NEW DELHI, June 29: The five-match Pataudi Trophy between England and India starting August 4 will kick off the second cycle of the World Test Championship.
The Pataudi Trophy along with the Ashes, in December, will be the only two series comprising five Tests in the second World Test Championship cycle, spanning August 2021 to June 2023.
Australia’s tour of India, in 2022, is the only four-Test series in World Test Championship 2. Beyond that, there are seven three-Test series and 13 series comprising two Tests. The ICC has not yet decided the schedule and the venue for the final.
Like the first World Test Championship cycle, played between 2019 and 2021, the second edition will see each of the nine Test teams playing a total of six series — three home and three away.
These bilateral series were finalised by the Full Member Boards in 2018 before the ICC locked them into the 2019-23 Future Tours Programme.
None of the series that were cut short of postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic in the first World Test Championship cycle, will be carried forward into the second cycle.
The big-ticket series will once again be split among the Big three of international cricket — India, England and Australia. The rest of the six countries will lock horns in series comprising two or a maximum of three Tests each.
England will play the most Tests (21) in WTC 2 followed by India (19), Australia (18) and South Africa (15).
The inaugural World Test Championship winners New Zealand will play only 13 matches, similar to that of West Indies and Sri Lanka, but one less than Pakistan (14). Bangladesh are the only country among the nine contestants to play two matches in each of their six series in World Test Championship 2.
Points System
To ensure the discrepancy in matches does not hurt the teams’ World Test Championship points tally, the ICC has decided to allot each match the same number of points.
Under the proposed system, which is set to be ratified at the next chief executives’ committee meeting, each match in will be worth 12 points. A draw will be a third of that, four points. while a tie will earn each team six points.
Teams will also be penalised for slow over rates – one point docked for every over they fall behind. (Agencies)