ICC Awards

The ICC Awards is an International cricket award presented annually by the sport's governing body, ICC.

The first awarding ceremony was held on 7 September 2004 in London, England. Between 2009 and 2014 the awards were known as the LG ICC Awards for sponsorship reasons.

Virat Kohli holds the record for most awards by an individual with 10 awards.

ICC Spirit of Cricket

 * Described by the ICC as being awarded to the team most notable for "upholding the 'Spirit of the Game'", involving respect for:
 * Their opponents
 * Their own captain and team
 * The role of the umpires
 * The game's traditional values

Teams

Players

ICC Twenty20 International Performance of the Year
In 2021, The award was succeeded by ICC T20I Player of the Year, which is given to a player based on his performance in the whole year.

Monthly awards
In January 2021, the ICC introduced "Player of the Month" awards to recognise cricketers, male and female, that performed best across all forms of international cricket each month. Nominees and winners are determined by an ICC panel of ex-players and journalists, with a public vote having a 10% contribution to the final results.

ICC Development Programme Awards
In December 2016, ICC Development Programme Awards were announced for the ICC's Associate and Affiliate Members aimed at creating improving structures within the 95 member federations.

Past methodology
The judging/voting period was originally from 1 August of the current year to 31 July of the next year. It then underwent two changes and used to take place between September of the current year and September of the next year.

The ICC Selection Committee comprised eminent former players (one chairman, four other members) who selected the finalists for the Cricketer of the Year, Test Player of the Year, ODI Player of the Year and the Emerging Player of the Year, as well as the final ICC Test Team of the Year and ICC ODI Team of the Year.

The final selection for the awards were previously voted on by an academy of 56 (expanded from 50 in 2004–05), which included current national team captains of Test playing nations (10), members of the Elite panel of ICC umpires and referees (18), prominent former players and cricket correspondents (28). In the event of a tie in the voting, awards are shared.

Awards by year

 * 2004 ICC Awards
 * 2005 ICC Awards
 * 2006 ICC Awards
 * 2007 ICC Awards
 * 2008 ICC Awards
 * 2009 ICC Awards
 * 2010 ICC Awards
 * 2011 ICC Awards
 * 2012 ICC Awards
 * 2013 ICC Awards
 * 2014 ICC Awards
 * 2015 ICC Awards
 * 2016 ICC Awards
 * 2017 ICC Awards
 * 2018 ICC Awards
 * 2019 ICC Awards
 * ICC Awards of the Decade (2020)
 * 2021 ICC Awards
 * 2022 ICC Awards
 * 2023 ICC Awards