The Hundred 2026 is a 100-ball cricket franchise tournament hosted across England from July 21 to August 16. Its 5th season features 8 men’s and 8 women’s teams across multiple English Test venues, owned in part by IPL franchise groups since 2025. One hundred balls per side. No overs. A strategic timeout. The Hundred is cricket’s most polarizing experiment, a format that purists love to hate and broadcasters love to sell. In its 5th season, the competition has become something stranger and more interesting than anyone predicted.
The controversy deepened in 2025 when IPL franchise owners bought into The Hundred’s teams, rebranding them with Indian franchise names. MI London (home at The Oval) carries the Mumbai Indians brand. Sunrisers Leeds (home at Headingley) connects to Sunrisers Hyderabad. Manchester Super Giants (home at Old Trafford) links to Lucknow Super Giants. Birmingham Phoenix stays at Edgbaston, London Spirit continues at Lord’s, Trent Rockets remain at Trent Bridge, Southern Brave play at The Hampshire Bowl, and Welsh Fire hold down Cardiff. The result is a competition that blends English cricket heritage with IPL commercial muscle, a combination that thrills investors and unsettles traditionalists.
The format itself demands explanation. Each team faces exactly 100 balls. Bowlers deliver sets of 5 or 10 consecutive balls from one end, with the batting side never knowing whether the bowling team will switch ends or keep going. A strategic timeout allows captains to reset. Matches last about two and a half hours, short enough for a weeknight, punchy enough to hold attention. Skeptics said it would never work. Five seasons in, The Hundred regularly sells out English cricket’s biggest grounds.
For overseas viewers, the timing works well for some and badly for others. All matches are played in British Summer Time (BST, UTC+1). Evening starts at 18:30 BST translate to 12:30 PM EDT for US East Coast fans, a lunchtime watch that fits neatly into a work-from-home day. Indian fans get those matches at 23:00 IST, a late-night slot but one that the cricket-obsessed subcontinent has long embraced. Australian viewers face 03:30 AEST the following morning, which is brutal unless you are truly dedicated. Weekend afternoon matches start earlier, around 14:30 BST, shifting the US window to 08:30 AM EDT and the Indian window to 19:00 IST. Check whatisthetime.now/london for current London time, or venue-specific pages at whatisthetime.now/birmingham, whatisthetime.now/leeds, and whatisthetime.now/manchester.
The eliminator lands on August 14, with the final at Lord’s on August 16. Three days later, the England vs Pakistan Test series begins at Headingley on August 19, forcing players to transition overnight from 100-ball franchise cricket to five-day Test matches. That whiplash between formats captures exactly what modern cricket has become: a sport trying to be everything to everyone, simultaneously. Whether you think The Hundred is the future of the game or a betrayal of its soul, you will probably watch it anyway.