Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Indian cricket team toured England from 24 May to 8 July 1986 for a three-match Test series, and two One Day Internationals (ODIs) for the Texaco Trophy.. India beat England 2–0 in the Test series and won the ODI Texaco Trophy that by virtue of faster run-rate despite England having squared the series after losing the first game.
The Pataudi Trophy is awarded to the winner of each Test cricket series between England and India contested in England. The trophy itself was designed and made by Jocelyn Burton . It was first awarded in 2007 to commemorate the 75 years since the first Test match between the two sides.
The tour will consist of five Test matches. [2] [3] The series will form part of the 2025–2027 ICC World Test Championship. In August 2024, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) confirmed the fixtures for the tour, as a part of the 2025 home international season. [4] The series will run alongside the women's series between England and ...
India face Australia in New Delhi in the second match of their four-Test series India cruised to victory in the first Test by an innings & 132 runs Australia batting first and reach 209-6 after 62 ...
This series victory made Virat Kohli the first captain to win a T20I series in both Australia and England. [14] Australia won the third and final match by 12 runs, with India winning the series 2–1. [15] In the first Test, India were bowled out for 36 runs in the second innings, [16] their lowest team total in a Test match. [17]
The India national cricket team toured Australia in the 1980–81 season to play 3 Test matches. The series was drawn 1-1. ... India won three of their ten-round ...
England won the first Test by 227 runs, [6] and India won the second Test by 317 runs, [7] to level the series at 1–1. [8] The third Test, a day/night fixture, [9] was completed inside two days, with India winning by ten wickets. [10] The loss meant that England could no longer qualify for the final of the World Test Championship. [11]
— Ross Dellenger (@RossDellenger) January 2, 2025. Many viewers criticized ESPN for not showing the moment of silence on its TV broadcast, but video was made available on social media.