World Test Cricket Championship
Alongside the Ashes arrangement in
England, August 1, 2019 will likewise observe the start of the ICC World Test
title. Gotten to add setting to reciprocal Test arrangement, the main version
of the World Test Championship will keep running till June 2021 when two
finalists will play for the title at Lord's in London.
Here's a point by point take a gander at
the Test title.
History
The idea for a Test title was first
glided in 2010. The underlying arrangement was to hold the challenge in 2013,
supplanting the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy. Be that as it may, that was rejected
with the plans conceded to 2017. That also didn't appear.
The arrangement for the up and coming
2019-2021 Test title was set up in October 2017.
Format
Every one of the nine groups will play
six rivals, with three arrangement at home and three arrangement away. The
quantity of matches in an arrangement can shift from at least two to limit of
five.
The matches will be held simply like
ordinary reciprocal arrangement, however each game presently has a greater
setting. The matches can be day or day-night, as settled upon by the two sheets
included. A sum of 71 Tests in 27 arrangement will be played in the debut Test
title. The two groups with the most focuses in the association stage will play
in the last in June 2021.
The subsequent cycle will start after
the finish of the first, and keep running till April 2023.
Points system
Every arrangement has an aggregate of
120, designated by the quantity of matches in the arrangement. A Test win in a
two-coordinate arrangement will win the group 60, while a success in a
five-coordinate arrangement will give 24. A tie will be distributed a large
portion of the focuses for a success, while a draw will be dispensed 33% of the
focuses for a success.
Number of teams
The main nine groups in the ICC Test
rankings will take an interest in the Test title. They are: India, New Zealand,
South Africa, England, Australia, Pakistan, West Indies, Sri Lanka and
Bangladesh.
Matches including Afghanistan and
Ireland won't be a piece of the title.
Matches per team
While each team will play six series,
the number of matches vary. The list:
England: 22
Australia: 19
India: 18
South Africa: 16
West Indies: 15
New Zealand: 14
Bangladesh: 14
Pakistan: 13
Sri Lanka: 13
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