WTC final: Can South Africa clinch first world title or will Pat Cummins extend Australia's reign?
Cricket is now an unending loop of tournaments and leagues of various hues and sizes, blending into each other and working as some sort of extension of one another.
But Test cricket stands out. It always does. Right after winning the IPL trophy for the first time in 17 years earlier last week, star India and RCB batter Virat Kohli said: 'This moment [IPL win] is right up there with the best moments I've had in my career, but it's still marks five levels under Test cricket. That's how much I value Test cricket. I urge youngsters coming through to treat that format with respect.'
And even in Test cricket, there is a pinnacle – the World Test Championship final, that begins on Wednesday at Lord's.
In one corner are the reigning champions and the most successful cricket team in history – Australia. On the other are an equally pedigreed team but one that has not won a single world title in their history – South Africa.
The WTC final is a relatively new concept, this being just the third such title match. Before 2021, the No 1-ranked team at the end of the cycle would receive the ICC Test mace, commemorating their sustained excellence over two seasons.
But now, the top two teams at the end of a cycle compete in a one-off title match to decide the Test champions. That has led to some extraordinary situations, like in 2021 when India were the most dominant Test side at home and away but lost the final to New Zealand in Southampton in conditions that were like home for the Kiwis.
In this cycle, Australia stormed into the title contest after crushing India at home in the five-Test Border Gavaskar Trophy, which expedited the exits of many of India's star players.
South Africa, on the other hand, made the cut after playing just 12 Tests in the entire cycle, accruing enough points in each short series to qualify for the final. Australia, on the other hand, played 19 Tests.
The Proteas did not face Australia or England during the entire previous cycle, putting the spotlight on the format of the WTC which still rewards below optimum output.
Australia the favourites
But the fact is, Australia and South Africa will compete for the Test mace. And going by recent record, the Aussies are the overwhelming favourites.
Almost the entire Australian team that won the 2023 WTC title will feature in the final that starts at Lord's.
Captain Pat Cummins is looking to add to Australia's overflowing trophy cabinet, which recently saw the addition of the 2021 T20 World Cup, 2023 WTC and the 2023 ODI World Cup trophies.
The Australian men's team will be aiming for world title No 11; their opponents only have one major trophy in their possession – the 1998 Champions Trophy.
It's not just history that is on Australia's side. They also boast the most experienced and accomplished line-up in modern history.
Star batter Steve Smith, 36, has not been in action for a few months but enters the one-off match in top form. He hit four hundreds in his last five Tests, has crossed the 10,000-run mark and is back at one of his favourite venues where he averages 58.
The likes of Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne and finals specialist Travis Head offer Australia an enviable edge in batting.
However, it is in bowling were the Aussies have the clear upper hand. Off-spinner Nathan Lyon (553 Test wickets), left-arm pacer Mitchell Starc (382 wickets), captain Cummins (294 scalps) and seamer Josh Hazlewood (279) form what is easily the most versatile and experienced red-ball bowling attack of the past few decades.
Golden chance for Proteas
South Africa have a few aces up their sleeve, too. Leading their bowing attack is Kagiso Rabada who, with 327 wickets, is three away from tying Allan Donald for fourth place on South Africa's all-time list.
Accompanying him will be left-arm pacer Marco Jansen, who has been in vintage form in 2025.
Their captain, Temba Bavuma, averages 60 in the previous cycle, even though he played only seven Tests.
One factor that could have a big say in the title match is the build-up. A significant number of players, especially South Africans, were involved in the recently concluded Indian Premier League, with many getting any sort of red ball practice only in the previous week.
Still, this is a golden chance for South Africa to win a richly deserved world title, having come perilously close in the 2024 T20 World Cup final where they could not chase down 30 runs with 30 balls and six wickets in hand against India.
South Africa batter Aiden Markram said the team played short two-match series almost the entire Test cycle and should be prepared to hit the ground running in the final, which is generally not the case in traditional full-length series where teams can come back after a poor start.
'A lot of our series have been two-game series. So in order to win that series, you can't start slow,' Markram said.
'There's no second dip at it, so we're going to have to make sure we hit the ground running and are nice and sharp come day one.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Int'l Cricket Council
3 hours ago
- Int'l Cricket Council
Rabada reveals key reason behind Lord's Aussie onslaught
As Proteas skipper Temba Bavuma won the toss and opted to bowl in the ICC World Test Championship Final 2025 against Australia at Lord's, the onus with the new ball fell to Kagiso Rabada. And the seasoned campaigner took little time to make his mark on the Ultimate Test. Removing Australia opener Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green in his opening burst, Rabada went on to claim his 17th five-wicket haul in Tests. His spell helped South Africa bundle the defending champions out for 212. But Rabada believes the Proteas could've managed to run through the Aussie batting much sooner. '212, we'd take that. We thought we should've had them at 160, but that's just the way the game goes,' the pacer told reporters at the end of the day's play at Lord's. With Australia five wickets down for 146, Beau Webster took command of the first innings with a handy knock of 72. Rabada lavished praise on the all-rounder, who shifted gears after seeing through South Africa's pace battery early on in his innings. 'Yeah, he didn't start off too well there, looked like he was going to get out any ball but I guess his positive intent got him through,' he said. Rabada five-for puts South Africa in the driving seat | Player Highlights | WTC25 Final Kagiso Rabada led the bowling efforts for South Africa with his 17th Test five-for on Day 1 of the ICC World Test Championship Final. Rabada eventually got rid of Webster, and marked his bowling figures by overtaking Alan Donald as the fourth-highest wicket-taker for the Proteas in Tests. 'To be named in that list of bowlers is special,' Rabada said on the milestone. 'As a player growing up and representing South Africa, I've been inspired by those who have come before and seen what they have done on the big stage. To be listed among those names is special and long may it continue.' Aussie pacers hit back after Rabada shines with the ball | Day 1 Highlights | WTC25 Final After Kagiso Rabada nabbed his 17th five-wicket haul to bundle out Australia, Pat Cummins and Co respond to set up an exciting Day 2. While Rabada was the pick of the bowlers for South Africa, Australia pacers also made early inroads towards the end of Day 1 at Lord's. Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood and skipper Pat Cummins all struck with the ball as South Africa closed the day at 43/4. 'I think the ball is nipping quite a bit, at times nipping off the slope quite a lot. But I still felt like batters could get in. If you just put more balls in the right area for a long period of time that would create chances. 'Right now, we're 43/4, not the start we were looking for but there's a lot of cricket to be played in this Test match. So we're just going to keep going for it.'

Int'l Cricket Council
4 hours ago
- Int'l Cricket Council
Australia fight back against Proteas as wickets tumble at Lord's
Mitchell Starc led an Australia fightback after Kagiso Rabada's superb five-wicket haul, as bowlers dominated the opening day of the ICC World Test Championship Final 2025 at Lord's. Starc took two top order wickets and combined with fellow quicks Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood to reduce South Africa to 43 for four at the close, 169 runs in arrears. Rabada and Marco Jansen (3/49) had earlier come to the fore as the holders collapsed after tea and were bowled out for 212, losing five for 20 after half-centuries from Steve Smith and Beau Webster had helped them steady the ship. Proteas skipper Temba Bavuma began the day by winning a vital toss and opting to bowl in overcast conditions – a decision Rabada immediately vindicated. The seamer opened up with three consecutive maidens from the Nursery End and struck twice in his fourth over, Usman Khawaja edging to first slip without scoring before Aiden Markram held a fine low catch in the cordon to see the back of Cameron Green. Smith joined Marnus Labuschagne to stem the tide but the return of Rabada's new-ball partner Jansen did the trick for the Proteas. Labuschagne was caught behind on 17 and wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne then dived to his right to take a stunning one-handed catch and remove the dangerous Travis Head. The left-hander scored a match-defining century in the ICC World Test Championship Final two years ago but his departure for 11 on this occasion came from the final ball before lunch, which arrived with Australia on 67 for four. Webster was forced to dig deep alongside Smith and survived two big lbw appeals, both from the bowling of Jansen, early in his innings. One was reviewed – the batter survived by virtue of umpire's call – and one was not, with replays later showing the ball would have gone on to uproot middle stump. The all-rounder seized his reprieve, driving nicely through the off-side amid a handy partnership with Smith, who brought up a 76-ball half century with a vicious cut to the point boundary. In doing so, the 36-year-old became the most prolific overseas batter in the rich history of Lord's, though his latest productive innings at the Home of Cricket was brought to an end by an unlikely source. Markram had just three Test wickets to his name when thrown the ball by Bavuma but the fourth was a particularly notable one as Smith was tempted into a heave and succeeded only in edging to Jansen, who took a juggling catch. Webster followed Smith in reaching his half-century, but South Africa seized control in ruthless fashion in the evening session. Alex Carey missing a reverse sweep off Keshav Maharaj started the collapse, with Rabada soon uprooting Pat Cummins' off stump with a beautiful delivery which straightened up the slope. Rabada then had Webster wafting outside off stump and caught at slip for 72, moving past Allan Donald's tally of 330 Test wickets in the process, and Jansen kept up the momentum by arrowing a full delivery through Nathan Lyon's defences. The stage was set for Rabada to add his name to the honours board for a second time, and he did just that by clean bowling Starc with the score on 212. Starc was straight into the action with the ball, cleaning up Markram in the first over of the Proteas' innings before a run was on the board. He should have had a second wicket when Wiaan Mulder edged behind, only for Carey to spill the chance, but did not have to wait long for it to arrive as Ryan Rickelton edged to Khawaja. Captain Cummins then got in on the act, clean bowling Mulder, and Hazlewood ensured he was not to be left out as he castled Tristan Stubbs to leave the Proteas with plenty of work to do on day two. Scores in brief ICC World Test Championship Final, Lord's – Day One Australia 212 all out in 56.4 overs (Beau Webster 72, Steve Smith 66; Kagiso Rabada 5/51, Marco Jansen 3/49) South Africa 43/4 in 22 overs (Ryan Rickelton 16; Mitchell Starc 2/10) South Africa trail by 169 runs with six wickets remaining ENDS


Khaleej Times
4 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
WTC final: Starc strikes as Australia fight back against South Africa
Mitchell Starc led Australia's recovery as the defending champions fought back with the ball against South Africa on the first day of the World Test Championship final at Lord's on Wednesday. Australia were dismissed for just 212 after South Africa captain Temba Bavuma won the toss in overcast, bowler-friendly, conditions, with spearhead quick Kagiso Rabada taking 5-51. But at stumps South Africa had slumped to 43-4 in reply, a deficit of 169 runs. Given the strength of both teams' pace attacks, the key question was always likely to be which side could put enough runs on the scoreboard. Australia's total certainly looked a lot healthier when left-arm quick Starc had Aiden Markram playing on for a duck before dismissing Ryan Rickelton (16) to leave South Africa floundering at 19-2. Novice number three Wiaan Mulder was reprieved on one when wicketkeeper Alex Carey dropped a sitter off Starc. But he added just five more runs before he was bowled by Australia captain Pat Cummins, having taken 44 balls to make six. It took Bavuma 31 balls to score his first runs, a two off Josh Hazlewood greeted with raucous cheers by South Africa fans at Lord's. But shortly before the close, Hazlewood bowled Tristan Stubbs. David Bedingham ended the day's play with consecutive boundaries off Cummins to be eight not out, with Bavuma unbeaten on three. Australia were in desperate trouble in the early overs in London, reduced to 16-2 after losing Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green in a single Rabada over. Khawaja fell for a 20-ball duck in the seventh over, edging Rabada to Bedingham at first slip. Three balls later 12-1 became 16-2 when Green nicked low to second slip, where Markram held a superb diving catch. Rabada had now taken two wickets for four runs in four balls. The 30-year-old, who has more than 300 Test wickets, is playing his first Test after serving a one-month ban for cocaine use earlier this year. Australia have struggled to find an opening partner for Khawaja since David Warner's retirement 17 months ago, with Marnus Labuschagne the latest batsman tried out. The 30-year-old, without a Test century for nearly two years, battled hard for 17 off 56 balls before being dismissed by classic fast-bowling from towering left-armer Marco Jansen. Australia had been in similar trouble in the 2023 final against India across London at the Oval, only for Steve Smith and Travis Head to both score hundreds as they turned the match in their favour. Head, however, could only manage 11 before he glanced Jansen, with Kyle Verreynne holding an excellent diving one-handed catch. But star batsman Smith (66) and all-rounder Beau Webster (72) repaired the damage with a fifth-wicket stand of 79. Yet in what could to be prove a key moment in the match, Webster would have been lbw to Rabada for eight if South Africa had reviewed an original not out decision. Smith went to fifty before falling to part-time spinner Markram when he edged a booming drive and Jansen, at slip, clung on at the third attempt. Australia lost their last five wickets for just 20 runs, with Rabada ending the innings when he bowled Starc.