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The International Cricket Council (ICC) announced the 2023–2027 Future Tours Programme on 17 August 2022 and identified which series was a part of the World Test Championship. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Rather than being a full round-robin tournament in which everyone played everyone else equally, each team played only six of the other eight as in the ...
The 2025 International cricket season will take place from April 2025 to September 2025. [1] This calendar will include men's Test, men's One Day International (ODI), men's Twenty20 International (T20I), women's Test, women's One Day International (ODI) and women's Twenty20 International (T20I) matches, as well as some other significant series.
The five-match series was a part of the 2023–2025 ICC World Test Championship, [3] the venues being Edgbaston, Lord's, Headingley, Old Trafford and The Oval. [4] The result was a 2–2 draw, with Australia retaining the Ashes (having won in 2021–22). [5] The 2023 series was the 73rd Ashes series and the 37th to take place in England.
The 2023–2025 ICC World Test Championship is an ongoing tournament of Test Cricket which is the third edition of the ICC World Test Championship.It started in June 2023 with The Ashes, which was contested between England and Australia, [1] and it is scheduled to finish in June 2025 with the final match to be played at Lord's.
For that reason, the value of England's 2024 may not be revealed for some time, well beyond a mouth-watering 2025. Of 24 players used, seven have been debutants, most with success.
2023–2025 ICC World Test Championship – Test series No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result Test 2545: 21–25 August: Ollie Pope: Dhananjaya de Silva: Old Trafford, Manchester England by 5 wickets Test 2546: 29 August–2 September: Ollie Pope: Dhananjaya de Silva: Lord's, London England by 190 runs Test 2548: 6–10 September ...
The weather will ultimately decide the fate of the match and the Ashes ‘It was a bonus’: England edge closer to fourth Test win with Ashes in the balance Skip to main content
The site was first used as a cricket ground in 1857, when the Manchester Cricket Club moved onto the meadows of the de Trafford estate. [9] Despite the construction of a large pavilion (for the amateurs—the professionals used a shed at the opposite end of the ground), Old Trafford's first years were rocky: accessible only along a footpath from the railway station, the ground was situated out ...