Tanzania national cricket team

Tanzania
Nickname(s) The Cows
Association Tanzania Cricket Association
Personnel
Captain Abhik Patwa
Coach Duncan Allan
International Cricket Council
ICC status Associate member (2001)
ICC region Africa
ICC Rankings Current Best-ever
T20I 30th 30th (17 Nov 2021)
International cricket
First international Tanganyika v. Kenya
(Nairobi; 1 December 1951)
Twenty20 Internationals
First T20I v Mozambique at Gahanga International Cricket Stadium, Kigali; 2 November 2021
Last T20I v Rwanda at Wanderers Cricket Ground, Windhoek; 29 November 2023
T20Is Played Won/Lost
Total 57 35/19 (0 ties, 3 no results)
This year 0 0/0 (0 ties, 0 no results)
T20 World Cup Qualifier appearances 1 (first in 2023)
Best result 6th (2023)
As of 1 January 2024

The Tanzania national cricket team is the men's team that represents Tanzania in international cricket. Cricket has been played in what is now Tanzania since 1890, and the national side first played in 1951. The Tanzania Cricket Association became an associate member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) in 2001, having previously been part of the East and Central Africa Cricket Conference, which was a member of the ICC in its own right.

In April 2018, the ICC decided to grant full Twenty20 International (T20I) status to all its members. Therefore, all Twenty20 matches played between Tanzania and other ICC members since 1 January 2019 have had the full T20Is status.

History

Beginnings of cricket in Tanzania

Cricket was first played in what is now Tanzania on the island of Zanzibar by the British Navy as recreation for the officers and crew. Cricket spread to Tanganyika after the British took over the League of Nations mandate in 1919.

Cricket began to be concentrated mostly on the coast and on Zanzibar, with particular development in Dar-es-Salaam. The Indian population quickly took up the game and by the 1930s formed the majority of the players, with a significant European minority.

National side

Early matches

Distance between Tanganyika and other countries in the African Great Lakes meant that the first international was not played until 1951, when Tanganyika lost by an innings to Kenya. Occasional matches against Kenya and Uganda continued throughout the 1950s and Zanzibar also played matches against Uganda, beginning in 1956.

Other opponents from further afield also toured, with Tanganyika playing the MCC in 1957 and 1963, a South African Non-Europeans side in 1958 (who also played Zanzibar) and Pakistan International Airlines in 1964. The occasional matches against Kenya and Uganda eventually led to a formal triangular tournament being introduced in 1967, later to become a quadrangular tournament with the addition of Zambia.

Decline

As many businesses were nationalised in the early 1970s, much of the Indian and British population began to leave the country. Cricketers, including John Solanky, who went on to play for Glamorgan, were amongst those who left the country, and standards went into decline.

Since the 1970s, the Tanzania Cricket Association has concentrated on developing the game amongst the African communities, and the national side now contains between 20 and 25% African players. The national side returned to form in the mid-1990s, when they were runners-up in two Africa-wide tournaments in 1994 and 1995, though there was again a slight decline in the late 1990s.

ICC membership

The Tanzania Cricket Association became an associate member of the ICC in 2001 (Tanzania had previously played international cricket as part of the combined East Africa and East and Central Africa teams) opening up new opportunities for Tanzanian cricket. The first matches for the national side as an ICC member were in the 2002 Africa Cup where they lost all four of their matches.

They showed improvement by the Africa Cricket Association Championship in 2004, where they still finished last, but did beat Zambia in the final match of the tournament, which was a qualifying event for the 2005 ICC Trophy. Even more improvement was shown in the equivalent tournament two years later, when they won Division Two of the World Cricket League Africa Region. This result qualified Tanzania for Division Three of the World Cricket League in Darwin in 2007. Tanzania finished sixth in that tournament after losing to Hong Kong in a play-off, which relegated them to Division Four.

In 2008, Tanzania hosted Division Four of the World Cricket League. In this tournament they finished fourth, which meant that they remained in Division Four for the next tournament in 2010, played in Italy, where they came 4th again, thus remaining for 2012 ICC World Cricket League Division Four.

Tournament history

World Cup

World Cricket League

ICC World Cup Qualifier

ICC T20 World Cup Qualifier (Africa Regional Final)

  • 2023 (Africa Regional Final): 6th place

World Cricket League Africa Region

  • Division Two 2006: Winners

ACA Africa T20 Cup

Records and Statistics

International Match Summary — Tanzania

Last updated 29 November 2023

Playing Record
Format M W L T NR Inaugural Match
Twenty20 Internationals 57 35 19 0 3 2 November 2021

Twenty20 International

T20I record versus other nations

Records complete to T20I #2374. Last updated 29 November 2023.

Opponent M W L T NR First match First win
vs Full Members
Zimbabwe 1 0 1 0 0 23 November 2023
vs Associate Members
Botswana 2 2 0 0 0 7 November 2021 7 November 2021
Cameroon 3 3 0 0 0 6 November 2021 6 November 2021
Eswatini 1 1 0 0 0 6 December 2022 6 December 2022
Gambia 1 1 0 0 0 6 December 2022 6 December 2022
Ghana 1 1 0 0 0 4 December 2022 4 December 2022
Kenya 4 2 2 0 0 17 November 2021 17 November 2021
Malawi 1 1 0 0 0 20 September 2022 20 September 2022
Mozambique 2 2 0 0 0 2 November 2021 2 November 2021
Namibia 1 0 1 0 0 28 November 2023
Nigeria 4 2 1 0 1 17 November 2021 17 November 2021
Rwanda 18 16 2 0 0 31 October 2022 31 October 2022
Sierra Leone 2 2 0 0 0 3 November 2021 3 November 2021
Uganda 16 2 12 0 2 18 November 2021 19 December 2022

Players

Current squad

This lists all the players who have played for Tanzania in the past 12 months or has been part of the latest T20I squad. Updated as of 31 August 2023

Name Age Batting style Bowling style Notes
Batters
Ivan Selemani 23 Right-handed Right-arm off break
Omary Kitunda 24 Right-handed Right-arm medium
Abhik Patwa 36 Right-handed Right-arm off break Captain
Jitin Singh 39 Right-handed Right-arm medium
Dhrumit Mehta 20 Right-handed Right-arm off break
All-rounders
Kassim Nassoro 35 Right-handed Right-arm off break Vice-captain
Md. Yunusu Issa 22 Right-handed Right-arm medium
Shaik Basha 18 Left-handed Slow left-arm unorthodox
Wicket-keepers
Amal Rajeevan 26 Right-handed Slow left-arm orthodox
Spin Bowlers
Yalinde Nkanya 20 Right-handed Slow left-arm orthodox
Sanjay Thakor 33 Right-handed Right-arm leg break
Akhil Anil 26 Left-handed Right-arm off break
Pace Bowlers
Ally Kimote 31 Right-handed Right-arm medium
Salum Jumbe 26 Left-handed Right-arm medium-fast
Johnson Nyambo 18 Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast

Other notable players

The following players played for Tanzania or Tanganyika and also played first-class or List A cricket:

International grounds

See also