Which champion team is greatest in World Cup history? India one win away from rivalling best of all time

By Paul Suttor / Expert

The 13th World Cup champions will be crowned on Sunday night at Ahmedabad’s Narendra Modi Stadium when India look to become just the sixth team in history to go through the tournament undefeated. 

Five-time champs Australia are all that’s standing in their way as they pursue a slice of history after their semi-final victory over South Africa. 

India have been vastly impressive but they’re not invincible while the Aussies are still yet to put together a complete performance and despite winning eight on the trot are a flawed line-up. 

If the Indians can fulfil their destiny of an unbeaten march to the trophy, their all-powerful line-up will have a claim to be considered up there with the best in ODI World Cup history.

But of the 12 previous sides which lifted the trophy, which one was the greatest?

Virat Kohli celebrates after scoring his century, overtaking Sachin Tendulkar. (Photo by Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

The West Indies in 1975 and ‘79 did not suffer a loss in the first two World Cups, Sri Lanka did likewise in their unexpected ‘96 success while the Australian juggernaut of 2003 and ‘07 swept all before them. 

If you put the 12 champion line-ups as they were when they conquered the world into a head-to-head tournament, who would be the last team standing?

World Cup honour role 

1975 West Indies
1979 West Indies 
1983 India
1987 Australia
1992 Pakistan
1996 Sri Lanka 
1999 Australia
2003 Australia
2007 Australia
2011 India 
2015 Australia
2019 England 

All these teams were fantastic in their own right so to work out which one is the greatest, for the sake of this exercise, each side was weighed up in terms of all-time greats, how much they dominated and the legacy they left. 

The first teams cut 

The original World Cup champions led by Clive Lloyd laid the foundation for the West Indies’ two decades of dominance on the international cricket stage. 

But when compared with the Windies of four years later, the ‘79 side was far stronger, particularly with Michael Holding and Joel Garner added to the bowling attack so the 1975 side is out of the running. 

The 1983 Indians were pioneers in establishing India as a cricketing superpower but when you analyse their winning XI, there are a few players who had modest international careers. 

Sri Lanka’s 1996 history makers also blazed a trail for their nation with players such as Aravinda de Silva and Arjuna Ranatunga bridging the gap from their early stars and their second generation led by Muttiah Muralidaran, Chaminda Vaas and Sanath Jayasuriya. 

Kapil Dev and Mohinder Armanath celebrate with the World Cup in 1983. (Photo by Adrian Murrell/Allsport//Getty Images)

But they also had a few players who were good not great, especially when compared against some of these other star-studded World Cup-winning outfits. 

Australia have five horses in this race and while they all contained legends of the game, Allan Border’s 1987 side and the Michael Clarke-led side which triumphed in 2015 could not hold a candle to the three sides which collected all the silverware from 1999-2007. 

England’s 2019 team also doesn’t make it into the top half of World Cup champions due to the fact that most of their players are very good but when it comes to all-time great status in ODI cricket, would you say any of these players fall into that category?

And of course they get docked a few demerit points for not scoring more than their opponents in the final but squeaking by New Zealand due to a bizarre boundary count back after the Super Over stalemate. 

1975 Windies ’79 Windies ’83 India ’87 Australia ’92 Pakistan ’96 Sri Lanka 
Roy Fredericks Desmond Haynes  Sunil Gavaskar David Boon Aamer Sohail Sanath Jayasuriya
Gordon Greenidge Gordon Greenidge Kris Srikkanth Geoff Marsh Ramiz Raja Romesh Kaluwitharana (wk)
Alvin Kallicharran Viv Richards Mohinder Armanath Dean Jones Imran Khan Asanka Gurusinha
Rohan Kanhai Alvin Kallicharran Yashpal Sharma Allan Border Javed Miandad Aravinda de Silva
Clive Lloyd (c) Clive Lloyd (c) Sandeep Patel Mike Veletta Inzamam-ul-haq Arjuna Ranatunga
Viv Richards Collis King Kapil Dev (c) Steve Waugh Ijaz Ahmed Hasan Tillakaratne
Keith Boyce Deryck Murray (wk) Kirti Azad Simon O’Donnell Saleem Malik  Roshan Mahanama 
Bernard Julien  Andy Roberts Roger Binny Greg Dyer (wk) Moin Khan (wk) Kumar Dharmasena
Deryck Murray (wk) Joel Garner Madan Lal Craig McDermott Wasim Akram Chaminda Vaas
Vanburn Holder Michael Holding Syed Kirmani (wk) Tim May Mushtaq Ahmed Pramodya Wickramasinghe
Andy Roberts Colin Croft Balwinder Sandhu  Bruce Reid Aqib Javed Muttiah Muralidaran

The Super Six: the ‘79 Windies, ‘92 Pakistan, the Aussie golden era and India’s 2011 team

Australia’s 2007 line-up was unbeaten but they benefited from what was a relatively soft tournament and would struggle to beat their previous two incarnations. 

The 2011 Indians have the two leading ODI centurions of all time in Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli but at opposite ends of their career – one on the way out and the other just starting to become a superstar. That team’s batting was sublime but the bowling attack is not in the legendary stratosphere. 

‘99 Australia 2003 Australia  ’07 Australia  ’11 India ’15 Australia  ’19 England
Mark Waugh Matthew Hayden Matthew Hayden Virender Sehwag David Warner Jason Roy
Adam Gilchrist (wk) Adam Gilchrist (wk) Adam Gilchrist (wk) Sachin Tendulkar Aaron Finch Jonny Bairstoe
Ricky Ponting Ricky Ponting (c) Ricky Ponting (c) Gautum Gambhir Steve Smith Joe Root
Darren Lehmann Damien Martyn Andrew Symonds Virat Kohli Michael Clarke (c) Eion Morgan (c)
Steve Waugh (c) Darren Lehmann Shane Watson MS Dhoni (c) (wk) Shane Watson Ben Stokes
Michael Bevan  Michael Bevan  Michael Clarke Yuvraj Singh Glenn Maxwell Jos Buttler (wk)
Tom Moody Andrew Symonds Mike Hussey Suresh Raina James Faulkner Chris Woakes
Paul Reiffel Brad Hogg Brad Hogg Harbhajan Singh Brad Haddin (wk) Liam Plunkett
Shane Warne Andy Bichel Nathan Bracken Zaheer Khan Mitchell Johnson Jofra Archer
Damien Fleming Brett Lee Shaun Tait Munaf Patel Mitchell Starc Mark Wood
Glenn McGrath Glenn McGrath Glenn McGrath Sreesanth Josh Hazlewood Adil Rashid

The Final Four: the ‘79 Windies, ‘92 Pakistan, the ‘99 and 2003 Aussies

If we’re talking about a team to win one hypothetical match against these other champion XIs, the 1992 Pakistani side could beat anyone on their day. 

But the eclectic line-up of talented individuals which Imran Khan managed to get firing on all cylinders also had the tendency to put in a collective shocker. 

They had their share of luck to even make the ‘92 semis Down Under before storming past New Zealand and England to glory. 

Sir Vivian Richards. (S&G/PA Images via Getty Images)

The 1979 Windies side contains their two greatest skippers in Clive Lloyd and Viv Richards, the finest ODI batter of his generation, and world-class openers in the iconic duo of Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes. 

Add in a four-man pace battery of Garner, Holding, Andy Roberts and Colin Croft and this team was ahead of its time. 

But as much as they obliterated the opposition of their era, they are probably just a touch behind the Australian sides of 1999-2003 who kicked off their threepeat of World Cup trophies. 

Australia’s four World Cup-winning captains Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke, Allan Border and Steve Waugh. (Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

The final showdown: Waugh’s comeback kings vs Ponting’s machine

Australia vs Australia, four years apart – who’d win? 

Five players backed up from partying at Lord’s in 1999 to be part of the final celebrations in Johannesburg four years later. 

The case for the 2003 side is Ricky Ponting, Glenn McGrath and Adam Gilchrist are four years older and more so in their prime. 

They didn’t lose a game and had to overcome plenty of drama before the tournament started with Shane Warne suspended for using a banned diuretic, which he claimed was for weight loss but drug testers suspected was part of a rapid recovery from shoulder surgery. 

Andrew Symonds came of age, Ponting blazed one of the best centuries in history in the final against India and the bowling attack had class, variety and potency in spades. 

Shane Warne celebrates a wicket for Australia on the way to conquering South Africa in the 1999 Cricket World Cup semi-final. (Photo: Michael Steele/Getty Images)

But although they started their march to victory slowly and should have been eliminated if not for Lance Klusener and Allan Donald’s panicked semi-final single, the Australian 1999 team is the G.O.A.T when it comes to World Cup champion sides. 

Waugh was indomitable as the team’s leader, Warne and McGrath had an aura which spooked opposing batters and the team had no weak links. 

The back-up bowlers in Paul Reiffel, Damien Fleming and Tom Moody thrived in English conditions while Mark Waugh, Ponting, Gilchrist and Michael Bevan are among the best in their roles that Australia has produced in the ODI format. 

Australia had better tournaments as far as win-loss records but if our AI overlords ever figure out how to stage a tournament between all the World Cup champions, it’s hard to see the side with two Waughs, Ponting, Gilchrist, McGrath, Bevan and Warne finishing anywhere but on top. 

The Crowd Says:

2023-11-20T20:45:24+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


Where does Australia 2023 rate among this lot?

2023-11-20T12:06:01+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


I don't get Gill (but we don't see him all the time)

2023-11-20T12:04:26+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


How many ODI pitches must a man walk down before you call him a batter? (Sorry Bob)

2023-11-19T17:35:25+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


(Tony Grieg): Just err ... lets that one sail harmlessly through to the keeper ... no need to chase such an innocuous offering ...

2023-11-19T17:27:34+00:00

Ad Tastic

Roar Rookie


You're taking a guy with a 41 Test avg over a guy with a 50+ Test avg? Waugh was a better player to watch but Hayden is the more dependable, superior player.

2023-11-19T08:26:51+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


Three contemporary commentators who think they were legends, but just simply weren't are Hayden, Boycott and Gavaskar.

2023-11-19T08:10:29+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


Agree. Hayden is slightly worse than Langer. Slightly.

2023-11-19T07:32:41+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


Yes it was brilliant batsmanship, but I rate Lloyd and Richards WC final tons higher than Ponting's and Gilly's because Australia were never in any trouble whatsoever with that latter two. In fact, I rate Steve Waugh's 1999 Headingly and even a couple of Mark's 1996 WC tons higher.

2023-11-19T07:19:57+00:00

The Knightwatchmen who say Nii

Roar Rookie


Don't get me started lol ... I generally mute whenever Hayden or Langer are commentating. Langer has such a whiny little kid's voice. Watson's alright though.

2023-11-19T07:13:53+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Don’t forget Terry Aldernan 89’ Ashes series

2023-11-19T06:52:27+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


His commentary also does not help his case.

2023-11-19T06:47:03+00:00

Sam

Roar Rookie


But it seems Cricket Iceland have some valuable advice https://x.com/icelandcricket/status/1725192151070380458?s=20

2023-11-19T04:03:20+00:00

sedz

Roar Rookie


Yep he is the special player just like Len Maddocks. :laughing:

2023-11-19T03:31:01+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


What!! You don't remember the remarkable Test career of Hasan Raja?? Nope, me neither. :laughing:

2023-11-19T03:00:08+00:00

PeteB

Roar Rookie


You’ve ruined a good story :silly:

2023-11-19T02:29:17+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Very true. Best swing bowler ever was Bob Massie in the 1972 Lords Test, 16 wickets, but he was never able to repeat it or get the same conditions. Anderson probably up there with Akram as a swing bowler in the right conditions, maybe better, but didn’t have his other weapons. But seam bowling is more dangerous overall, unless swing is very late. You can adjust to swing, but almost impossible to do so against the fast ball moving off the seam.

2023-11-19T01:33:46+00:00

Good Game

Roar Rookie


Debatable… Each to their own though.

2023-11-19T01:18:02+00:00

sedz

Roar Rookie


ha ha yes. Recently one of the ex-players of Pakistan (Hasan Raza, never known him) accused that Indian bowlers get special ball that swings well. Wasim Akram roasted them as well saying they're bringing bad name to Pakistan.

2023-11-19T01:04:21+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


They certainly love their conspiracy theories in Pakistan, don’t they? First Raja and now Bakt about the coin toss. Given the Indians have won every game by some distance, it’s probably a tad hard to believe. I’m also sure the Aussies will happily accept support from anyone! They’re going to be very lonely in Ahmedabad later today.

2023-11-19T00:44:39+00:00

Targa

Roar Rookie


The 2019 Cricket and the 2023 Rugby World Cup finals were both more farcical than 07.

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