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Women's T20 World Cup 2026 schedule: IND vs PAK on June 14, final at Lord's

Women's T20 World Cup 2026 schedule: IND vs PAK on June 14, final at Lord's

India Today5 hours ago

The full schedule for the ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 was unveiled on Wednesday, with the tournament set to begin on June 12. Matches will be played across six venues in England and Wales.The opening clash will feature hosts England taking on Sri Lanka at Edgbaston. Ten teams will compete in the tournament, split into two groups of six. Four of these spots will be filled via the global qualifiers. Group 1 features India, Pakistan, Australia, South Africa, and two qualifying teams. Mark your calendars The fixtures for the ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 are out Full details https://t.co/X2BqQphwSC pic.twitter.com/gqkxaMudEP— ICC (@ICC) June 18, 2025advertisementDefending champions New Zealand headline Group 2, alongside last edition's runners-up South Africa, hosts England, the West Indies, and two qualifiers.
India will begin their campaign with a marquee clash against arch-rivals Pakistan on June 14. It will be a challenging path for the Women in Blue, with powerhouses like Australia and South Africa also in their group. India hold a dominant head-to-head record against Pakistan in T20Is, winning 12 of their 15 encounters. Pakistan's last victory in this format came during the 2022 Women's T20 Asia Cup.Group 2 may not appear as formidable on paper, but it could still deliver tightly contested matches. New Zealand will be eyeing a smooth passage to the semi-finals, while England will hope to capitalise on home advantage.Speaking about the event, Tournament Director Beth Barrett-Wild said: "The ICC Women's T20 World Cup provides us with an unparalleled opportunity to transform a month of sporting excellence into a movement that will rewrite the narrative about women's cricket. At iconic venues across the country, we'll see incredible, world-class athletes battling it out in front of hundreds of thousands of fans, who, with every ball bowled and run scored, will be contributing to lasting change. It's our opportunity to give women's cricket, and women's sport, the stage it deserves."ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 GroupsadvertisementGroup 1: Australia, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Qualifier, QualifierGroup 2: West Indies, England, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Qualifier, QualifierFull ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 ScheduleFriday June 12: England v Sri Lanka, Edgbaston 18:30 BSTSaturday June 13: Qualifier v Qualifier, Old Trafford Cricket Ground 10:30 BSTSaturday June 13: Australia v South Africa, Old Trafford Cricket Ground 14:30 BSTSaturday June 13: West Indies v New Zealand, Hampshire Bowl 18:30 BSTSunday June 14: Qualifier v Qualifier, Edgbaston 10:30 BSTSunday June 14: India v Pakistan, Edgbaston 14:30 BSTTuesday June 16: New Zealand v Sri Lanka, Hampshire Bowl 14:30 BSTTuesday June 16: England v Qualifier, Hampshire Bowl 18:30 BSTWednesday June 17: Australia v Qualifier, Headingley 10:30 BSTWednesday June 17: India v Qualifier, Headingley 14:30 BSTWednesday June 17: South Africa v Pakistan, Edgbaston 18:30 BSTThursday June 18: West Indies v Qualifier, Headingley 18:30 BSTFriday June 19: New Zealand v Qualifier, Hampshire Bowl 18:30 BSTSaturday June 20: Australia v Qualifier, Hampshire Bowl 10:30 BSTSaturday June 20: Pakistan v Qualifier, Hampshire Bowl 14:30 BSTSaturday June 20: England v Qualifier, Headingley 18:30 BSTSunday June 21: West Indies v Sri Lanka, Bristol County Ground 10:30 BSTadvertisementSunday June 21: South Africa v India, Old Trafford Cricket Ground 14:30 BSTTuesday June 23: New Zealand v Qualifier, Bristol County Ground 10:30 BSTTuesday June 23: Sri Lanka v Qualifier, Bristol County Ground 14:30 BSTTuesday June 23: Australia v Pakistan, Headingley 18:30 BSTWednesday June 24: England v West Indies, Lord's Cricket Ground 18:30 BSTThursday June 25: India v Qualifier, Old Trafford Cricket Ground 14:30 BSTThursday June 25: South Africa v Qualifier, Bristol County Ground 18:30 BSTFriday June 26: Sri Lanka v Qualifier, Old Trafford Cricket Ground 18:30 BSTSaturday June 27: Pakistan v Qualifier, Bristol County Ground 10:30 BSTSaturday June 27: West Indies v Qualifier, Bristol County Ground 14:30 BSTSaturday June 27: England v New Zealand, The Oval 18:30 BSTSunday June 28: South Africa v Qualifier, Lord's Cricket Ground 10:30 BSTSunday June 28: Australia v India, Lord's Cricket Ground 14:30 BSTTuesday June 30: TBC v TBC (Semi Final 1), The Oval 14:30 BSTThursday July 2: TBC v TBC (Semi Final 2), The Oval 18:30 BSTSunday July 5: TBC v TBC (The Final), Lord's Cricket Ground 14:30 BST

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Proteas Homecoming: Airport filled to 3 tiers, old school teammates in crested jumpers, ‘crying or flu' quip by Ngidi and a call to name 9th month SepTemba
Proteas Homecoming: Airport filled to 3 tiers, old school teammates in crested jumpers, ‘crying or flu' quip by Ngidi and a call to name 9th month SepTemba

Indian Express

time10 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Proteas Homecoming: Airport filled to 3 tiers, old school teammates in crested jumpers, ‘crying or flu' quip by Ngidi and a call to name 9th month SepTemba

The Cape Town international airport was packed to the rafters for three tiers as Temba Bavuma's Proteas landed home after winning the World Test Championship. In a chaotic reception, the ICC trophy winning South Africans were stopped every few metres as Marco Jansen signed every single autograph request and 'OH Temba Bavuma' choruses rung with the whole airport joining in after the cricket team broke the dark spell of 27 years. It's not quite the World Cup of 50 overs, but TV channels emphasised on the word ICC, a trophy that has been storiedly elusive. United in grief of several defeats, the multi racial nation citizens trooped in from faroff places to greet the Proteas. #ProteasWTCFinal #HomeComing #ProteaFire — A Runner With A Struggling Cheque Account (@OfficialVeli) June 18, 2025 Notably, former school teammates of the Champion Proteas showed up in old crested jumpers, and fancy jackets inscribed with new face prints from Lord's, with Paarl school former openers in attendance. Assorted school teams of Bavuma and Markram also came to cheer as the Proteas wearing classy Champion tees lined up and Bavuma lifted the mace again. Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie had rolled out the red carpet, and joined a bunch of fans in singing the Temba-song. A young white fan, Daniel, a diehard Bavuma fan, told Newz Sport, 'Temba, even under pressure – he taught us that he can win it for us. He showed us that we Proteas can win. So now even we think we can win.' Daniel, who has met Wiaan Mulder 4 times, had skipped school though his school teacher quipped on Twitter saying he might need to serve detention. But he was one of many signifying how this triumph could unite a bitterly divided nation of racial tensions. For Daniel had simply won SA the trophy that had eluded generations. We Here 🙌🙌🙌🙌 — A Runner With A Struggling Cheque Account (@OfficialVeli) June 18, 2025 Lungi Ngidi told journalist Likho Mpama he had brieflyspoken to his mother who said she was proud of him and joked that, 'My mum is proud, that's all I needed to hear. I dunno if she was crying or maybe she's got the flu. But it sounded something in between the two.' On the years it had taken to win and the despondency after first innings he said, 'There was no choice but I pretty much had to do it, win. It's sport there's ups and downs. Its just unfortunate that sometimes the downs have been on the biggest stage. But the ups too have been on just as big a stage and look today we have a medal. It was very stressful but I knew that if I got one wicket then I would get another one. Just tried to break that momentum to break the game open. Welcome home you — Werner (@Werries_) June 18, 2025 At the CSA reception, he said, 'We can't fill those shoes of legends. But we are building a legacy of our own. No one can replace Graeme Smith and Jacques Kallis. But we've got our own guys,' he said. South Africa play Zimbabwe in two Tests at end of June, and fans were busy considering logistics of travelling and supporting the team. With stadia being refurbished for the 2027 World Cup, South Africa play no Tests in their December summer this year or until later in 2026 at home. Twitter super fans Sabeeha Majid, Werner and Naeema Benjamin kept the fans updated, and there was a lot of bantering demands of those who wrote off South Africa to apologise. An apology form with multiple choice was doing the rounds. [WATCH] A young Temba Bavuma fan, who can name the whole #Proteas squad, has brought a picture of the champions for the captain to sign at OR Tambo International Airport. @vuyo_macoba reports. — Newzroom Afrika (@Newzroom405) June 18, 2025 While Keshav Maharaj who wears a tiny gold mace pendant as he is a Hanuman devotee posed formally, and Bavuma kept his now-famous shades on, Markram and Ryan Rickelton got frenzied cheers. Ring dances with all the iconic songs had been performing since early morning as the flight landed at 9 am, 25 minutes ahead of schedule. Shakira's catchy ditty in Waka, Waka readily gets plastered on South Africa's cricket triumphs by the rest of the world. It's worth many loops and had its WTC-sized resurrection, since being composed around when Australia last lost an ICC final. But the iconic 'Shosholoza' reached a crescendo when performed and broughtbthe airport to a standstill before the team arrived. Shosholoza which literally means 'keep going forward', has origins in the Ndebele language, and talks of resilience and relentlessness of hard-working miners, urged to keep chugging ahead. It's an earworm to persevere through tough times and even mundane struggles. While it stood for solidarity during the fight against Apartheid, the haunting melody has rung in unity, and Shosholoza gets sung at rugby internationals by whites, Blacks and anyone South African, forming quite an aural dome as the Springbok forward pack moves the scrum menacingly forward. Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie singing #Proteas Captain's name Temba Bavuma!#WozaNawe #ICCWTC2025Final #Gayton #McKenzie — Likho Mpama (@JLikho11) June 18, 2025 South African Comedian Rory Petrez, had spent four days relaying his nail biting anxiety in his car, airing it on youtube. He found a banger on the final day, in his tweet that read: 'I'd like to also add that this is not some limited overs, skop, skiet, donner & hope for the best trophy. It's TEST MATCH CRICKET. The purist & most technical form of the game. Holy s'%#t, I'm so happy. Congratulations Proteas. I love you.' He recalled bunking school to witness the first heartbreak, now famous as '22 off 1 ball.' 'We are champions of the full whole world. We've been waiting fir this since 1992. We bunked primary school in 1992, to watch THAT match. You know THAT 22 off 1 ball match. We are waiting since that day,' he said once it was done. Rugby, cricket, music aren't the only South African passions. Their braai (barbecue) are legendary. And Petrez would chomp into a boerewors (boer = farmer, wors = sausage) roll on camera to celebrate. 'This morning I went and bought championship boerwors. It has champion written on it. And as we were winning I lit the fire and I'm eating the championship boerwors roll.' To ensure the triumph was never forgotten, the comic suggestedcnaming the 9th month 'SepTemba.' 'We need a few rules now to remember this victory to weave into our language. Firstly all rugby players from Springboks down to U7s whenever they catch the ball in the 22 you shout 'Markram'. That game in the swimming pool (water polo) you shout Marco Jansen. That ninth month of the year in every single diary and calendar. It is spellt SepTemba. And everything you buy Boerwors, or mince or chops or potatoes at the shop, you buying it 'by the KG' Rabada.' Celebrations will continue for a few more days.

‘He's Someone I've Always Admired': Joe Root Pays Emotional Tribute To Virat Kohli Ahead Of 1st Test Against India
‘He's Someone I've Always Admired': Joe Root Pays Emotional Tribute To Virat Kohli Ahead Of 1st Test Against India

India.com

time21 minutes ago

  • India.com

‘He's Someone I've Always Admired': Joe Root Pays Emotional Tribute To Virat Kohli Ahead Of 1st Test Against India

As the cricketing world braces for the much-awaited Test series between India and England, England's batting stalwart Joe Root has taken a moment to reflect on a poignant shift in the sport, the recent Test retirements of Indian legends Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma. Speaking to reporters ahead of the first Test at Headingley, Root expressed admiration and deep respect for the duo, describing them as 'irreplaceable icons' who left an indelible mark on the game. The five-match Test series will be India's first major overseas assignment without the presence of Kohli and Rohit in over a decade, a symbolic beginning of a new era. Joe Root on Virat and Rohit: 'I've never competed with Virat. He's someone I've always admired. What a player, intense, passionate, and a complete match-winner. It'll feel strange not having him out there.' – Joe Root on Virat Kohli 'Cricket will be poorer without Virat and Rohit. They're two legends of the game who carried Indian cricket for more than a decade. Their contributions have been phenomenal.'– Joe Root on the duo's impact Root further said that while the upcoming series would be different without these Indian greats, the level of competition would remain top-tier, with both sides fielding exciting new talents. 'Every player is different. If you're in a five-match Test series and there's something in your game that doesn't sit well with you, it can be difficult. You haven't got time to go and get two weeks off to work on that thing. There's no breathing space unless you make a drastic change within a Test. But then you're playing against some very high-quality players in their conditions. And let's not forget, a lot of people will keep mentioning how you got out!' Root said. Root-Kohli: One of Test Cricket's Premier Rivalries The cricketing rivalry between Joe Root and Virat Kohli was one of the hallmarks of the last decade in Tests. From iconic battles in India and England to fighting for supremacy in ICC rankings, the two modern greats often pushed each other to greater heights. Root admitted he always looked forward to playing against Kohli: 'He brought the best out of me. You had to be at your absolute best against him, both technically and mentally. He made cricket feel alive.'

India vs England: Siraj's form augurs well for a spearhead's role
India vs England: Siraj's form augurs well for a spearhead's role

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

India vs England: Siraj's form augurs well for a spearhead's role

Mumbai: In his debut series in 2020-21, Mohammed Siraj finished with 13 wickets to play a starring role in India's unlikely series win in Australia. A few months later, he returned from England with 18 scalps in five Tests. He had to wait until 2024-25 for his next double-digit series haul (20 in five Tests in Australia). For a promising pacer who started Test cricket in the fast lane in Australia, leading the attack in just his third Test with a five-wicket haul to earn his team a memorable victory, Siraj's career has yet to hit top gear. The 31-year-old will be an important cog in India's bowling attack in the five-Test series in England, especially since lead bowler Jasprit Bumrah might be rotated and rested to manage workload. The Hyderabad pace bowler was in excellent rhythm in the Indian Premier League and it has raised expectations of a fine showing. The feature of his impressive showing in IPL for Gujarat Titans was the way he was extracting sharp movement with the new ball. In England, the conditions will be perfect for swing bowlers. 'Everyone I know has a lot of expectations from Bumrah but you need someone else to shoulder that responsibility as well. That has to be Siraj. He is the senior (most) after Bumrah, he has played a lot of cricket. Not only him, you need others to shoulder the responsibility as well,' says former India bowling coach Paras Mhambrey. 'You expect your frontline bowlers to be in the best of rhythm. From what I have seen is that Siraj and Bumrah, the way they have gone about in terms of IPL, is very heartening. 'He (Siraj) has excellent prospects. It's heartening simply for the fact that you need experience. The couple of guys who have toured England and have the experience are Bumrah and him.' Towards the end of last year, after starting the Australia tour well, Siraj had looked a bit jaded as the series progressed. He was overlooked by the selectors for the Champions Trophy. Left to cool his heels at home as India won the prestigious 50-overs ICC event, Siraj didn't sit idle. He took the break from international cricket to work on his game and came back into IPL looking sharp. 'Good to see he has peaked at the right time. I am sure he has worked on his game and a lot of other aspects of the game that reflect on the ground,' Mhambrey says. Mhambrey has seen first hand the quality of Siraj's bowling in IPL. It started with the match against Mumbai Indians at Ahmedabad when he cleaned up Rohit Sharma with a beauty, the ball darting in and hitting middle-stump. During that game, Mhambrey was in the MI dugout as their bowling coach. So, what is he doing right technically? 'It is all about rhythm, right? It is something which you need to feel as a bowler. You might come across differently (different bowlers will deliver the ball in different ways), but individually it is all about the feel. What the feel does, it translates into the release, you are happy with the way the ball leaves your hand, and you are pretty much sure what the ball is going to do, so all that falls into place. It is the length. When you have the rhythm, you know you can hit that particular length, the kind of block you are really looking at,' says Mhambrey, relating Siraj's current form to how he bowled in the 2023 Asia Cup final in Colombo when he blew away hosts Sri Lanka for 50 runs with 6/21 in seven overs. 'He has been consistent with his pace, his length has been consistent. He is using the crease, that kind of stuff. When you have the rhythm, you tick all the boxes. Similar to what we saw in the Asia Cup final, the spell he bowled against Sri Lanka. You knew the rhythm was there, the length he was pitching, moving the ball in and out, that is what you saw in this IPL.' With 100 wickets in 36 Tests, Siraj has enough experience under his belt. His best match haul of 8/126 was during India's win at Lord's in 2021. This time in England, Siraj's real test will come in matches where Bumrah decides to rest to manage workload. Immediately, all eyes will turn to Siraj as the next senior bowler. How he copes with that responsibility is going to determine his success on this tour. In patches, Siraj has bowled impressive spells. On this important tour, an Indian team under transition is expecting a big impact from him. The kind deserving of the tag of a lead bowler.

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