Dubai: England toppled former world champion Australia at the top of the ICC ODI ranking table, following an annual update on Wednesday.
Australia have fallen to fourth spot which is its lowest ranking since the ODI table was launched in 2002 as its outstanding record of 30 wins and eight defeats from 40 ODIs in 2009-10 does not reflect any longer after the update.
England lead second-placed South Africa by one-sixth of a rating point, while world champion India are third - just one ratings point behind England & South Africa. Australia trail England by nine ratings points.
The annual rankings update is carried out to ensure the Championship tables continue to reflect recent form. As such, the new tables only include results from matches played from August 2010, with older results from between August 2009 and July 2010 being discarded.
This is the first time England have topped the ODI Championship table since it was launched in 2002. It is also the first time England can claim to be the top ODI team since January 1996, after the rankings are applied retrospectively.
Below the top four, the ODI rankings are unchanged. However, the gap between seventh-placed West Indies and eighth-ranked New Zealand has grown from six to 20 points, while ninth-placed Bangladesh is now only three points behind New Zealand.
Meanwhile, South Africa have replaced England as the number-one ranked side on the T20 table.
However, the number-one T20 ranking, like in the current Test and forthcoming ODI series, will be up for grabs when the reigning World Twenty20 champion England and South Africa go head to head in a three-T20I series starting on 8 September in Chester-le-Street.
Currently, both the sides are separated by one ratings point.
Australia have slipped from sixth position to ninth, as its excellent results in early 2010 have now been removed, while West Indies has moved up from eighth to fifth after benefiting from the exclusion of its results from early 2010.
Only 11 teams are now ranked on the T20I table. The remaining five sides - Afghanistan, Canada, Kenya, Netherlands and Scotland - have played fewer than eight Twenty20 internationals since August 2010. These sides will rejoin the table once they have played eight T20 internationals.
England now need to win the Lords Test, starting from August 16, to retain their number one position, while South Africa require a draw to move to the top.
If England win the Test, it will finish on 121 ratings points, pushing South Africa behind Australia into third position on 114 ratings points.
However, if England lose the Test, then they will slip to second position on 117 ratings points while South Africa will move to number-one spot on 120 ratings points.
If England salvage a draw, then both the sides will be tied on 118 ratings points with South Africa taking the top spot by a fraction (0.1634) of a point.
West Indies and New Zealand have also swapped places on the Test table with former now seventh and the Kiwis eighth.