Italy national cricket team
The Italy men's national cricket team is the team that represents Italy in men's international cricket. They have been an associate member of the International Cricket Council since 1995, having previously been an affiliate member since 1984. The Italy national cricket team is administered by the Italian Cricket Federation.
History
Early history
The earliest mention of cricket in Italy is of a match played by Admiral Nelson's sailors in 1793 during a stop in Naples harbour. Around the end of the 19th century, several combined cricket and association football clubs formed, including the world-famous A.C. Milan, which was originally the Milan Cricket and Football Club and the first Italian football team Genoa Cricket and Football Club, which was originally the Genoa Cricket & Athletic Club. But these clubs soon forgot about cricket and concentrated on football. Cricket started to be revived after the Second World War. Cricket flourished in Rome in the 1960s at a superb field which looked across to St. Peter's dome from Villa Doria Pamphili. The Australian and British embassies, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, the Commonwealth War Graves Association, the Venerable English College and Beda College fielded teams which competed for the Rome Ashes there until, in the 1970s, the Villa became a public park.When cricket resumed in Rome on other grounds at the end of the 1970s, four of the Villa Doria Pamphili-era players formed in 1980 the Doria Pamphili Cricket Club: the Italian-Sri Lankan Francis Alphonsus Jayarajah, the Italian-Indian Massimo da Costa, the Australian Desmond O'Grady and the Syrian Issam Kahale
In the same period, some cricket was played in the northern part of Italy with the Milan Cricket Club being formed in the 1970s and Euratom CC in the 1980s.
Modern history
The "Federazione Cricket Italiana" was formed in 1980, and they became an affiliate member of the ICC in 1984, and were promoted to associate member in 1995.The first record match by the Italy national team was touring their first UK Tour in August 1984 and played a week of cricket against local London clubs, the first losing against Enfield CC, but ending on a high with their first win in the last match against North Middlesex.
The first international match played by the Italy national team was a draw against Denmark in 1989.
After years of matches against neighboring nations such as France and Germany, in 1996, Italy took part in the first European Championship in Denmark, finishing seventh after beating Israel in a play-off. They took part in the ICC Trophy for the first time in the 1997 tournament and performed poorly, finishing joint last out of the 22 participants. They finished fifth in the following year's European Championship in which they caused the biggest upset to date in the history of the game by beating the England XI in the promotion/relegation playoff.
In 1999, Italy took part in a quadrangular tournament in Gibraltar also featuring France and Israel. They won the tournament, beating the hosts in the final. They finished fifth in Division One of the European Championship the following year and were due to participate in the 2001 ICC Trophy, but pulled out at the last minute due to a dispute over the eligibility of four players, Italian citizens by birth but not resident in Italy. The dispute was happily resolved by ICC a year later with the recognition of citizenship as a criterion for eligibility in national teams.
The 2002 European Championship saw Italy finish sixth in Division One, relegating them for 2004 to Division Two, which they promptly won. This qualified them for the 2007 [Cricket World Cup qualification#World Cup Qualifying Series Division 2 2005|repêchage tournament] for the 2005 ICC Trophy in early 2005 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. They finished seventh in that tournament after beating Zambia in a play-off.
They took part in Division One of the European Championship in 2006, finishing fifth. In May–June 2007, they travelled to Darwin, Australia, to take part in 2007 [ICC World Cricket League Division Three|Division Three] of the World Cricket League. They finished seventh after beating Fiji in a play-off, and played in 2008 ICC [World Cricket League Division Four|Division Four] of the World Cricket League in 2008 to come third and remained in 2010 ICC World Cricket League Division Four. With a second-place finish there, they were promoted to 2011 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, where they came 4th to remain in 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three. They had a chance of reaching the 2015 Cricket World Cup, if they finished in the top two in the 2013 ICC World Cricket League Division Three, and then in the top two of the 2013 Cricket World Cup Qualifier. An encouraging start to this tournament witnessed wins over Oman and United States, followed by defeats, narrowly to Ireland and more comprehensively against Kenya. After finishing last in this tournament they were relegated to Division Four in 2014.
In November 2013 they competed in the 2013 ICC World [Twenty20 Qualifier] in the UAE, their highest level of competition to date. They finished 9th place with victories over the US, and higher-ranked opponents in UAE and Namibia.
2018–present
In April 2018, the ICC decided to grant full Twenty20 International status to all its members. Therefore, all Twenty20 matches played between Italy and other List of [International Cricket Council members|ICC members] since 1 January 2019 have the T20I status.In September 2018, Italy qualified from Group B of the 2018–19 ICC World Twenty20 Europe Qualifier to the Regional Finals of the tournament.
Italy played their first T20I against Germany in May 2019.
In 2023, it was reported that Italy had pursued a strategy of recruiting professional cricketers from Australia and England to play in the regional final of the 2022–23 [ICC Men's T20 World Cup Europe Qualifier]. The recruits, while holding Italian passports and meeting ICC regulations for representing the country, may have arguably only tenuous direct connections with Italy. On July 11, 2025, following a stunning 12-run upset over Scotland at the 2025 [Men's T20 World Cup Europe Regional Final|European Regional Final],
Italy sealed a spot at the 2026 Men's T20 World Cup after finishing at third-place beating Jersey on net run rate.
Tournament records
- – Champions
- – Runners-up
- – Third place/Semi-finals
- – Host
- – Promoted
- – Remained in the same division
- – Relegated
ICC Men's T20 World Cup
ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier
- Q - Qualified for the T20 World Cup.
- DNQ - Did not qualify for the T20 World Cup.
ICC T20 World Cup Europe Regional Final
- Q - Qualified for the T20 World Cup.
ICC T20 Europe Sub-regional Qualifiers
- A - Advanced to the regional final.
Cricket World Cup Qualifier
European Cricket Championship
European T20 Championship Division One
ICC Cricket World Cup Challenge League
ICC CWC Challenge League Play-off
ICC World Cricket League Division Three
ICC World Cricket League Division Four
ICC World Cricket League Division Five
Current squad
Italy's squad for the 2026 ICC T20 World Cup Europe Regional Final in July 2025 included the following players:Coaching staff
International grounds
| Ground | City | Region | Capacity | Matches hosted | Notes |
| Roma Cricket Ground | Rome | Lazio | 1,000 | T20Is, ICC qualifiers | Main venue for Italy's national team; hosted ICC Men's T20 World Cup Europe Qualifiers |
| Jesselton Cricket Ground | Jesolo | Veneto | 800 | T20Is | Used for ICC Europe development tournaments |
| Simar Cricket Ground | Palermo | Sicily | 1,200 | T20Is | Hosts international matches; part of ICC Europe's southern development region |
Records and statistics
International Match Summary — Italy
''Last updated 26 January 2026''Twenty20 International
- Highest team total: 244/4 v. Romania on 16 June 2024 at Simar Cricket Ground, Palermo.
- Highest individual score: 108*, Joe Burns v. Romania on 16 June 2024 at Simar Cricket Ground, Palermo.
- Best individual bowling figures: 5/14, Stefano di Bartolomeo v. Germany on 28 July 2023 at The Grange Club, Edinburgh.
| Player | Runs | Average | Career span |
| Anthony Mosca | 479 | 39.91 | 2022–2026 |
| Marcus Campopiano | 475 | 31.66 | 2022–2026 |
| Grant Stewart | 473 | 29.56 | 2021–2026 |
| Justin Mosca | 381 | 21.16 | 2022–2026 |
| Joy Perera | 367 | 28.23 | 2019–2022 |
Most T20I wickets for Italy
| Player | Wickets | Average | Career span |
| Harry Manenti | 34 | 13.29 | 2022–2026 |
| Jaspreet Singh | 23 | 21.21 | 2019–2026 |
| Gareth Berg | 20 | 16.45 | 2022–2024 |
| Crishan Kalugamage | 20 | 18.15 | 2022–2026 |
| Grant Stewart | 17 | 20.11 | 2021–2026 |
T20I record versus other nations
''Records complete to T20I #3670. Last updated 26 January 2026.''