Kohli's champions, New Zealand's finest, and the new Test nations
A review of how India, Bangladesh, New Zealand, South Africa, Ireland and Afghanistan fared between 2010 and 2019

India reached the final of ICC tournaments four times in the decade and won twice • Michael Steele/Getty Images
India
A decade in which India, already a superpower in cricket commerce, became one on the field too. Under MS Dhoni, they achieved the Test No. 1 ranking, and won the World Cup and the Champions Trophy. A transitional blip that lasted upwards of two years gave way to another surge under Virat Kohli. This team had a battery of fast bowlers to go with two spinners who will end up among the greats. They were unbeatable at home and competitive away, winning India's first ever Test series in Australia, in 2018-19. A T20 world crown eluded them in the decade, but they were the most consistent side at ICC tournaments: in nine of those tournaments they won two, and they lost two finals and three semi-finals.
India's Test XI of the decade
M Vijay
Rahul Dravid
Cheteshwar Pujara
Virat Kohli (c)
Sachin Tendulkar
Ajinkya Rahane/VVS Laxman
MS Dhoni (wk)
R Ashwin
Ishant Sharma
Mohammed Shami
Jasprit Bumrah/ Ravindra Jadeja
The Test team's dominance under Kohli has to be India's biggest achievement in the decade, but you can't perhaps point to a series that was the high point for Indian cricket in the 2010s. Had Steven Smith and David Warner played the series that India won in Australia, it would have eclipsed the World Cup win in 2011, India's first such triumph since 1983.
The two tours of England and Australia in 2011 and 2011-12, where India sleepwalked to eight overseas Test defeats in a row. The batting stars were ageing, the bowlers were unfit, and the preparation was poor for both trips.
Bangladesh
This was Bangladesh's decade of progress. They became a strong Test team at home, and made great strides in ODIs, whitewashing higher-ranked opponents and rising up the rankings. Although they are yet to fully catch up in T20Is, in all, Bangladesh performed remarkably for a side constantly referred to as "minnows" during the previous decade.
Bangladesh's Test XI of the decade
Tamim Iqbal
Imrul Kayes
Mominul Haque
Mahmudullah
Shakib Al Hasan (c)
Mushfiqur Rahim (wk)
Nasir Hossain
Mehidy Hasan
Taijul Islam
Robiul Islam
Mustafizur Rahman
Beating India 2-1 in the 2015 ODI series at home was the pinnacle of Bangladesh's decade of progress. Mashrafe Mortaza marshalled his emerging side superbly against tough opposition, relying on newcomer Mustafizur Rahman but balancing youth and experience in equal measure.
Hong Kong beating Bangladesh by two wickets was the nadir, particularly as it came in a home World T20. Bangladesh lost seven wickets for 23 runs, and despite reducing Hong Kong to 100 for 8 in a chase of 109, they lost with two balls to spare.
New Zealand
It was the decade in which New Zealand were no longer being called "dark horses" or "underdogs". Rising to No. 2 in Tests on the back of a formidable home record, thanks to an outstanding pace attack and a strong top order, and reaching consecutive World Cup finals was reward for what could be considered their finest era ever.
New Zealand's Test XI of the decade
Tom Latham
Brendon McCullum
Kane Williamson (c)
Ross Taylor
Henry Nicholls
BJ Watling (wk)
Colin de Grandhomme
Daniel Vettori
Tim Southee
Neil Wagner
Trent Boult
That heady Auckland evening in 2015 when Grant Elliott wrote himself into New Zealand cricket history with a six off Dale Steyn to take them the team to their first World Cup final. The noise and emotion was incredible. McCullum's triple-century against India in Wellington - the first triple by a New Zealander - is a close-run second.
"By the barest of margins…" Four years later, on an equally heady day, at Lord's, a deflection off Ben Stokes' bat, a missed catch on the boundary, and the agony of Martin Guptill's forlorn dive left New Zealand ruing a rule that was never expected to be needed. Their grace in defeat (or when tying) was extraordinary.
South Africa
Successive Test series wins in Australia in 2012 and 2016 and over Australia at home in 2017-18 are highlights of a decade that started with South Africa a dominant side and ended with them struggling to make an impact.
South Africa's Test XI of the decade
Graeme Smith (c)
Dean Elgar
Hashim Amla
AB de Villiers
Faf du Plessis
Quinton de Kock (wk)
Vernon Philander
Dale Steyn
Kagiso Rabada
Keshav Maharaj
Morne Morkel
Winning the Test mace in 2012 was the culmination of a period of excellence for South Africa's Test side. At the time, they had the experience of Graeme Smith as captain, the serenity of Hashim Amla, the sensational AB de Villiers, and the most skilled bowling attack around, with swing and speed from Dale Steyn, bounce from Morne Morkel, and subtle seam movement from Vernon Philander. South Africa didn't quite have the right spinner in the mix at the time, Imran Tahir, but he went on to become the best limited-overs bowler in the world.
There was their choke in the 2011 World Cup quarter-final, their dramatic crashing out of the 2015 semi-final, and their twin 0-3 series losses to India in 2015 and 2019, but ultimately the manner in which South Africa exited the 2019 World Cup, losing five of their first six completed matches, marked rock bottom for the team - and subsequently for the administration.
Afghanistan
In the late 2000s, Afghanistan produced one of cricket's great Cinderella stories to rise from Division Five of the World Cricket League all the way to ODI status in the space of 14 months. The 2010s were all about proving that they could sustain that ranking after a meteoric rise. And they did, burning brighter through the decade and ultimately securing Full Member status in June 2017.
Afghanistan's ODI XI of the decade
Mohammad Shahzad (wk)
Nawroz Mangal (c)
Rahmat Shah
Asghar Afghan
Samiullah Shenwari
Mohammad Nabi
Najibullah Zadran
Rashid Khan
Dawlat Zadran
Hamid Hassan
Mujeeb ur Rahman
Unlike Ireland, who can call upon two famous World Cup wins, over Pakistan and England, as signature moments in their history, Afghanistan have to arguably still score a truly stunning win. Instead, their biggest point of pride may be Rashid Khan's Rs 4 crore (approximately US$560,000) bid from Sunrisers Hyderabad in the 2017 IPL auction. His subsequent performances in the IPL helped legitimise Afghanistan's individual players and the national team across the board.
Losing their maiden Test match by an innings inside two days to India in Bengaluru in 2018. In spite of an outstanding record in the ICC Intercontinental Cup prior to being awarded Test status, Afghanistan's batsmen looked out of their depth and their prized bowling unit mostly had a case of the yips on day one.
Ireland
After seminal World Cup success in 2007, Ireland spent the first three quarters of the 2010s capitalising on that foundation to graduate out of the Associate world, which they had dominated for the better part of a decade, and into Test cricket. But since being christened with Full Membership in 2017, their adjustment to the next level has been a baptism by fire, as an ageing squad and a string of retirements have highlighted a worrying lack of depth.
Ireland's ODI XI of the decade
Paul Stirling
William Porterfield (c)
Ed Joyce
Andy Balbirnie
Niall O'Brien (wk)
Kevin O'Brien
John Mooney
Trent Johnston
George Dockrell
Tim Murtagh
Boyd Rankin
Few nights in Irish cricket history can top their win over England in Bangalore in the 2011 World Cup. Apart from recording the highest successful chase in World Cup history, they did it on the back of the fastest World Cup century: Kevin O'Brien's pink-dyed hair rampage.
Ireland's T20 form has seemingly never recovered from the fateful night in Sylhet when Netherlands ambushed them to chase 190 in 13.5 overs and pass them for a spot in the main draw of the 2014 World T20. As for ODI cricket, a symbolic gut punch was delivered with a six-wicket defeat by England in Malahide in September 2013, when that team's stars with bat and ball were both Irish-reared: Boyd Rankin (4 for 46) and Eoin Morgan (124 not out off 106 balls).