City
Epaper

WTC continues to invigorate Test cricket: Jay Shah on start of 2025-27 championship cycle

By IANS | Updated: June 17, 2025 11:48 IST

Dubai, June 17 After the culmination of the World Test Championship (WTC) 2023-25 cycle with South Africa lifting ...

Open in App

Dubai, June 17 After the culmination of the World Test Championship (WTC) 2023-25 cycle with South Africa lifting the mace at iconic Lord's last week, ICC Chair Jay Shah is looking forward to the next instalment of the WTC and wished players all the best ahead of the new cycle.

The next cycle begins in earnest with a string of high-profile series kicking off proceedings. Sri Lanka’s two-Test series at home against Bangladesh, which begins on 17 June, is the first contest of the 2025-27 cycle and soon overlaps with a five-Test showdown between England and India.

Indian and Eng;and will go head-to-head at Headingley, Edgbaston, Lord’s, Old Trafford and The Oval in the coming weeks.

“The third edition of the World Test Championship came to a fantastic conclusion at Lord’s as Australia and South Africa played out a classic encounter and we now look forward to the next instalment. This Championship continues to invigorate Test match cricket, and four of the nine competing nations have now reached a Final over the first three cycles," Shah said in an ICC release.

“Bringing context for players and fans, as well as a high level of competitiveness, is key and the big turnout out at Lord’s – as well as the viewership levels across the globe – for the Final is testimony to the continued popularity of Test cricket. I would like to thank the Member Boards for their continued support of this exciting concept and wish the players all the very best as they begin their journey towards the next Final in 2027," he added.

Beaten finalists Australia begin their bid to regain their WTC crown in the Caribbean as they take on West Indies in a three-Test series for the right to lift the Frank Worrell Trophy.

As per the previous cycles, nine teams will contest the WTC and each nation will play six other sides – three home and three away – over the course of the two-year period.

Australia play 11 matches at home – including an Ashes series against England later this year and four Tests against New Zealand – and the same number away.

England play 11 Tests on their own turf and 10 on the road, visiting beaten WTC Final 2025 finalists South Africa for a three-Test tour in December 2026.

India will play 18 matches in this cycle, split evenly home and away, with 2021 champions New Zealand playing in 16.

The points percentage system used in the previous two editions will determine the leaderboard with teams getting 12 points for a win, six for a tie and four for a draw.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Navi MumbaiUlwe Road Accident: Fisherman Dead, Driver Hurt as Speeding Car Rams Pickup Near Atal Setu Toll Plaza

InternationalUN chief welcomes Hamas' statement on US Gaza proposal

EntertainmentVijay Deverakonda and Rashmika Mandanna Engaged: Star Couple To Marry In February 2026?

NationalAmit Shah to visit Chhattisgarh’s Bastar today

InternationalAmid shutdown, Trump blocks funding for Democrat-run Chicago

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsNishad Kumar, Simran Sharma shine as India continues strong run at World Para Athletics Championships 2025

Other SportsFootball: Chance for Arsenal as pressure builds on Amorim, Postecoglou (Preview)

Other SportsBundesliga 2025-26: Spirits high as Bayern Munich pursue historic winning streak

Other SportsBFI Cup: World Championships medalist Husamuddin, Bhawna Sharma, Parthvi Grehwal advance on Day 3

Other SportsPKL 12: Arjun Deshwal’s sensational 22 points guide Tamil Thalaivas to first home win since 2018