that all matches played at the finals would have ODI status.
Hong Kong has played in every ICC Trophy/World Cup Qualifier tournament, with the exceptions of the 1979 and 2005 editions. It has also taken part in two ICC Intercontinental Cup tournaments, in 2005 and in 2015–17, and in two ICC T20 World Cup tournaments, in 2014 and 2016.
In April 2018, the ICC decided to grant full Twenty20 International (T20I) status to all its members. Therefore, all Twenty20 matches played between Hong Kong and other ICC members after 1 January 2019 have the full T20I status.
History
Early years
The sport was introduced to Hong Kong by the British, with the first recorded game taking place in 1841, and the Hong Kong Cricket Club being founded ten years later. The Cricket Club (playing as Hong Kong) played a number of Interport matches against sides on the Chinese mainland, the first taking place against Shanghai in 1866, and in 1890 played Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) for the first time.
1948 saw the last game against Shanghai. In 1969 the Hong Kong Cricket Association became an associate member of the International Cricket Council, cricket's global ruling body. but it was not until the 1982 ICC Trophy when the Hong Kong team next played.
Hong Kong took part in the following three ICC Trophy tournaments, again failing to progress beyond the first round in 1986, reaching the plate competition in 1990 and the second round in 1994. They then played in the inaugural ACC Trophy tournament in 1996,
In 1997, Hong Kong returned to Chinese control. In the same year, the national team finished eighth in the ICC Trophy. They played in the ACC Trophy again in 1998, losing to Malaysia in the semi-finals.
21st century
2000–2009
In 2000, Hong Kong reached the final of the ACC Trophy, where they lost to the United Arab Emirates. Nonetheless, this earned them qualification for the 2002 Asia Cup (which was subsequently moved to 2004), and thus their first taste of One Day International cricket. In 2002, they reached the semi-finals of the ACC Trophy, again losing to the United Arab Emirates.
At the 2004 Asia Cup, held in Sri Lanka, Hong Kong were drawn alongside Test nations Bangladesh and Pakistan. They lost both matches heavily, despite restricting Bangladesh to 221/9 in the first match.
Also in 2004, Hong Kong failed to progress beyond the first round of the ACC Trophy after losing in the group stages to Oman and Bahrain, missing out on qualification for the 2005 ICC Trophy in Ireland. They also reached the final of the ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament, losing to the United Arab Emirates.
In 2006, Hong Kong again lost to the United Arab Emirates in the final of the ACC Trophy, and finished fourth in the ACC Premier League. The following year, they travelled to Darwin, Australia to take part in Division Three of the World Cricket League, finishing fifth, relegating them to Division Four for 2008.
In October/November 2007, Hong Kong took part in the inaugural ACC Twenty20 Cup held in Kuwait, where they played in Group B against the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Hong Kong finished 4th in their group and failed to make to the semi-finals stage.
In June 2008, Hong Kong took part in the Asia Cup in Pakistan. They failed to progress beyond the group stage to the Super Four stage, as they lost both of their group A matches against India and Pakistan convincingly.
In October 2008, Hong Kong travelled to Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania to participate in Division Four of the World Cricket League. Hong Kong won four group matches against; Fiji, Italy, Jersey and the hosts but lost twice to Afghanistan in their group match and the Final. Hong Kong's top two finish resulted in their promotion back to Division Three.
2010–present
In 2011 they hosted the Division Three and won it defeating Papua New Guinea in the finals to qualify for Division Two to be held in the United Arab Emirates. Then in Division Two they came 4th qualifying as HPP member and for 2014 Cricket World Cup Qualifier in New Zealand. .
In 2013 the UAE hosted the ICC T20 Qualifier where Hong Kong came 6th by beating Papua New Guinea and just enough to qualify for ICC T20 World Cup 2014 held in Bangladesh.
In 2014, New Zealand hosted the ICC 50 over world cup qualifier where Hong Kong came third place despite not qualifying for 2015 ICC cricket world cup, they still achieved an ODI status with Papua New Guinea.
In March 2014 Hong Kong beat the host Bangladesh in the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 by two wickets with two balls remaining but could not make it to the next stage of super 10 having lost the two earlier matches to Afghanistan and Nepal
Hong Kong first ODI win against a full member came on 8 March 2018 defeating Afghanistan in 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier.
Grounds
Tournament history
ICC T20 World Cup
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; width=900px;"
|-
! colspan="8" |ICC T20 World Cup records
|-
! width=150 |Year
! width=150 |Round
! width=50 |Position
! width=50 |GP
! width=50 |W
! width=50 |L
! width=50 |T
! width=50 |NR
|-
| 2007 || colspan="7" rowspan="4"|Did not qualify
|-
| 2009
|-
| 2010
|-
| 2012
|-
| 2014 || Group stage || 15/16 || 3 || 1 || 2 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2016|| Group stage || 16/16 || 3 || 0 || 3 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2021 || colspan="7" rowspan="4" |Did not qualify
|-
| 2022
|-
| 2024
|-
| 2026
|-
|Total||2/9 ||0 Title ||6||1||5||0||0
|}
ICC Trophy / World Cup Qualifier
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
! colspan="9" |ICC Trophy/World Cup Qualifier record
|-
!Year
!Round
!Position
!P
!W
!L
!T
!NR
!A
|-
| 1979 || colspan="8"|Did not participate
|-
| 1982 || Group stage || 8/16 || 7 || 2 || 3 || 0 || 0 || 2
|-
| 1986 || Group stage || 8/16 || 8 || 3 || 5 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 1990 || Plate round || 11/17 || 8 || 5 || 3 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 1994 || Second round || 8/20 || 7 || 3 || 4 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 1997 || Second round || 8/22 || 7 || 3 || 3 || 0 || 1 || 0
|-
| 2001 || Group stage || 17/24 || 5 || 1 || 4 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2005 || colspan="8" rowspan="2"|Did not qualify
|-
| 2009
|-
| 2014 || Super Sixes || 3/10 || 9 || 6 || 2 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2018 || Playoffs || 10/10 || 6 || 1 || 5 || 0 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2023 || colspan="8"| Did not qualify
|-
|| Total || 57 || 25 || 29 || 0 || 1 || 2
|0
|0
|}
T20 World Cup Qualifier
- 2012: 11th place
- 2013: 6th place
- 2015: 4th place
- 2019: 8th place
- 2022: 6th place
- 2023 (T20 WC Asia Qualifier): Group Stage
ICC Intercontinental Cup
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
!colspan="9"|ICC Intercontinental Cup records
|-
!Year
!Round
!Position
!P
!W
!L
!D
!T
!NR
|-
| 2004 || colspan="8"|Did not qualify
|-
| 2005 || Group stage || 11/12 || 2 || 0 || 1 || 1 || 0 || 0
|-
| 2006–07 || colspan="8" rowspan="4"|Did not qualify
|-
| 2007–08
|-
| 2009–10
|-
| 2011–13
|-
| 2015–17 || Round Robin || 4/8 || 7 || 2 || 3 || 0 || 1 || 1
|-
|| Total ||7/7||0 Title ||9 || 2 || 4 || 1 || 1 || 1
|}
World Cricket League
- 2007 Division Three: 5th place
- 2008 Division Four: 2nd place
- 2009 Division Three: 4th place
- 2011 Division Three: Champions
- 2011 Division Two: 4th place
- 2019 Division Two:6th place
ACC Asia Cup
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
!colspan=8|Asia Cup records
|-
! width=150 |Host/Year
! width=150 |Round
! width=50 |Position
! width=50 |GP
! width=50 |W
! width=50 |L
! width=50 |T
! width=50 |NR
|-
| 1984||colspan=8 rowspan=5|1983 to 1995 inclusive: Did not participate
- 2010 (Elite): 3rd place
- 2012: 5th place
ACC Premier League
- 2014: 5th place
ACC Twenty20 Cup
- 2007: First round
- 2009: 10th place
- 2011: Runners up
- 2013: 4th place
ACC Fast Track Countries Tournament
- 2004/05: Runners-up
- 2001: Andy Moles
- 2001–2002: Lal Jayasinghe
- 2004–2007: Robin Singh
- 2007: Sameer Dighe
- 2007–2009: Aftab Habib
- 2009–2010: Afzaal Haider
- 2010–2015: Charlie Burke
- 2015–2019: Simon Cook
- 2019–2022: Trent Johnston
- 2023–2025: Simon Willis
- 2025-present: Kaushal Silva
Records
International Match Summary – Hong Kong
Last updated 1 June 2026.
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; width: 500px;"
|-
| colspan=7 align="center" | Playing Record
|-
! Format !! M !! W !! L !! T !! NR !! Inaugural Match
|-
| align="left"| One Day Internationals || 26 || 9 || 16 || 0 || 1 || 16 July 2004
|-
| align="left"| Twenty20 Internationals || 125 || 57 || 63 || 2 || 3 || 16 March 2014
|}
One Day Internationals
- Highest team total: 323/4 v Papua New Guinea, 8 December 2017 at ICC Academy Ground, Dubai
- Highest individual score: 143*, Anshuman Rath v Papua New Guinea, 8 December 2017 at ICC Academy Ground, Dubai
- Best individual bowling figures: 4/10, Kinchit Shah v Papua New Guinea, 17 March 2018 at Harare Sports Club, Harare
Most ODI runs for Hong Kong
{| class="wikitable"
! Player!!Runs!!Average!!Career span
|-
|Anshuman Rath || 828 || 51.75 || 2014–2018
|-
|Babar Hayat || 784 || 39.20 || 2014–2018
|-
|Nizakat Khan || 675 || 33.75 || 2014–2018
|-
|Tanwir Afzal || 292 || 18.25 || 2014–2018
|-
|Aizaz Khan || 260 || 20.00 || 2014–2018
|}
Most ODI wickets for Hong Kong
{| class="wikitable"
! Player!!Wickets!!Average!!Career span
|-
|Nadeem Ahmed || 38 || 24.52 || 2004–2018
|-
|Ehsan Khan || 29 || 20.48 || 2016–2018
|-
|Tanwir Afzal || 19 || 31.63 || 2014–2018
|-
|Ehsan Nawaz || 16 || 28.62 || 2014–2018
|-
|Aizaz Khan || 16 || 42.50 || 2014–2018
|}
Highest individual innings in ODI
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
! Player!!Score!!Opposition!!Venue!!Year
|-
|Anshuman Rath || 143* || || Dubai || 2017
|-
|Mark Chapman || 124* || || Dubai || 2015
|-
|Anshuman Rath || 97 || || Mong Kok || 2016
|-
|Nizakat Khan || 94 || || Mong Kok || 2016
|-
|Nizakat Khan || 93 || || Dubai || 2017
|}
Best bowling figures in an innings in ODI
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
! Player!!Score!!Opposition!!Venue!!Year
|-
|Kinchit Shah || 4/10 || || Harare || 2018
|-
|Nadeem Ahmed || 4/26 || || Mong Kok || 2016
|-
|Nadeem Ahmed || 4/33 || || Harare || 2017
|-
|Ehsan Khan || 4/33 || || Bulawayo || 2018
|-
|Ehsan Nawaz || 4/47 || || Bulawayo || 2018
|}
ODI record versus other nations
- Highest individual score: 122, Babar Hayat v. Oman on 19 February 2016 at Fatullah Osmani Stadium, Fatullah.
- Best individual bowling figures: 6/12, Nasrulla Rana v. Papua New Guinea on 24 September 2023 at Bayuemas Oval, Pandamaran.
Most T20I runs for Hong Kong
{| class="wikitable"
! Player!!Runs!!Average!!Career span
|-
|Nizakat Khan || 2,403 || 21.64 || 2014–2026
|-
|Babar Hayat || 2,339 || 27.19 || 2014–2026
|-
|Anshuman Rath || 2,010 || 29.55 || 2015–2026
|-
|Zeeshan Ali || 1,384 || 29.44 || 2022–2026
|-
|Aizaz Khan || 1,042 || 15.10 || 2014–2026
|}
Most T20I wickets for Hong Kong
{| class="wikitable"
! Player!!Wickets!!Average!!Career span
|-
|Ehsan Khan || 134 || 16.94 || 2016–2026
|-
|Aizaz Khan || 101 || 21.46 || 2014–2026
|-
|Yasim Murtaza || 77 || 20.03 || 2022–2026
|-
|Ayush Shukla || 53 || 25.92 || 2022–2026
|-
|Nasrulla Rana || 46 || 23.58 || 2019–2025
|}
T20I record versus other nations
- Ryan Campbell who formerly played for Australia in ODIs, became the oldest player in T20I cricket to make his T20I debut at the age of 44 and 30 days.
- Holds the record for the highest ODI partnership for any wicket by an associate nation (174 for the first wicket between Nizakat Khan and Anshuman Rath v India)
- Hong Kong set the record for taking the longest time duration to lose their first wicket in an ODI match (34.1 overs against India at the 2018 Asia Cup)
See also
- Cricket Hong Kong
- List of Hong Kong ODI cricketers
- List of Hong Kong Twenty20 International cricketers
- Hong Kong national cricket captains
- Hong Kong women's cricket team
Notes
References
External links
- Hong Kong Cricket Association
- Hong Kong Cricket Team
