ICC Retains Srinath, Menon in Elite Umpiring Panel for 2026-27

The ICC has retained India's Javagal Srinath and Nitin Menon on its elite panels of match referees and umpires for the 2026-27 season. The decision follows a comprehensive annual review that found the current group's performance satisfactory. ICC CEO Sanjog Gupta praised the officials for their accuracy and professionalism in high-pressure situations. The unchanged panels include five match referees and 12 umpires from various cricket-playing nations.

Key Points: ICC Retains Srinath, Menon in Elite Panel for 2026-27

  • Srinath and Menon retained in ICC elite panels
  • Panel unchanged after annual review
  • ICC cites high standards and professionalism
  • Includes umpires from 12 countries
2 min read

Srinath, Menon retained as ICC keeps elite panel of umpires, match referees unchanged for 2026‑27

ICC keeps Javagal Srinath and Nitin Menon on elite panels of match referees and umpires for 2026-27 season, citing consistency and professionalism.

"The decision reflects the ICC's commitment to recognising and rewarding excellence - ICC"

Dubai, May 11

India's Javagal Srinath and Nitin Menon are amongst the elite panel of match referees and umpires kept unchanged by the International Cricket Council for the 2026‑27 international cricket season.

The decision comes after an annual review and selection process was conducted comprehensively by the ICC's Umpire Selection Panel, which determined that the current group of elite officials would continue in their roles, reflecting satisfaction with their strong contribution over the past year.

"The decision to retain the Emirates ICC Elite Panel for the 2026-27 season reflects the consistency and high standards that have come to define officiating at the international level. Over the past year, the panels have demonstrated a strong blend of accuracy, composure, and professionalism, which is critical to maintaining the integrity of the game.

"What stands out is not just the quality of decision-making, but the ability to operate with clarity and confidence in high-pressure situations, across formats and conditions. That consistency provides assurance to players, teams, and fans alike.

"On behalf of the ICC, I would like to congratulate all members of the panels on their re-selection. Their performances over the past season have fully justified this continuity, and we look forward to seeing them build further on these standards in the year ahead," said ICC CEO Sanjog Gupta.

The Umpire Selection Panel, comprising ICC General Manager - Cricket Wasim Khan (Chair), former English Premier League referee Mike Riley, former international umpire and coach Peter Manuel, and former international player and commentator Sanjay Manjrekar, reviewed performances before deciding to retain the existing panel.

"The decision reflects the ICC's commitment to recognising and rewarding excellence, with the panels' consistency and high standards demonstrated by members at the recent ICC Men's T20 World Cup and in men's bilateral cricket across the previous calendar year.

"The umpires' outstanding on-field performances, professionalism, decision-making accuracy, and third umpiring have contributed significantly to the quality and integrity of international cricket," added the ICC.

ICC Elite Panel of Match Referees (2026/27): Jeff Crowe (New Zealand), Ranjan Madugalle (Sri Lanka), Andrew Pycroft (Zimbabwe), Richie Richardson (West Indies), Javagal Srinath (India).

ICC Elite Panel of Umpires (2026/27): Kumar Dharmasena (Sri Lanka), Christopher Gaffaney (New Zealand), Adrian Holdstock (South Africa), Richard Illingworth (England), Richard Kettleborough (England), Nitin Menon (India), Allahuddien Paleker (South Africa), Ahsan Raza (Pakistan), Paul Reiffel (Australia), Sharfuddoula Ibne Shahid (Bangladesh), Rodney Tucker (Australia), Alex Wharf (England).

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Javagal Srinath has been a match referee for so long now. From being India's bowling spearhead to officiating at the highest level—what a journey! Much deserved retention.
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Rahul R
I'm not sure why the panel remains completely unchanged. Surely some umpires who struggled in the T20 World Cup should have been rotated out? Consistency is good but so is accountability.
N
Nikhil C
Absolutely thrilled for both Srinath and Menon! Nitin Menon has been a real star—his calm decision-making under pressure is top notch. The ICC did the right thing by keeping this core group.
S
Sarah B
It's reassuring to see experienced officials like Kettleborough and Illingworth stay. The elite panel needs that blend of youth and experience. Good call by the ICC selection panel. 👍
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Riya H
Two Indians in the elite panels and both retained! That's wonderful for Indian cricket fans. Srinath brings immense experience as a former player and Menon has really established himself as an elite umpire.
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Vikram M
No changes at all? I thought some new faces from Associate nations deserved a chance to break into the elite panel. But I understand the need for stability. Let's hope this consistency translates into even better officiating.

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