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The final of the 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship, the inaugural ICC World Test Championship, was played from 18 to 23 June 2021 at the Rose Bowl, Southampton, England, between India and New Zealand. It was initially scheduled for five days, but time lost during the game to rain interruptions meant that the planned reserve day was used. [1]
The WTC 2021–23 cycle began in August 2021 with Pataudi Trophy (5 matches series between India and England). [21] The International Cricket Council officially announced the full programme with a new points system. [22] Australia qualified for the final by winning the 3rd Test Match of the 2022–23 Border-Gavaskar Trophy. [23]
The five-match Pataudi Trophy between England and India, started 4 August 2021, started the second cycle of the World Test Championship. [6] [7] [8] That series, along with the Ashes in December 2021, were the only two series comprising five Tests in the second WTC cycle. [9] [10] [11] New Zealand were the defending champions.
The 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship was the inaugural edition of the ICC World Test Championship of Test cricket. [1] It started on 1 August 2019 with the first Test of the 2019 Ashes series , [ 2 ] and finished with the Final at the Rose Bowl, Southampton in June 2021.
With this result, Australia emerged victorious in the 2021–2023 ICC World Test Championship, securing a 209-run win. [45] Travis Head, who made significant contributions, received player of the match award. This achievement established Australia as the first and, thus far, the only team to have won all ICC tournaments. [46] Scorecard Source: [47]
3 January 2021 657 (101.0 overs) England: Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi, Pakistan: 1 December 2022 654/6d (154.0 overs) Australia Sri Lanka: Galle International Stadium, Galle, Sri Lanka: 29 January 2025 648/8d (179.0 overs) Sri Lanka Bangladesh: Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Pallekele, Sri Lanka: 21 April 2021
Twenty-two years after 9/11 — and after battles with Pataki, Bloomberg and Port Authority — Larry Silverstein is closing in on the prize that long eluded him: Two World Trade Center.
[1] [2] In 2021, the mace underwent a redesign, and the updated version was meticulously crafted by hand at the workshop of Thomas Lyte in London. [1] [3] Prior to the introduction of the World Test Championship (WTC) Final, the mace was awarded to the team at the top of the ICC Men's Test Team Rankings.