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Harare Sports Club, Harare, Zimbabwe 11 September 2011 New Zealand: 4 August 2015 India: 15 June 2016 Afghanistan: Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates 16 February 2018 India: Harare Sports Club, Harare, Zimbabwe 18 August 2022: Last updated: 1 July 2020 [35]
Zimbabwe became a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) on 6 July 1992, thereby gaining the right to play Test matches.It had previously become an associate member of the ICC on 21 July 1981, a year after the country's internationally recognised independence.
This is a list of Zimbabwean One-day International cricketers displaying career statistics for all players that have represented Zimbabwe in at least one One Day International (ODI). An ODI is an international cricket match between two representative teams, each having ODI status, as determined by the International Cricket Council (ICC).
The Zimbabwe national cricket team toured India in the 1992–93 season to play a Test match and three One day internationals. This was Zimbabwe's inaugural tour of India, and Zimbabwe lost all four matches.
Zimbabwe were placed in group B alongside Afghanistan, Nepal, Hong Kong and Scotland. [109] Zimbabwe progressed to the super sixes by beating Nepal, [110] Afghanistan [111] and Hong Kong [112] and earning a tie with Scotland. [113] Zimbabwe beat Ireland in the first game [114] of the super sixes but lost the second to West Indies. [115]
The Zimbabwe national cricket team is one of the full members of the International Cricket Council (ICC), the governing body of cricket. There have been nine editions of the T20 World Cup and Zimbabwe has participated in six editions.
The association football champions of Zimbabwe are the winners of the highest league in Zimbabwean football, which is the Zimbabwe Premier Soccer League (ZPSL). The ZPSL was founded in 1980, after Zimbabwe's internationally recognised independence, as a successor to the Rhodesia National Football League, which started in 1962.
Zimbabwe has 16 official languages, [3] with English, Shona, and Ndebele the most common. Zimbabwe is a member of the United Nations, the Southern African Development Community, the African Union, and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa. The region was long inhabited by the San, and was settled by Bantu peoples around 2,000 years ago.