The Vitality T20 Blast gets underway on August 27 and bookmaker William Hill is offering new mobile customers the chance to claim a big price boost on Surrey to win the 2020 competition at 150/1. Are the capable of winning their first title since 2003?

England will be looking to claim a series win over Pakistan when they lock horns in the third and final T20 at Old Trafford. Can England add the T20 series to their Test series win, or will Pakistan level it up at 1-1? BettingPro.com offers our best tips for all the action in the third T20I against Pakistan on September 1.

England and Australia renew their rivalry this September with a three-game Twenty20 series in Southampton and online bookmaker Sky Bet is now offering all new and existing customers the chance to back England to win the series at boosted odds, with winnings to be paid in cash!

Having once again selected a winning tip as Jos Buttler top scored for England as they clinched a T20 series win over Australia on Sunday, check out our predictions for the third and final game on Tuesday. Can BettingPro.com and England make it three in a row?

Trinbago Knight Riders and St Lucia Zouks will battle it out to be cronwed Caribbean Premier League champions on Thursday. Get BettingPro.com's best bet from the action in the Caribbean Premier League Final (CPL) with our free cricket CPL Tips.

The Indian Premier League returns on September 19 with Mumbai Indians looking to fight off the challenge of seven other teams to retain their IPL title. BettingPro’s Cricket expert has selected his best bets ahead of the new season.

The Indian Premier League returns to action on September 19 and online bookmaker Sky Bet is now offering all new and existing customers the chance to back the Royal Challengers Bangalore to win the IPL at boosted odds, with all winnings to be paid in cash!

Australia wasted a golden opportunity to win the ODI series against England, but we head into Wednesday's final ODI with everything to play for. Who will come out victorious? BettingPro.com have come up with their top three predictions for this game at Old Trafford.

Accumulator betting is very popular in cricket, and the BettingPro.com team have been picking out their favourite Vitality Blast T20 accumulators for this week. Read on for our free cricket accumulator betting tips and predictions…

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The Indian Premier League (IPL)

The Indian Premier League (IPL) is the biggest club cricket competition and brings together the greatest players in the shortest format of the game. India’s cricket mad population will turn out in droves and pack out big stadiums to get a chance to see their favourite players take to the middle to utilise both bat and ball, and this always ends in fireworks.

The IPL is a round-robin competition that culminates in a knock-out stage and a final, and with 60 games to be played across the season, the peaks and troughs some teams are forced to enjoy and endure are incredible. Indian cricket’s poster boy Virat Kohli has been awesome across the IPL’s history, smashing a huge 5412 runs in 169 innings as he continues to prove just how good a T20 player he is, while Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga is the current all-time leading wicket taker in the IPL with 170 victims in 122 matches, with the pair becoming mainstays of the IPL since it’s creation back in 2008.

In 2020, even more English talent will be present across the tournament, with World Cup winning captain Eoin Morgan joining young-star Tom Banton at Kolkata Knight Riders, Moeen Ali will turn out at Royal Challengers Bangalore with Kohli and AB de Villiers, Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler and Jofra Archer will all play for the Rajasthan Royals, Jonny Bairstow will be in the orange of Sunrisers Hyderabad, and Jason Roy and Chris Woakes will play for the Delhi Capitals. The English orientated talent in the competition has not been massive over the last few years but their exploits at the 2019 World Cup has seen the stock of the players rise massively to the point where many of their top talents have been able to secure lucrative deals in T20’s biggest club competition.

So, with this year’s competition just around the corner, you can get all of the latest betting tips and insight from our IPL tips page.

One Day International Cricket

One Day International Cricket is a shorter format of the game that only sees the two sides bat and bowl for 50 overs each. This format of the game is one that is more popular with those that enjoy cricket but do not have the patience to watch a five day Test match. 50 over cricket is completed within a single day and while it does leave time for batsmen to get themselves in and play defensive shots, there is a lot more attacking intent in the format as sides are forced to score quick runs and make big scores, with the ODI format now no longer a stranger to seeing 400+ runs scored in a single innings, something that seemed improbable even a few years ago.

While there are many ways to play ODI cricket spanning for international series to domestic matches, by far and away the biggest stage to play ODI cricket is the World Cup.

The Cricket World Cup

Like many sports, the World Cup is the biggest event in the calendar, and it is no different in cricket. The competition is played in the 50 over format with each of the teams in the competition (currently 10 as of the 2019 World Cup) playing each-other once before the top-four teams go through to the semi-finals, where first plays fourth and second plays against third. The winner of these two games then take on one-another in the final for the chance to lift the trophy.

The 2019 edition of the tournament brought with it some of the most exciting and unpredictable cricket seen, with the final summing this up perfectly in a day of the most tense and thrilling cricket seen on the 50 over circuit.

Having gone in to bat first, finalists New Zealand made 241/8 in their 50 overs and went about restricting tournament hosts England as they stumbled to 86/4 in the 23rd over. However, a fine partnership between Jos Buttler (59) and hero Ben Stokes (84 not out), helped England to close on 241 all out, with the scores level. The scores ending level saw the match go into a Super Over, where the teams are able to select three batsmen to score as many runs as possible in a single over. Stokes and Buttler smashed 15 between them meaning New Zealand had to score 16 to win by virtue of England’s superior boundary scoring in the final. Off the final ball of the Super Over with New Zealand needing two runs to win, Martin Guptill struck the ball towards Jason Roy at deep mid-wicket and, as he came back for what would be a match-winning second, the England player fired a clean and flat throw into Buttler behind the stumps allowing him to whip off the bails and run Guptill out, sparking wild celebrations for the English players and fans. The game itself was one of extreme drama and likely left many with some seriously chewed fingernails with the game touted as the greatest ODI final and match in the game’s history.

The History Of The Cricket World Cup

Year Host(s) Final Venue Winners Result In The Final Runners-Up 1975 England London West Indies (291/8) West Indies won by 17 runs Australia (274 All Out) 1979 England London West Indies (286/9) West Indies won by 92 runs England (194 All Out) 1983 England London India (183 All Out) India won by 43 runs West Indies (140 All Out) 1987 India Pakistan Kolkata Australia (253/5) Australia won by 7 runs England (246/8) 1992 Australia New Zealand Melbourne Pakistan (249/6) Pakistan won by 22 runs England (227 All Out) 1996 Sri Lanka Pakistan India Lahore Sri Lanka (245/3) Sri Lanka won by 7 wickets Australia (241/7) 1999 England Wales London Australia (133/2) Australia won by 8 wickets Pakistan (132 All Out) 2003 South Africa Johannesburg Australia (359/2) Australia won by 125 runs India (234 All Out) 2007 West Indies Bridgetown Australia (281/4) Australia won by 53 runs (D/L) Sri Lanka (215/8) 2011 Sri Lanka India Bangladesh Mumbai India (277/4) India won by 6 wickets Sri Lanka (274/6) 2015 Australia New Zealand Melbourne Australia (186/3) Australia beat New Zealand by 7 wickets New Zealand (183 All Out) 2019 England Wales London England (241 All Out) (15/0 – Super Over) 23 fours & 3 sixes England won on boundary count after scores in first innings and super over remained level New Zealand (241/8) (15/1 – Super Over) 14 fours & 3 sixes 2023 India Mumbai

Twenty20 Cricket

T20 (Twenty 20) cricket is the shortest and probably the most exciting format of the game. Each team is given 20 overs (120 balls) to score as many runs as possible with the bat before the two sides switch and the batting side is thrown the ball. A T20 game generally takes around 3-4 hours to be completed and it sees boundaries galore, with the players rarely given any time to get themselves in. Instead, batsmen are forced to go hard early, with maximums the norm. Of course, going for the big shots does bring a huge amount of risk with it as cartwheeling stumps and outrageous catches have become a regular occurrence in the game, while it is not uncommon to see multiple run outs in a match as players try to sneak that extra run.

T20 Cricket World Cup

Like the 50 over Cricket World Cup, the T20 World Cup brings together the very best in the shortest format of the game in a tournament that sees massive hits and exciting contests. Indeed, this was no more true than in the 2016 T20 World Cup final between the West Indies and England, which saw an incredibly topsy-turvy game that had both sets of fans feeling they were edging towards victory.

England went into the game with a superbly well-balanced side that looked well placed to secure the World Cup trophy. However, Eoin Morgan’s side stumbled to 155/9 as their impressive rebuilding from 23/3 to 110/4 almost counted for very little as they lost three wickets for one run. In the end, England managed to make it to 155/9. In reply, the Windies were limping at 11/3, but a supreme innings of 85 not out from Marlon Samuels helped the side get back into the game before Carlos Brathwaite’s incredible hitting exploits, which saw him hit four consecutive sixes off the bowling of Ben Stokes in the final, helped the Windies to claim the World Cup and send their fans into joyous celebration, with England left to rue what might have been.

The History Of The T20 World Cup