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England cricket team

The England men's cricket team represents England and Wales in international cricket. Since 1997, it has been governed by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), having been previously governed by Marylebone Cricket Club (the MCC) since 1903.[8][9] England, as a founding nation, is a Full Member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) with Test, One Day International (ODI) and Twenty20 International (T20I) status. Until the 1990s, Scottish and Irish players also played for England as those countries were not yet ICC members in their own right.

England
AssociationEngland and Wales Cricket Board
Personnel
Test captainBen Stokes
One Day captainJos Buttler
T20I captainJos Buttler
CoachTest - Brendon McCullum
ODI - Matthew Mott
T20I - Matthew Mott
History
Test status acquired1877
International Cricket Council
ICC statusFull Member (1909)
ICC regionEurope
ICC Rankings Current[1] Best-ever
Test 3rd 1st (1 June 1955)
ODI 6th 1st (1 January 1981)
T20I 2nd 1st (24 October 2011)
Tests
First Testv.  Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne; 15–19 March 1877
Last Testv.  Australia at The Oval, London; 27–31 July 2023
Tests Played Won/Lost
Total[2] 1,066 391/320
(355 draws)
This year[3] 8 4/3
(1 draw)
World Test Championship appearances2 (first in 2019–2021)
Best resultFourth place (2019–2021, 2021-2023)
One Day Internationals
First ODIv.  Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne; 5 January 1971
Last ODIv.  West Indies at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua; 3 December 2023
ODIs Played Won/Lost
Total[4] 795 399/356
(9 ties, 31 no results)
This year[5] 22 10/11
(0 ties, 1 no result)
World Cup appearances13 (first in 1975)
Best resultChampions (2019)
Twenty20 Internationals
First T20Iv.  Australia at the Ageas Bowl, Southampton; 13 June 2005
Last T20Iv.  New Zealand at Trent Bridge, Nottingham; 5 September 2023
T20Is Played Won/Lost
Total[6] 177 92/77
(2 ties, 6 no results)
This year[7] 7 2/5
(0 ties, 0 no results)
T20 World Cup appearances8 (first in 2007)
Best resultChampions (2010, 2022)

Test kit

ODI kit

T20I kit

As of 3 December 2023

England and Australia were the first teams to play a Test match (15–19 March 1877), and along with South Africa, these nations formed the Imperial Cricket Conference (the predecessor to today's International Cricket Council) on 15 June 1909. England and Australia also played the first ODI on 5 January 1971. England's first T20I was played on 13 June 2005, once more against Australia.

As of 3 December 2023, England have played 1,066 Test matches, winning 391 and losing 320 (with 355 draws).[10] In the Test series against Australia, England play for The Ashes, one of the most famous trophies in all of sport, and they have won the urn on 32 occasions. England have also played 795 ODIs, winning 399.[11] They have appeared in the final of the Cricket World Cup four times (1979, 1987, 1992), and winning their first in 2019; they have also finished as runners-up in two ICC Champions Trophies (2004 and 2013). England have played 177 T20Is, winning 92.[12] They won the ICC T20 World Cup in 2010 and 2022, and were runners-up in 2016. They are the current World champions in both ODIs and T20Is, as of May 2023, and were the first team to hold both titles concurrently.

As of 19 November 2023, England are ranked third in Tests, sixth in ODIs and second in T20Is by the ICC.[1]

History edit

 
The All-England Eleven in 1846

The first recorded incidence of a team with a claim to represent England comes from 9 July 1739 when an "All-England" team, which consisted of 11 gentlemen from any part of England exclusive of Kent, played against "the Unconquerable County" of Kent and lost by a margin of "very few notches".[13] Such matches were repeated on numerous occasions for the best part of a century.

In 1846 William Clarke formed the All-England Eleven. This team eventually competed against a United All-England Eleven with annual matches occurring between 1847 and 1856. These matches were arguably the most important contest of the English season if judged by the quality of the players.

Early tours edit

 
The 1859 English team to North America.

The first overseas tour occurred in September 1859 with England touring North America. This team had six players from the All-England Eleven, six from the United All-England Eleven and was captained by George Parr.

With the outbreak of the American Civil War, attention turned elsewhere. English tourists visited Australia in 1861–62 with this first tour organised as a commercial venture by Messrs Spiers and Pond, restaurateurs of Melbourne. Most matches played during tours prior to 1877 were "against odds", with the opposing team fielding more than 11 players to make for a more even contest.[14] This first Australian tour was mostly against odds of at least 18/11.

 
The first England team to tour southern Australia in 1861–62

The tour was so successful that Parr led a second tour in 1863–64. James Lillywhite led a subsequent England team which sailed on the P&O steamship Poonah on 21 September 1876. They played a combined Australian XI, for once on even terms of 11-a-side. The match, starting on 15 March 1877 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground came to be regarded as the inaugural Test match. The combined Australian XI won this Test match by 45 runs with Charles Bannerman of Australia scoring the first Test century. At the time, the match was promoted as James Lillywhite's XI v Combined Victoria and New South Wales.[14] The teams played a return match on the same ground at Easter, 1877, when Lillywhite's team avenged their loss with a victory by four wickets. The first Test match on English soil occurred in 1880 with England victorious; this was the first time England fielded a fully representative side with W. G. Grace included in the team.[15]

1880s edit

 
The death notice printed on The Sporting Times newspaper which first named the Ashes.

England lost their first home series 1–0 in 1882, with The Sporting Times printing an obituary on English cricket:

In Affectionate Remembrance

OF
ENGLISH CRICKET,
WHICH DIED AT THE OVAL
ON
29th AUGUST, 1882,
Deeply lamented by a large circle of sorrowing
friends and acquaintances.
R. I. P.

N.B.—The body will be cremated and the
ashes taken to Australia.[16]

As a result of this loss, the tour of 1882–83 was dubbed by England captain Ivo Bligh as "the quest to regain the ashes". England, with a mixture of amateurs and professionals, won the series 2–1.[17] Bligh was presented with an urn that contained some ashes, which have variously been said to be of a bail, ball or even a woman's veil, and so The Ashes was born. A fourth match was then played which Australia won by four wickets. However, the match was not considered part of the Ashes series.[17][18] England dominated many of these early contests, with England winning the Ashes series 10 times between 1884 and 1898.[19] During this period England also played their first Test match against South Africa in 1889 at Port Elizabeth.[20]

1890s edit

England won the 1890 Ashes series 2–0, with the third match of the series being the first Test match to be abandoned. England lost 2–1 in the 1891–92 series, although England regained the urn the following year. England again won the 1894–95 series, winning 3–2 under the leadership of Andrew Stoddart. In 1895–96, England played South Africa, winning all Tests in the series. The 1899 Ashes series was the first tour where the MCC and the counties appointed a selection committee. There were three active players: Grace, Lord Hawke and Warwickshire captain Herbert Bainbridge. Prior to this, England teams for home Tests had been chosen by the club on whose ground the match was to be played. England lost the 1899 Ashes series 1–0, with Grace making his final Test appearance in the first match of the series.

1900s edit

The start of the 20th century saw mixed results for England as they lost four of the eight Ashes series between 1900 and 1914.[21] During this period, England lost their first series against South Africa in the 1905–06 season 4–1 as their batting faltered.[22]

England lost their first series of the new century to Australia in 1901–02 Ashes. Australia also won the 1902 series, which was memorable for exciting cricket, including Gilbert Jessop scoring a Test century in just 70 minutes. England regained the Ashes in 1904 under the captaincy of Pelham Warner. R. E. Foster scored 287 on his debut and Wilfred Rhodes took 15 wickets in a match. In 1905–06, England lost 4–1 against South Africa. England avenged the defeat in 1907, when they won the series 1–0 under the captaincy of Foster. However, they lost the 1909 Ashes series against Australia, using 25 players in the process. England also lost to South Africa, with Jack Hobbs scoring his first of 15 centuries on the tour.

1910s edit

England toured Australia in 1911–12 and beat their opponents 4–1. The team included the likes of Rhodes, Hobbs, Frank Woolley and Sydney Barnes. England lost the first match of the series but bounced back and won the next four Tests. This proved to be the last Ashes series before the war.

The 1912 season saw England take part in a unique experiment. A nine-Test triangular tournament involving England, South Africa and Australia was set up. The series was hampered by a very wet summer and player disputes however and the tournament was considered a failure with the Daily Telegraph stating:[23]

Nine Tests provide a surfeit of cricket, and contests between Australia and South Africa are not a great attraction to the British public.

With Australia sending a weakened team and the South African bowlers being ineffective England dominated the tournament winning four of their six matches. The match between Australia and South Africa at Lord's was visited by King George V, the first time a reigning monarch had watched Test cricket.[24] England went on one more tour before the outbreak of the First World War, beating South Africa 4–0, with Barnes taking 49 wickets in the series.

1920s edit

 
English cricket team at the Test match at the Brisbane Exhibition Ground in 1928. England won by a record margin of 675 runs.

England's first match after the war was in the 1920–21 season against Australia. Still feeling the effects of the war England went down to a series of crushing defeats and suffered their first whitewash losing the series 5–0. Six Australians scored hundreds while Mailey spun out 36 English batsmen. Things were no better in the next few Ashes series losing the 1921 Ashes series 3–0 and the 1924–25 Ashes 4–1. England's fortunes were to change in 1926 as they regained the Ashes and were a formidable team during this period dispatching Australia 4–1 in the 1928–29 Ashes tour.

In the same year the West Indies became the fourth nation to be granted Test status and played their first game against England. England won each of these three Tests by an innings, and a view was expressed in the press that their elevation had proved a mistake although Learie Constantine did the double on the tour. In the 1929–30 season England went on two concurrent tours with one team going to New Zealand (who were granted Test status earlier that year) and the other to the West Indies. Despite sending two separate teams England won both tours beating New Zealand 1–0 and the West Indies 2–1.

1930s edit

 
Bill Woodfull evades a Bodyline ball. Note the number of leg-side fielders.

The 1930 Ashes series saw a young Don Bradman dominate the tour, scoring 974 runs in his seven Test innings. He scored 254 at Lord's, 334 at Headingley and 232 at The Oval. Australia regained the Ashes winning the series 3–1. As a result of Bradman's prolific run-scoring the England captain Douglas Jardine chose to develop the already existing leg theory into fast leg theory, or bodyline, as a tactic to stop Bradman. Fast leg theory involved bowling fast balls directly at the batsman's body. The batsman would need to defend himself, and if he touched the ball with the bat, he risked being caught by one of a large number of fielders placed on the leg side.

Using Jardine's fast leg theory, England won the next Ashes series 4–1, but complaints about the Bodyline tactic caused crowd disruption on the tour, and threats of diplomatic action from the Australian Cricket Board, which during the tour sent the following cable to the MCC in London:

Bodyline bowling assumed such proportions as to menace best interests of game, making protection of body by batsmen the main consideration. Causing intensely bitter feeling between players as well as injury. In our opinion is unsportsmanlike. Unless stopped at once likely to upset friendly relations existing between Australia and England.

Later, Jardine was removed from the captaincy and the Laws of Cricket changed so that no more than one fast ball aimed at the body was permitted per over, and having more than two fielders behind square leg was banned.

England's following tour of India in the 1933–34 season was the first Test match to be staged in the subcontinent. The series was also notable for Stan Nichols and Nobby Clark bowling so many bouncers that the Indian batsman wore solar toupées instead of caps to protect themselves.

Australia won the 1934 Ashes series 2–1 and kept the urn for the following 19 years. Many of the wickets of the time were friendly to batsmen resulting in a large proportion of matches ending in high scoring draws and many batting records being set.

England drew the 1938 Ashes, meaning Australia retained the urn. England went into the final match of the series at The Oval 1–0 down, but won the final game by an innings and 579 runs. Len Hutton made the highest ever Test score by an Englishman, making 364 in England first innings to help them reach 903, their highest ever score against Australia.

The 1938–39 tour of South Africa saw another experiment with the deciding Test being a timeless Test that was played to a finish. England lead 1–0 going into the final timeless match at Durban. Despite the final Test being 'timeless', the game ended in a draw after 10 days as England had to catch the train to catch the boat home. A record 1,981 runs were scored, and the concept of timeless Tests was abandoned. England went on one final tour of the West Indies in 1939 before the Second World War, although a team for an MCC tour of India was selected more in hope than expectation of the matches being played.

1940s edit

Test cricket resumed after the war in 1946, and England won their first match back against India. However, they struggled in the 1946–47 Ashes series, losing 3–0 in Australia under Wally Hammond's captaincy. England beat South Africa 3–0 in 1947 with Denis Compton scoring 1,187 runs in the series.

The 1947–48 series against the West Indies was another disappointment for England, with the side losing 2–0 following injuries to several key players. England suffered further humiliation against Bradman's invincible side in the 1948 Ashes series. Hutton was controversially dropped for the third Test, and England were bowled out for just 52 at The Oval. The series proved to be Bradman's final Ashes series.

In 1948–49, England beat South Africa 2–0 under the captaincy of George Mann. The series included a record breaking stand of 359 between Hutton and Cyril Washbrook. The decade ended with England drawing the Test series against New Zealand, with every match ending in a draw.

1950s edit

Their fortunes changed on the 1953 Ashes tour as they won the series 1–0. England did not lose a series between their 1950–51 and 1958–59 tours of Australia and secured famous victory in 1954–55 under the captaincy of Len Hutton, thanks to Frank Tyson whose 6/85 at Sydney and 7/27 at Melbourne are remembered as the fastest bowling ever seen in Australia. The 1956 series was remembered for the bowling of Jim Laker who took 46 wickets at an average of 9.62, including figures of 19/90 at Old Trafford. After drawing to South Africa, England defeated the West Indies and New Zealand comfortably.

The England team then left for Australia in the 1958–59 season with a team that had been hailed as the strongest ever to leave on an Ashes tour but lost the series 4–0 as Richie Benaud's revitalised Australians were too strong, with England struggling with the bat throughout the series.

On 24 August 1959, England inflicted its only 5–0 whitewash over India. All out for 194 at The Oval, India lost the last test by an innings. England's batsman Ken Barrington and Colin Cowdrey both had an excellent series with the bat, with Barrington scoring 357 runs across the series and Cowdrey scoring 344.

1960s edit

The early and middle 1960s were poor periods for English cricket. Despite England's strength on paper, Australia held the Ashes and the West Indies dominated England in the early part of the decade. May stood down as captain in 1961 following the 1961 Ashes defeat.

Ted Dexter succeeded him as captain but England continued to suffer indifferent results. In 1961–62, they beat Pakistan, but also lost to India. The following year saw England and Australia tie the 1962–63 Ashes series 1–1, meaning Australia retained the urn. Despite beating New Zealand 3–0, England went on to lose to the West Indies, and again failed in the 1964 Ashes, losing the home series 1–0, which marked the end of Dexter's captaincy.

However, from 1968 to 1971 they played 27 consecutive Test matches without defeat, winning 9 and drawing 18 (including the abandoned Test at Melbourne in 1970–71). The sequence began when they drew with Australia at Lord's in the Second Test of the 1968 Ashes series and ended in 1971 when India won the Third Test at The Oval by four wickets. They played 13 Tests with only one defeat immediately beforehand and so played a total of 40 consecutive Tests with only one defeat, dating from their innings victory over the West Indies at The Oval in 1966. During this period they beat New Zealand, India, the West Indies, and Pakistan, and under Ray Illingworth's leadership, regained The Ashes from Australia in 1970–71.

1970s edit

The 1970s, for the England team, can be largely split into three parts. Early in the decade, Illingworth's side dominated world cricket, winning the Ashes away in 1971 and then retaining them at home in 1972. The same side beat Pakistan at home in 1971 and played by far the better cricket against India that season. However, England were largely helped by the rain to sneak the Pakistan series 1–0 but the same rain saved India twice and one England collapse saw them lose to India. This was, however, one of (if not the) strongest England team ever with the likes of Illingworth, Geoffrey Boycott, John Edrich, Basil D'Oliveira, Dennis Amiss, Alan Knott, John Snow and Derek Underwood at its core.

The mid-1970s were more turbulent. Illingworth and several others had refused to tour India in 1972–73 which led to a clamour for Illingworth's job by the end of that summer – England had just been beaten 2–0 by a flamboyant West Indies side – with several England players well over 35. Mike Denness was the surprising choice but only lasted 18 months; his results against poor opposition were good, but England were badly exposed as ageing and lacking in good fast bowling against the 1974–75 Australians, losing that series 4–1 to lose the Ashes.

Denness was replaced in 1975 by Tony Greig. While he managed to avoid losing to Australia, his side were largely thrashed the following year by the young and very much upcoming West Indies for whom Greig's infamous "grovel" remark acted as motivation. Greig's finest hour was probably the 1976–77 win over India in India. When Greig was discovered as being instrumental in World Series Cricket, he was sacked, and replaced by Mike Brearley.

Brearley's side showed again the hyperbole that is often spoken when one side dominates in cricket. While his side of 1977–80 contained some young players who went on to become England greats, most notably future captains Ian Botham, David Gower and Graham Gooch, their opponents were often very much weakened by the absence of their World Series players, especially in 1978, when England beat New Zealand 3–0 and Pakistan 2–0 before thrashing what was effectively Australia's 2nd XI 5–1 in 1978–79.

1980s edit

The England team, with Brearley's exit in 1980, was never truly settled throughout the 1980s, which will probably be remembered as a low point for the team. While some of the great players like Botham, Gooch and Gower had fine careers, the team seldom succeeded in beating good opposition throughout the decade and did not score a home Test victory (except against minnows Sri Lanka) between September 1985 and July 1990.

Botham took over the captaincy in 1980 and they put up a good fight against the West Indies, losing a five match Test series 1–0, although England were humbled in the return series. After scoring a pair in the first Test against Australia, Botham lost the captaincy due to his poor form, and was replaced by Brearley. Botham returned to form and played exceptionally in the remainder of the series, being named man of the match in the third, fourth and fifth Tests. The series became known as Botham's Ashes as England recorded a 3–1 victory.

Keith Fletcher took over as captain in 1981, but England lost his first series in charge against India. Bob Willis took over as captain in 1982 and enjoyed victories over India and Pakistan, but lost the Ashes after Australia clinched the series 2–1. England hosted the World Cup in 1983 and reached the semi-finals, but their Test form remained poor, as they suffered defeats against New Zealand, Pakistan and the West Indies.

Gower took over as skipper in 1984 and led the team to a 2–1 victory over India. They went on to win the 1985 Ashes 3–1, although after this came a poor run of form. Defeat to the West Indies dented the team's confidence, and they went on to lose to India 2–0. In 1986, Micky Stewart was appointed the first full-time England coach. England beat New Zealand, but there was little hope of them retaining the Ashes in 1986–87. However, despite being described as a team that 'can't bat, can't bowl and can't field', they went on to win the series 2–1.

After losing consecutive series against Pakistan, England drew a three match Test series against New Zealand 0–0. They reached the final of the 1987 World Cup, but lost by seven runs against Australia. After losing 4–0 to the West Indies, England lost the Ashes to a resurgent Australia led by Allan Border. With the likes of Gooch banned following a rebel tour to South Africa, a new look England side suffered defeat again against the West Indies, although this time by a margin of 2–1.

1990s edit

If the 1980s were a low point for English Test cricket, then the 1990s were only a slight improvement. The arrival of Gooch as captain in 1990 forced a move toward more professionalism and especially fitness though it took some time for old habits to die. Even in 2011, one or two successful county players have been shown up as physically unfit for international cricket. Creditable performances against India and New Zealand in 1990 were followed by a hard-fought draw against the 1991 West Indies and a strong performance in the 1992 Cricket World Cup in which the England team finished as runners-up for the second consecutive World Cup, but landmark losses against Australia in 1990–91 and especially Pakistan in 1992 showed England up badly in terms of bowling. So bad was England's bowling in 1993 that Rod Marsh described England's pace attack at one point as "pie throwers". Having lost three of the first four Tests played in England in 1993, Gooch resigned to be replaced by Michael Atherton.

More selectorial problems abounded during Atherton's reign as new chairman of selectors and coach Ray Illingworth (then into his 60s) assumed almost sole responsibility for the team off the field. The youth policy which had seen England emerge from the West Indies tour of 1993–94 with some credit (though losing to a seasoned Windies team) was abandoned and players such as Gatting and Gooch were persisted with when well into their 30s and 40s. England continued to do well at home against weaker opponents such as India, New Zealand and a West Indies side beginning to fade but struggled badly against improving sides like Pakistan and South Africa. Atherton had offered his resignation after losing the 1997 Ashes series 3–2 having been 1–0 up after two matches – eventually to resign one series later in early 1998. England, looking for talent, went through a whole raft of new players during this period, such as Ronnie Irani, Adam Hollioake, Craig White, Graeme Hick and Mark Ramprakash. At this time, there were two main problems:

  • The lack of a genuine all-rounder to bat at 6, Botham having left a huge gap in the batting order when he retired from Tests in 1992.
  • Alec Stewart, a sound wicket-keeper and an excellent player of quick bowling, could not open and keep wicket, hence his batting down the order, where he was often exposed to spin which he did not play as well.

Stewart took the reins as captain in 1998, but another losing Ashes series and early World Cup exit cost him Test and ODI captaincy in 1999. This should not detract from the 1998 home Test series where England showed great fortitude to beat a powerful South African side 2–1.

Another reason for their poor performances were the demands of County Cricket teams on their players, meaning that England could rarely field a full-strength team on their tours. This eventually led to the ECB taking over from the MCC as the governing body of England and the implementation of central contracts. 1992 also saw Scotland sever ties with the England and Wales team, and begin to compete as the Scotland national team.

By 1999, with coach David Lloyd resigning after the World Cup exit and new captain Nasser Hussain just appointed, England hit rock bottom (literally ranked as the lowest-rated Test nation) after losing 2–1 to New Zealand in shambolic fashion. Hussain was booed on the Oval balcony as the crowd jeered "We've got the worst team in the world" to the tune of "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands".

2000s edit

Central contracts were installed – reducing players workloads – and following the arrival of Zimbabwean coach Duncan Fletcher, England thrashed the fallen West Indies 3–1. England's results in Asia improved that winter with series wins against both Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Hussain's side had a far harder edge to it, avoiding the anticipated "Greenwash" in the 2001 Ashes series against the all-powerful Australian team. The nucleus the side was slowly coming together as players such as Hussain himself, Graham Thorpe, Darren Gough and Ashley Giles began to be regularly selected. By 2003 though, having endured another Ashes drubbing as well as another first-round exit from the World Cup, Hussain resigned as captain after one Test against South Africa.

Michael Vaughan took over, with players encouraged to express themselves. England won five consecutive Test series prior to facing Australia in the 2005 Ashes series, taking the team to second place in the ICC Test Championship table. During this period England defeated the West Indies home and away, New Zealand, and Bangladesh at home, and South Africa in South Africa. In June 2005, England played its first ever T20 international match, defeating Australia by 100 runs. Later that year, England defeated Australia 2–1 in a thrilling series to regain the Ashes for the first time in 16 years, having lost them in 1989. Following the 2005 Ashes win, the team suffered from a spate of serious injuries to key players such as Vaughan, Giles, Andrew Flintoff and Simon Jones. As a result, the team underwent an enforced period of transition. A 2–0 defeat in Pakistan was followed by two drawn away series with India and Sri Lanka.

In the home Test series victory against Pakistan in July and August 2006, several promising new players emerged. Most notable were the left-arm orthodox spin bowler Monty Panesar, the first Sikh to play Test cricket for England, and left-handed opening batsman Alastair Cook. The 2006–07 Ashes series was keenly anticipated and was expected to provide a level of competition comparable to the 2005 series. In the event, England, captained by Flintoff who was deputising for the injured Vaughan, lost all five Tests to concede the first Ashes whitewash in 86 years.

In the 2007 Cricket World Cup, England lost to most of the Test playing nations they faced, beating only the West Indies and Bangladesh, although they also avoided defeat by any of the non-Test playing nations. Even so, the unimpressive nature of most of their victories in the tournament, combined with heavy defeats by New Zealand, Australia and South Africa, left many commentators criticising the manner in which the England team approached the one-day game. Coach Duncan Fletcher resigned after eight years in the job as a result and was succeeded by former Sussex coach Peter Moores.

In 2007–08, England toured Sri Lanka and New Zealand, losing the first series 1–0 and winning the second 2–1. These series were followed up at home in May 2008 with a 2–0 home series win against New Zealand, with the results easing pressure on Moores – who was not at ease with his team, particularly star batsman Kevin Pietersen. Pietersen succeeded Vaughan as captain in June 2008, after England had been well beaten by South Africa at home. The poor relationship between the two came to a head on the 2008–09 tour to India. England lost the series 1–0 and both men resigned their positions, although Pietersen remained a member of the England team. Moores was replaced as coach by Zimbabwean Andy Flower. Against this background, England toured the West Indies under the captaincy of Andrew Strauss and, in a disappointing performance, lost the Test series 1–0.

The 2009 Ashes series featured the first Test match played in Wales, at Sophia Gardens, Cardiff. England drew the match thanks to a last-wicket stand by bowlers James Anderson and Panesar. A victory for each team followed before the series was decided at The Oval. Thanks to fine bowling by Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann and a debut century by Jonathan Trott, England regained the Ashes.

2010s edit

 
2019 World cup winning team with prime minister Theresa May

After a drawn Test series in South Africa, England won their first ever ICC world championship, the 2010 World Twenty20, with a seven-wicket win over Australia in Barbados. The following winter in the 2010–11 Ashes, they beat Australia 3–1 to retain the urn and record their first series win in Australia for 24 years. Furthermore, all three of their wins were by an innings – the first time a touring side had ever recorded three innings victories in a single Test series. Cook earned Man of the Series with 766 runs.

England struggled to match their Test form in the 2011 Cricket World Cup. Despite beating South Africa and tying with eventual winners India, England suffered shock losses to Ireland and Bangladesh before losing in the quarter-finals to Sri Lanka.[25] However the team's excellent form in the Test match arena continued and on 13 August 2011, they became the world's top-ranked Test team after comfortably whitewashing India 4–0, their sixth consecutive series victory and eighth in the past nine series. However, this status only lasted a year – having lost 3–0 to Pakistan over the winter, England were beaten 2–0 by South Africa, who replaced them at the top of the rankings. It was their first home series loss since 2008, against the same opposition.

This loss saw the resignation of Strauss as captain (and his retirement from cricket). Cook, who was already in charge of the ODI side, replaced Strauss and led England to a 2–1 victory in India – their first in the country since 1984–85. In doing so, he became the first captain to score centuries in his first five Tests as captain and became England's leading century-maker with 23 centuries to his name.

 
The England team celebrate victory over Australia in the 2015 Ashes series

After finishing as runners-up in the ICC Champions Trophy, England faced Australia in back-to-back Ashes series. A 3–0 home win secured England the urn for the fourth time in five series. However, in the return series, they found themselves utterly demolished in a 5–0 defeat, their second Ashes whitewash in under a decade. Their misery was compounded by batsman Jonathan Trott leaving the tour early due to a stress-related illness and the mid-series retirement of spinner Graeme Swann. Following the tour, head coach Flower resigned his post while Pietersen was dropped indefinitely from the England team.[26] Flower was replaced by his predecessor, Moores, but he was sacked for a second time after a string of disappointing results including failing to advance from the group stage at the 2015 World Cup.[27] He was replaced by Australian Trevor Bayliss[28] who oversaw an upturn of form in the ODI side, including series victories against New Zealand and Pakistan. In the Test arena, England reclaimed the Ashes 3–2 in the summer of 2015.

England entered the 2019 Cricket World Cup as favourites, having been ranked the number one ODI side by the ICC for over a year prior to the tournament.[29] However, shock defeats to Pakistan and Sri Lanka during the group stage left them on the brink of elimination and needing to win their final two games against India and New Zealand to guarantee progression to the semi-finals.[30] This was achieved, putting their campaign back on track, and an eight-wicket victory over Australia in the semi-final at Edgbaston meant England were in their first World Cup final since 1992.[31] The final against New Zealand at Lord's has been described as one of the greatest and most dramatic matches in the history of cricket, with some calling it the "greatest ODI in history",[32] as both the match and subsequent Super Over were tied, after England went into the final over of their innings 14 runs behind New Zealand's total. England won by virtue of having scored more boundaries throughout the match, securing their maiden World Cup title in their fourth final appearance.

[33][34]

2020s edit

Recent results edit

HOME AWAY
Test One Day International Twenty20 International Test One Day International Twenty20 International
Last match won 5th Test v Australia 2023 2nd ODI v South Africa 2022 1st T20I v South Africa 2022 1st Test v New Zealand 2023 2nd ODI v Bangladesh 2023 World Cup Final v Pakistan 2022
Last match lost 2nd Test v Australia 2023 1st ODI v South Africa 2022 3rd T20I v South Africa 2022 2nd Test v New Zealand 2023 3rd ODI v Bangladesh 2023 3rd T20I v Bangladesh 2023
Last series won South Africa 2022 Pakistan 2021 Sri Lanka 2021 Pakistan 2022–23 Bangladesh 2023 2022 World Cup
Last series lost New Zealand 2021 India 2022 South Africa 2022 West Indies 2021–22 Australia 2022–23 Bangladesh 2023
Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 12 September 2022. Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 12 September 2022. Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 12 September 2022. Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 28 February 2023. Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 10 March 2023. Source: ESPNcricinfo.com. Last updated: 14 March 2023.

Forthcoming fixtures edit

As set out by the ICC's Future Tours Programme, below is England's full international fixture list until the end of the 2024 international season.[35][36]

Winter 2023–24

Summer 2024

Governing body edit

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is the governing body of English cricket and the England cricket team. The Board has been operating since 1 January 1997 and represents England on the International Cricket Council. The ECB is also responsible for the generation of income from the sale of tickets, sponsorship and broadcasting rights, primarily in relation to the England team. The ECB's income in the 2006 calendar year was £77 million.[37]

Prior to 1997, the Test and County Cricket Board (TCCB) was the governing body for the English team. Apart from in Test matches, when touring abroad, the England team officially played as MCC up to and including the 1976–77 tour of Australia, reflecting the time when MCC had been responsible for selecting the touring party. The last time the England touring team wore the bacon-and-egg colours of the MCC was on the 1996–97 tour of New Zealand.

Status of Wales edit

Historically, the England team represented the whole of Great Britain in international cricket, with Scottish or Welsh national teams playing sporadically and players from both countries occasionally representing England. Scotland became an independent member of the ICC in 1994, having severed links with the TCCB two years earlier.[38][39][40][41]

Criticism has been made of the England and Wales Cricket Board using only the England name while utilising Welsh players[41][40] such as Simon and Geraint Jones. With Welsh players pursuing international careers exclusively with an England team, there have been a number of calls for Wales to become an independent member of the ICC, or for the ECB to provide more fixtures for a Welsh national team.[42] However, both Cricket Wales and Glamorgan County Cricket Club have continually supported the ECB, with Glamorgan arguing for the financial benefits of the Welsh county within the English structure, and Cricket Wales stating they are "committed to continuing to play a major role within the ECB"[43][44][45]

The absence of a Welsh cricket team has seen a number of debates within the Welsh Senedd. In 2013 a debate saw both Conservative and Labour members lend their support to the establishment of an independent Welsh team.[46]

In 2015, a report produced by the Welsh National Assembly's petitions committee, reflected the passionate debate around the issue. Bethan Jenkins, Plaid Cymru's spokesperson on heritage, culture, sport and broadcasting, and a member of the petitions committee, argued that Wales should have its own international team and withdraw from the ECB. Jenkins noted that Ireland (with a population of 6.4 million) was an ICC member with 6,000 club players whereas Wales (with 3 million) had 7,500. Jenkins said: "Cricket Wales and Glamorgan CCC say the idea of a Welsh national cricket team is 'an emotive subject', of course having a national team is emotive, you only have to look at the stands during any national game to see that. To suggest this as anything other than natural is a bit of a misleading argument."[47][48][49][50][51][52]

In 2017, the First Minister of Wales, Carwyn Jones called for the reintroduction of the Welsh one-day team stating: "[It] is odd that we see Ireland and Scotland playing in international tournaments and not Wales."[53][54]

Team colours edit

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1994–1996 Tetley Bitter
1996–1998 ASICS
1998–2000 Vodafone
2000–2008 Admiral
2008–2010 Adidas
2010–2014 Brit Insurance
2014–2017 Waitrose
2017–2021 New Balance NatWest
2021–2022 Cinch
2022–present Castore

In February 2021, the England and Wales Cricket Board announced that England's principal partner NatWest has been replaced by Cinch, an online used car marketplace.[55] England's kit is manufactured by Castore, who replaced previous manufacturer New Balance in April 2022.[56]

When playing Test cricket, England's cricket whites feature the three lions badge on the left of the shirt and the name of the sponsor Cinch on the centre. English fielders may wear a navy blue cap or white sun hat with the ECB logo in the middle. Helmets are also coloured navy blue. Before 1997 the uniform sported the TCCB lion and stumps logo on the uniforms, while the helmets, jumpers and hats had the three lions emblem.[57] Before 1996, the caps used in test touring squads featured a crest deptcting St. George and a dragon.[58]

In limited overs cricket, England's ODI and Twenty20 shirts feature the Cinch logo across the centre, with the three lions badge on the left of the shirt and the New Balance logo on the right. In ODIs, the kit comprises a blue shirt with navy trousers, whilst the Twenty20 kit comprises a flame red shirt and navy trousers. In ICC limited-overs tournaments, a modified kit design is used with sponsor's logo moving to the sleeve and 'ENGLAND' printed across the front.

Over the years, England's ODI kit has cycled between various shades of blue (such as a pale blue used until the mid-1990s, when it was replaced in favour of a bright blue)[59][60] with the occasional all-red kit.[61]

In April 2017, the ECB brought back the traditional cable-knit sweater for test matches under new supplier New Balance.[62]

International grounds edit

class=notpageimage|
Locations of current international cricket grounds in England and Wales

Listed chronologically in order of first match and include neutral fixtures such as World Cup and Champions Trophy games

Venue City County team Capacity Years used Test ODI T20I
Current venues
The Oval London Surrey 26,000 1880– 102 74 16
Old Trafford Manchester Lancashire 26,000 1884– 82 55 10
Lord's London Middlesex 28,000 1884– 140 67 10
Trent Bridge Nottingham Nottinghamshire 17,500 1899– 63 49 12
Headingley Leeds Yorkshire 17,500 1899– 78 45 1
Edgbaston Birmingham Warwickshire 25,000 1902– 53 64 5
Riverside Ground Chester-le-Street Durham 19,000 1999– 6 20 3
Sophia Gardens Cardiff Glamorgan 15,500 1999– 3 29 8
Rose Bowl Southampton Hampshire 25,000 2003– 7 31 9
County Ground Taunton Somerset 12,500 1983– 6 1
County Ground Bristol Gloucestershire 17,500 1983– 19 3
Former venues
Bramall Lane Sheffield Yorkshire 32,000 1902 1
St. Helen's Swansea Glamorgan 4,500 1973–1983 2
North Marine Road Ground Scarborough Yorkshire 11,500 1976–1978 2
Grace Road Leicester Leicestershire 12,000 1983–1999 3
New Road Worcester Worcestershire 5,500 1983–1999 3
County Ground Southampton Hampshire 7,000 1983–1999 3
County Ground Derby Derbyshire 9,500 1983–1999 2
Nevill Ground Tunbridge Wells Kent 6,000 1983 1
County Ground Chelmsford Essex 6,500 1983–1999 3
St Lawrence Ground Canterbury Kent 15,000 1999–2005 4
County Ground Northampton Northamptonshire 6,500 1999 2
As of 18 July 2021[63]

Tournament history edit

Key
Champions
Runners-up
Third place
Fourth place

  Indicates tournaments played within England

ICC World Test Championship edit

ICC World Test Championship record
Year League stage Final Host Final Final Position
Pos Matches Ded PC Pts PCT
P W L D T
2019–21[64] 4/9 21 11 7 3 0 0 720 442 61.4 Rose Bowl, England DNQ 4th
2021–23[65] 4/9 22 10 8 4 0 12 264 124 47 The Oval, England DNQ 4th

ICC Cricket World Cup edit

World Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR Win %
  1975 Semi-final 3/8 4 3 1 0 0 75.00
  1979 Runners-up 2/8 5 4 1 0 0 80.00
  1983 Semi-final 3/8 7 5 2 0 0 71.43
    1987 Runners-up 2/8 8 5 3 0 0 62.50
    1992 2/9 10 6 3 0 1 66.67
      1996 Quarter-final 8/12 6 2 4 0 0 33.33
          1999 Pool stage 5 3 2 0 0 60.00
      2003 Pool stage 9/14 6 3 3 0 0 50.00
  2007 Super 8 5/16 9 5 4 0 0 55.55
      2011 Quarter-final 7/14 7 3 3 1 0 50.00
    2015 Pool stage 10/14 6 2 4 0 0 33.33
    2019 Champions 1/10 11 8 3 0 0 68.18
  2023 Pool Stage 7/10 9 3 6 0 0 33.33
      2027 TBD
    2031
Total 1 title 13/13 93 52 39 1 1 56.45
*The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win.

ICC T20 World Cup edit

T20 World Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR Win %
  2007 Super 8 7/12 5 1 4 0 0 20.00
  2009 6/12 5 2 3 0 0 40.00
  2010 Champions 1/12 7 5 1 0 1 83.33
  2012 Super 8 6/12 5 2 3 0 0 40.00
  2014 Super 10 7/16 4 1 3 0 0 25.00
  2016 Runners-up 2/16 6 4 2 0 0 66.67
    2021 Semi-final 4/16 6 4 2 0 0 66.67
  2022 Champions 1/16 7 5 1 0 1 83.33
    2024 Qualified
    2026 TBD
    2028
        2030 Qualified as co-hosts
Total 2 titles 8/8 45 25 19 0 2 55.55
*The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win.

ICC Champions Trophy edit

Champions Trophy record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR Win %
  1998 Quarter-final 5/9 1 0 1 0 0 0.00
  2000 7/11 1 0 1 0 0 0.00
  2002 Pool stage 6/12 2 1 1 0 0 50.00
  2004 Runners-up 2/12 4 3 1 0 0 75.00
  2006 Pool stage 7/10 3 1 2 0 0 33.33
  2009 Semi-final 4/8 4 2 2 0 0 50.00
  2013 Runners-up 2/8 5 3 2 0 0 60.00
  2017 Semi-final 3/8 4 3 1 0 0 75.00
  2025 Qualified
Total 0 titles 8/8 24 13 11 0 0 54.17
*The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win.

Other tournaments edit

Summer Olympics edit

Summer Olympics record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR Win %
  1900 Champions 1/2 1 1 0 0 0 100.00
Total 1 title 1/1 1 1 0 0 0 100.00
*The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win.

Honours edit

ICC edit

Other edit

Records edit

Test matches edit

Test team records edit

  • Highest team total: 903–7 dec. v. Australia at The Oval in 1938
  • Lowest team total: 45 v. Australia at Sydney in 1886/87
  • England are the only team in the history of Test cricket to have secured 100 victories by an innings.[66]

Test individual records edit

Test batting records edit

Test bowling records edit

  • Most wickets: 690 – James Anderson
  • Best average: 10.75 – George Lohmann
  • Best innings bowling: 10/53 – Jim Laker v. Australia at Old Trafford in 1956
  • Best match bowling: 19/90 – Jim Laker v. Australia at Old Trafford in 1956
  • Best strike rate: 34.1 – George Lohmann
  • Best economy rate: 1.31 – William Attewell
  • Five England bowlers have taken four wickets in an over, three of these at Headingley. They were Maurice Allom v. New Zealand at Christchurch in 1929–30, Kenneth Cranston v. South Africa at Headingley in 1947, Fred Titmus v. New Zealand at Headingley in 1965, Chris Old v. Pakistan at Edgbaston in 1978 and Andy Caddick v. West Indies at Headingley in 2000.

Test fielding records edit

Test record versus other nations edit

Opponent M W L T D % Win First win
  Australia 361 112 152 0 97 31.02 4 April 1877
  South Africa 156 66 35 0 55 42.31 13 March 1889
  West Indies 163 51 59 0 53 31.29 26 June 1928
  New Zealand 112 52 13 0 46 46.43 13 January 1930
  India 131 50 31 0 50 38.16 28 June 1932
  Pakistan 89 29 21 0 39 32.58 5 July 1954
  Sri Lanka 36 17 8 0 11 47.22 21 February 1982
  Zimbabwe 6 3 0 0 3 50.00 21 May 2000
  Ireland 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 26 July 2019
  Bangladesh 10 9 1 0 0 90.00 25 October 2003
  Afghanistan Yet to play
Records complete to Test #2515. Last updated: 31 July 2023.[71]

One Day Internationals edit

ODI team records edit

ODI individual records edit

  • Most matches: 225 – Eoin Morgan
  • Longest-serving captain: 126 matches – Eoin Morgan[72]

ODI batting records edit

  • Most runs: 6,957 – Eoin Morgan
  • Best average: 51.25 – Jonathan Trott
  • Best strike rate: 117.97 – Jos Buttler
  • Highest individual score: 182 – Ben Stokes v. New Zealand at Kia Oval, London in 2023
  • Record partnership: 256* – Alex Hales and Jason Roy v. Sri Lanka at Edgbaston in 2016
  • Most centuries: 16 – Joe Root
  • Most ducks: 15 – Eoin Morgan

ODI bowling records edit

ODI fielding records edit

  • Most catches by an outfielder: 108 – Paul Collingwood
  • Most dismissals as wicketkeeper: 238 – Jos Buttler
  • Most dismissals in a match: 6 – Alec Stewart v. Zimbabwe at Old Trafford in 2000; Matt Prior v. South Africa at Trent Bridge in 2008; Jos Buttler v. South Africa at The Oval in 2013

ODI record versus other nations edit

Opponent M W L T NR % Win First win
v. Test nations
  Afghanistan 3 2 1 0 0 66.67 13 March 2015
  Australia 156 63 88 2 3 40.38 24 August 1972
  Bangladesh 25 20 5 0 0 80.00 5 October 2000
  India 107 44 58 2 3 41.12 13 July 1974
  Ireland 15 11 2 0 2 73.33 13 June 2006
  New Zealand 96 44 45 3 4 45.83 18 July 1973
  Pakistan 91 56 32 0 3 63.63 23 December 1977
  South Africa 70 30 34 1 5 42.86 12 March 1992
  Sri Lanka 79 38 37 1 3 48.10 13 February 1982
  West Indies 102 52 44 0 6 54.16 5 September 1973
  Zimbabwe 30 21 8 0 1 72.41 7 January 1995
v. Associate Members
  Canada 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 13 June 1979
  East Africa 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 14 June 1975
  Kenya 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 18 May 1999
  Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 19 February 2003
  Netherlands 6 6 0 0 0 100.00 22 February 1996
  Scotland 5 3 1 0 1 75.00 19 June 2010
  United Arab Emirates 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 18 February 1996
Last updated 4 November 2023. Win percentages exclude no-results and count ties as half a win.[73]

T20 Internationals edit

Figures include games up to 13 November 2022.

T20I team records edit

T20I individual records edit

  • Most matches: 115 – Eoin Morgan
  • Longest-serving captain: 72 matches – Eoin Morgan

T20I batting records edit

T20I bowling records edit

T20I fielding records edit

  • Most catches by an outfielder: 46 – Eoin Morgan
  • Most dismissals as wicket-keeper: 64 – Jos Buttler [a]
  • Most dismissals in an innings: 4 – Matt Prior v. South Africa at Cape Town in 2007

T20I record versus other nations edit

Opponent M W L T+W T+L NR % Win First win
v. Test nations
  Afghanistan 3 3 0 0 0 0 100.00 21 September 2012
  Australia 23 11 10 0 0 2 47.82 13 June 2005
  Bangladesh 4 1 3 0 0 0 25.00 27 October 2021
  India 23 11 12 0 0 0 47.82 14 June 2009
  Ireland 2 0 1 0 0 1 0.00
  New Zealand 23 13 8 1 0 1 56.52 5 February 2008
  Pakistan 29 18 9 1 0 1 66.07 7 June 2009
  South Africa 25 12 12 0 0 1 50.00 13 November 2009
  Sri Lanka 14 10 4 0 0 0 71.43 13 May 2010
  West Indies 24 10 14 0 0 0 41.67 29 June 2007
  Zimbabwe 1 1 0 0 0 0 100.00 13 September 2007
v. Associate Members
  Netherlands 2 0 2 0 0 0 0.00
Records complete to T20I #2026, 14 March 2023. T+W and T+L indicate matches tied and then won or lost in a tiebreaker (such as a Super Over). Win percentages exclude no-results and count ties (irrespective of tiebreakers) as half a win.[74]

Most England appearances edit

These lists show the five players (or those tied for fifth) with the most appearances for England in each form of the game. The lists are correct up to match starting on 11 November 2023.

  • = players who are available for selection and have represented England in the format during the past 12 months.
Most Test caps[75]
183 James Anderson
167 Stuart Broad
161 Alastair Cook
135 Joe Root
133 Alec Stewart
Most ODI caps[76]
225 Eoin Morgan
197 Paul Collingwood
194 James Anderson
178 Jos Buttler
171 Joe Root
Most T20I caps[77]
115 Eoin Morgan
109 Jos Buttler
99 Adil Rashid
88 Chris Jordan
78 Moeen Ali

Current squad edit

This lists all the active players who are contracted to or have played for England in the past year (since 3 December 2022) and the forms in which they have played, and any players (in italics) outside this criteria who have been selected in the team's most recent Test, ODI or T20I squad.

The ECB offers a number of contracts in October each year to England players which covers both red-ball and white-ball players, considers the likelihood of players featuring in England teams across formats over the next period while recognising performances in the preceding year.[78] Multi-year contracts have been awarded for the first time since central contracts were established in 2000.

Moeen Ali, Stuart Broad and David Willey have made international appearances during this period however have announced their retirements from Test cricket, cricket and International cricket respectively.

Key

  • No = Shirt number
  • Con[78] = Contract type (Central / Development)
Name Age Batting style Bowling style Domestic team Con Forms No Captaincy Last Test Last ODI Last T20I
Batters
Harry Brook 24 Right-handed Right-arm medium Yorkshire C Test, ODI, T20I 88   2023   2023   2023
Zak Crawley 25 Right-handed Kent C Test, ODI 6   2023   2023
Ben Duckett 29 Left-handed Nottinghamshire C Test, ODI, T20I 17   2023   2023   2023
Sam Hain 28 Right-handed Warwickshire ODI 48   2023
Dawid Malan 36 Left-handed Right-arm leg spin Yorkshire C ODI, T20I 29   2022   2023   2023
Ollie Pope 25 Right-handed Surrey C Test, ODI 80 Test (VC)   2023
Joe Root 32 Right-handed Right-arm off break/leg spin Yorkshire C Test, ODI 66   2023   2023   2019
Phil Salt 27 Right-handed Lancashire ODI, T20I 61   2023   2023
All-rounders
Rehan Ahmed 19 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Leicestershire C ODI, T20I 53   2022   2023   2023
Moeen Ali 36 Left-handed Right-arm off break Warwickshire C ODI, T20I 18 T20I (VC)   2023   2023   2023
Brydon Carse 28 Right-handed Right-arm fast Durham C ODI, T20I 92   2023   2023
Sam Curran 25 Left-handed Left-arm medium-fast Surrey C ODI, T20I 58   2021   2023   2023
Will Jacks 25 Right-handed Right-arm off break Surrey ODI, T20I 85   2022   2023   2023
Liam Livingstone 30 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin/off break Lancashire C ODI, T20I 23   2022   2023   2023
Ben Stokes 32 Left-handed Right-arm fast-medium Durham C Test, ODI 55 Test (C)   2023   2023   2022
Chris Woakes 34 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Warwickshire C Test, ODI, T20I 19   2023   2023   2023
Luke Wood 28 Left-handed Left-arm fast-medium Lancashire ODI, T20I 77   2023   2023
Wicket-keepers
Jonny Bairstow 34 Right-handed Yorkshire C Test, ODI, T20I 51   2023   2023   2023
Jos Buttler 33 Right-handed Lancashire C ODI, T20I 63 ODI and T20I (C)   2022   2023   2023
Ben Foakes 30 Right-handed Surrey C Test 50   2023   2019   2019
Jamie Smith 23 Right-handed Surrey ODI 39   2023
Pace bowlers
James Anderson 41 Left-handed Right-arm fast-medium Lancashire C Test 9   2023   2015   2009
Jofra Archer 28 Right-handed Right-arm fast Sussex C 22   2021   2023   2023
Gus Atkinson 25 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Surrey C ODI, T20I 37   2023   2023
Matthew Fisher 26 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Yorkshire D 40   2022
Chris Jordan 35 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Surrey T20I 34   2015   2022   2023
Saqib Mahmood 26 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Lancashire D 25   2022   2023   2022
Tymal Mills 31 Right-handed Left-arm fast Sussex T20I 72   2022
Matthew Potts 25 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Durham C Test, ODI 35   2023   2023
Ollie Robinson 30 Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast Sussex C Test 45   2023
George Scrimshaw 25 Right-handed Right-arm medium fast Derbyshire ODI 52   2023
Josh Tongue 26 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Nottinghamshire C Test 56   2023
Reece Topley 29 Right-handed Left-arm fast-medium Surrey C ODI, T20I 38   2023   2022
John Turner 22 Right-handed Right-arm fast-medium Hampshire D ODI, T20I
Mark Wood 33 Right-handed Right-arm fast Durham C Test, ODI 33   2023   2023   2023
Spin bowlers
Tom Hartley 24 Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Lancashire ODI 79   2023
Jack Leach 32 Left-handed Slow left-arm orthodox Somerset C Test 77   2023
Adil Rashid 35 Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Yorkshire C ODI, T20I 95   2019   2023   2023

Coaching staff edit

Test edit

Position Name
Head coach Brendon McCullum
Assistant coach Paul Collingwood
Assistant coach Marcus Trescothick
Spin bowling coach Jeetan Patel
Pace bowling coach Neil Killeen

Limited overs edit

Position Name
Head coach Matthew Mott
Assistant coach Richard Dawson
Assistant coach David Saker
Assistant coach Carl Hopkinson

England Men's Cricketer of the Year edit

At the start of each season the ECB presents the England Men's Cricketer of the Year award to "recognise outstanding performances in all formats of international cricket over the past year",[79] voted on by members of the cricket media.[80]

The previous winners of this award are:

Eligibility of players edit

The England cricket team represents England and Wales. However, under ICC regulations,[88] players can qualify to play for a country by nationality, place of birth or residence, so (as with any national sports team) some people are eligible to play for more than one team. ECB regulations[89] state that to play for England, a player must be a British citizen, and have either been born in England or Wales, or have lived in England or Wales for three years. This has led to players who also held other nationalities becoming eligible to play for England. The qualification period for those born outside England and Wales has varied in the past, but in November 2018 the ECB announced that the period would be reduced to three years in all circumstances, in line with ICC regulations.[90]

Of the current squad (see above), Jason Roy was born to British parents in South Africa so had to fulfil residency requirements. In addition, Chris Jordan and Ben Stokes have British citizenship, having lived in England since their youth. Jofra Archer, though born in Barbados to a Barbadian mother, qualifies through his English father. Brydon Carse were both born in South Africa and had to serve qualification periods after arriving in England having already played top-level cricket in the country of their birth.

ICC regulations also allow cricketers who represent associate (i.e. non-Test-playing) nations to switch to a Test-playing nation, provided nationality requirements are fulfilled. In recent years, this has seen Irish internationals Ed Joyce, Boyd Rankin and Eoin Morgan switch to represent England (before Ireland were promoted to full member status in 2018), whilst Gavin Hamilton previously played for Scotland – though Joyce, Rankin and Hamilton were later able to re-qualify for and represent the countries of their birth.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Some sources list Butler with 65 dismissals as keeper

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Waghorn, H. T. (1899). Cricket Scores, Notes, etc. (1730–1773). Blackwood.

External links edit

  • Official website  

england, cricket, team, this, article, about, team, women, team, england, women, cricket, team, england, cricket, team, represents, england, wales, international, cricket, since, 1997, been, governed, england, wales, cricket, board, having, been, previously, g. This article is about the men s team For the women s team see England women s cricket team The England men s cricket team represents England and Wales in international cricket Since 1997 it has been governed by the England and Wales Cricket Board ECB having been previously governed by Marylebone Cricket Club the MCC since 1903 8 9 England as a founding nation is a Full Member of the International Cricket Council ICC with Test One Day International ODI and Twenty20 International T20I status Until the 1990s Scottish and Irish players also played for England as those countries were not yet ICC members in their own right EnglandAssociationEngland and Wales Cricket BoardPersonnelTest captainBen StokesOne Day captainJos ButtlerT20I captainJos ButtlerCoachTest Brendon McCullum ODI Matthew Mott T20I Matthew MottHistoryTest status acquired1877International Cricket CouncilICC statusFull Member 1909 ICC regionEuropeICC RankingsCurrent 1 Best everTest3rd1st 1 June 1955 ODI6th1st 1 January 1981 T20I2nd1st 24 October 2011 TestsFirst Testv Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground Melbourne 15 19 March 1877Last Testv Australia at The Oval London 27 31 July 2023TestsPlayedWon LostTotal 2 1 066391 320 355 draws This year 3 84 3 1 draw World Test Championship appearances2 first in 2019 2021 Best resultFourth place 2019 2021 2021 2023 One Day InternationalsFirst ODIv Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground Melbourne 5 January 1971Last ODIv West Indies at Sir Vivian Richards Stadium Antigua 3 December 2023ODIsPlayedWon LostTotal 4 795399 356 9 ties 31 no results This year 5 2210 11 0 ties 1 no result World Cup appearances13 first in 1975 Best resultChampions 2019 Twenty20 InternationalsFirst T20Iv Australia at the Ageas Bowl Southampton 13 June 2005Last T20Iv New Zealand at Trent Bridge Nottingham 5 September 2023T20IsPlayedWon LostTotal 6 17792 77 2 ties 6 no results This year 7 72 5 0 ties 0 no results T20 World Cup appearances8 first in 2007 Best resultChampions 2010 2022 Test kitODI kitT20I kitAs of 3 December 2023England and Australia were the first teams to play a Test match 15 19 March 1877 and along with South Africa these nations formed the Imperial Cricket Conference the predecessor to today s International Cricket Council on 15 June 1909 England and Australia also played the first ODI on 5 January 1971 England s first T20I was played on 13 June 2005 once more against Australia As of 3 December 2023 update England have played 1 066 Test matches winning 391 and losing 320 with 355 draws 10 In the Test series against Australia England play for The Ashes one of the most famous trophies in all of sport and they have won the urn on 32 occasions England have also played 795 ODIs winning 399 11 They have appeared in the final of the Cricket World Cup four times 1979 1987 1992 and winning their first in 2019 they have also finished as runners up in two ICC Champions Trophies 2004 and 2013 England have played 177 T20Is winning 92 12 They won the ICC T20 World Cup in 2010 and 2022 and were runners up in 2016 They are the current World champions in both ODIs and T20Is as of May 2023 update and were the first team to hold both titles concurrently As of 19 November 2023 update England are ranked third in Tests sixth in ODIs and second in T20Is by the ICC 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early tours 1 2 1880s 1 3 1890s 1 4 1900s 1 5 1910s 1 6 1920s 1 7 1930s 1 8 1940s 1 9 1950s 1 10 1960s 1 11 1970s 1 12 1980s 1 13 1990s 1 14 2000s 1 15 2010s 1 16 2020s 1 17 Recent results 2 Forthcoming fixtures 3 Governing body 3 1 Status of Wales 4 Team colours 5 International grounds 6 Tournament history 6 1 ICC World Test Championship 6 2 ICC Cricket World Cup 6 3 ICC T20 World Cup 6 4 ICC Champions Trophy 6 5 Other tournaments 6 5 1 Summer Olympics 7 Honours 7 1 ICC 7 2 Other 8 Records 8 1 Test matches 8 1 1 Test team records 8 1 2 Test individual records 8 1 3 Test batting records 8 1 4 Test bowling records 8 1 5 Test fielding records 8 1 6 Test record versus other nations 8 2 One Day Internationals 8 2 1 ODI team records 8 2 2 ODI individual records 8 2 3 ODI batting records 8 2 4 ODI bowling records 8 2 5 ODI fielding records 8 2 6 ODI record versus other nations 8 3 T20 Internationals 8 3 1 T20I team records 8 3 2 T20I individual records 8 3 3 T20I batting records 8 3 4 T20I bowling records 8 3 5 T20I fielding records 8 3 6 T20I record versus other nations 8 4 Most England appearances 9 Current squad 10 Coaching staff 10 1 Test 10 2 Limited overs 11 England Men s Cricketer of the Year 12 Eligibility of players 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 15 1 Bibliography 16 External linksHistory editMain articles History of the England cricket team to 1939 and History of the England cricket team from 1945 nbsp The All England Eleven in 1846The first recorded incidence of a team with a claim to represent England comes from 9 July 1739 when an All England team which consisted of 11 gentlemen from any part of England exclusive of Kent played against the Unconquerable County of Kent and lost by a margin of very few notches 13 Such matches were repeated on numerous occasions for the best part of a century In 1846 William Clarke formed the All England Eleven This team eventually competed against a United All England Eleven with annual matches occurring between 1847 and 1856 These matches were arguably the most important contest of the English season if judged by the quality of the players Early tours edit nbsp The 1859 English team to North America The first overseas tour occurred in September 1859 with England touring North America This team had six players from the All England Eleven six from the United All England Eleven and was captained by George Parr With the outbreak of the American Civil War attention turned elsewhere English tourists visited Australia in 1861 62 with this first tour organised as a commercial venture by Messrs Spiers and Pond restaurateurs of Melbourne Most matches played during tours prior to 1877 were against odds with the opposing team fielding more than 11 players to make for a more even contest 14 This first Australian tour was mostly against odds of at least 18 11 nbsp The first England team to tour southern Australia in 1861 62The tour was so successful that Parr led a second tour in 1863 64 James Lillywhite led a subsequent England team which sailed on the P amp O steamship Poonah on 21 September 1876 They played a combined Australian XI for once on even terms of 11 a side The match starting on 15 March 1877 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground came to be regarded as the inaugural Test match The combined Australian XI won this Test match by 45 runs with Charles Bannerman of Australia scoring the first Test century At the time the match was promoted as James Lillywhite s XI v Combined Victoria and New South Wales 14 The teams played a return match on the same ground at Easter 1877 when Lillywhite s team avenged their loss with a victory by four wickets The first Test match on English soil occurred in 1880 with England victorious this was the first time England fielded a fully representative side with W G Grace included in the team 15 1880s edit nbsp The death notice printed on The Sporting Times newspaper which first named the Ashes England lost their first home series 1 0 in 1882 with The Sporting Times printing an obituary on English cricket In Affectionate RemembranceOFENGLISH CRICKET WHICH DIED AT THE OVALON29th AUGUST 1882 Deeply lamented by a large circle of sorrowingfriends and acquaintances R I P N B The body will be cremated and theashes taken to Australia 16 As a result of this loss the tour of 1882 83 was dubbed by England captain Ivo Bligh as the quest to regain the ashes England with a mixture of amateurs and professionals won the series 2 1 17 Bligh was presented with an urn that contained some ashes which have variously been said to be of a bail ball or even a woman s veil and so The Ashes was born A fourth match was then played which Australia won by four wickets However the match was not considered part of the Ashes series 17 18 England dominated many of these early contests with England winning the Ashes series 10 times between 1884 and 1898 19 During this period England also played their first Test match against South Africa in 1889 at Port Elizabeth 20 1890s edit England won the 1890 Ashes series 2 0 with the third match of the series being the first Test match to be abandoned England lost 2 1 in the 1891 92 series although England regained the urn the following year England again won the 1894 95 series winning 3 2 under the leadership of Andrew Stoddart In 1895 96 England played South Africa winning all Tests in the series The 1899 Ashes series was the first tour where the MCC and the counties appointed a selection committee There were three active players Grace Lord Hawke and Warwickshire captain Herbert Bainbridge Prior to this England teams for home Tests had been chosen by the club on whose ground the match was to be played England lost the 1899 Ashes series 1 0 with Grace making his final Test appearance in the first match of the series 1900s edit The start of the 20th century saw mixed results for England as they lost four of the eight Ashes series between 1900 and 1914 21 During this period England lost their first series against South Africa in the 1905 06 season 4 1 as their batting faltered 22 England lost their first series of the new century to Australia in 1901 02 Ashes Australia also won the 1902 series which was memorable for exciting cricket including Gilbert Jessop scoring a Test century in just 70 minutes England regained the Ashes in 1904 under the captaincy of Pelham Warner R E Foster scored 287 on his debut and Wilfred Rhodes took 15 wickets in a match In 1905 06 England lost 4 1 against South Africa England avenged the defeat in 1907 when they won the series 1 0 under the captaincy of Foster However they lost the 1909 Ashes series against Australia using 25 players in the process England also lost to South Africa with Jack Hobbs scoring his first of 15 centuries on the tour 1910s edit England toured Australia in 1911 12 and beat their opponents 4 1 The team included the likes of Rhodes Hobbs Frank Woolley and Sydney Barnes England lost the first match of the series but bounced back and won the next four Tests This proved to be the last Ashes series before the war The 1912 season saw England take part in a unique experiment A nine Test triangular tournament involving England South Africa and Australia was set up The series was hampered by a very wet summer and player disputes however and the tournament was considered a failure with the Daily Telegraph stating 23 Nine Tests provide a surfeit of cricket and contests between Australia and South Africa are not a great attraction to the British public With Australia sending a weakened team and the South African bowlers being ineffective England dominated the tournament winning four of their six matches The match between Australia and South Africa at Lord s was visited by King George V the first time a reigning monarch had watched Test cricket 24 England went on one more tour before the outbreak of the First World War beating South Africa 4 0 with Barnes taking 49 wickets in the series 1920s edit nbsp English cricket team at the Test match at the Brisbane Exhibition Ground in 1928 England won by a record margin of 675 runs England s first match after the war was in the 1920 21 season against Australia Still feeling the effects of the war England went down to a series of crushing defeats and suffered their first whitewash losing the series 5 0 Six Australians scored hundreds while Mailey spun out 36 English batsmen Things were no better in the next few Ashes series losing the 1921 Ashes series 3 0 and the 1924 25 Ashes 4 1 England s fortunes were to change in 1926 as they regained the Ashes and were a formidable team during this period dispatching Australia 4 1 in the 1928 29 Ashes tour In the same year the West Indies became the fourth nation to be granted Test status and played their first game against England England won each of these three Tests by an innings and a view was expressed in the press that their elevation had proved a mistake although Learie Constantine did the double on the tour In the 1929 30 season England went on two concurrent tours with one team going to New Zealand who were granted Test status earlier that year and the other to the West Indies Despite sending two separate teams England won both tours beating New Zealand 1 0 and the West Indies 2 1 1930s edit nbsp Bill Woodfull evades a Bodyline ball Note the number of leg side fielders The 1930 Ashes series saw a young Don Bradman dominate the tour scoring 974 runs in his seven Test innings He scored 254 at Lord s 334 at Headingley and 232 at The Oval Australia regained the Ashes winning the series 3 1 As a result of Bradman s prolific run scoring the England captain Douglas Jardine chose to develop the already existing leg theory into fast leg theory or bodyline as a tactic to stop Bradman Fast leg theory involved bowling fast balls directly at the batsman s body The batsman would need to defend himself and if he touched the ball with the bat he risked being caught by one of a large number of fielders placed on the leg side Using Jardine s fast leg theory England won the next Ashes series 4 1 but complaints about the Bodyline tactic caused crowd disruption on the tour and threats of diplomatic action from the Australian Cricket Board which during the tour sent the following cable to the MCC in London Bodyline bowling assumed such proportions as to menace best interests of game making protection of body by batsmen the main consideration Causing intensely bitter feeling between players as well as injury In our opinion is unsportsmanlike Unless stopped at once likely to upset friendly relations existing between Australia and England Later Jardine was removed from the captaincy and the Laws of Cricket changed so that no more than one fast ball aimed at the body was permitted per over and having more than two fielders behind square leg was banned England s following tour of India in the 1933 34 season was the first Test match to be staged in the subcontinent The series was also notable for Stan Nichols and Nobby Clark bowling so many bouncers that the Indian batsman wore solar toupees instead of caps to protect themselves Australia won the 1934 Ashes series 2 1 and kept the urn for the following 19 years Many of the wickets of the time were friendly to batsmen resulting in a large proportion of matches ending in high scoring draws and many batting records being set England drew the 1938 Ashes meaning Australia retained the urn England went into the final match of the series at The Oval 1 0 down but won the final game by an innings and 579 runs Len Hutton made the highest ever Test score by an Englishman making 364 in England first innings to help them reach 903 their highest ever score against Australia The 1938 39 tour of South Africa saw another experiment with the deciding Test being a timeless Test that was played to a finish England lead 1 0 going into the final timeless match at Durban Despite the final Test being timeless the game ended in a draw after 10 days as England had to catch the train to catch the boat home A record 1 981 runs were scored and the concept of timeless Tests was abandoned England went on one final tour of the West Indies in 1939 before the Second World War although a team for an MCC tour of India was selected more in hope than expectation of the matches being played 1940s edit Test cricket resumed after the war in 1946 and England won their first match back against India However they struggled in the 1946 47 Ashes series losing 3 0 in Australia under Wally Hammond s captaincy England beat South Africa 3 0 in 1947 with Denis Compton scoring 1 187 runs in the series The 1947 48 series against the West Indies was another disappointment for England with the side losing 2 0 following injuries to several key players England suffered further humiliation against Bradman s invincible side in the 1948 Ashes series Hutton was controversially dropped for the third Test and England were bowled out for just 52 at The Oval The series proved to be Bradman s final Ashes series In 1948 49 England beat South Africa 2 0 under the captaincy of George Mann The series included a record breaking stand of 359 between Hutton and Cyril Washbrook The decade ended with England drawing the Test series against New Zealand with every match ending in a draw 1950s edit Their fortunes changed on the 1953 Ashes tour as they won the series 1 0 England did not lose a series between their 1950 51 and 1958 59 tours of Australia and secured famous victory in 1954 55 under the captaincy of Len Hutton thanks to Frank Tyson whose 6 85 at Sydney and 7 27 at Melbourne are remembered as the fastest bowling ever seen in Australia The 1956 series was remembered for the bowling of Jim Laker who took 46 wickets at an average of 9 62 including figures of 19 90 at Old Trafford After drawing to South Africa England defeated the West Indies and New Zealand comfortably The England team then left for Australia in the 1958 59 season with a team that had been hailed as the strongest ever to leave on an Ashes tour but lost the series 4 0 as Richie Benaud s revitalised Australians were too strong with England struggling with the bat throughout the series On 24 August 1959 England inflicted its only 5 0 whitewash over India All out for 194 at The Oval India lost the last test by an innings England s batsman Ken Barrington and Colin Cowdrey both had an excellent series with the bat with Barrington scoring 357 runs across the series and Cowdrey scoring 344 1960s edit The early and middle 1960s were poor periods for English cricket Despite England s strength on paper Australia held the Ashes and the West Indies dominated England in the early part of the decade May stood down as captain in 1961 following the 1961 Ashes defeat Ted Dexter succeeded him as captain but England continued to suffer indifferent results In 1961 62 they beat Pakistan but also lost to India The following year saw England and Australia tie the 1962 63 Ashes series 1 1 meaning Australia retained the urn Despite beating New Zealand 3 0 England went on to lose to the West Indies and again failed in the 1964 Ashes losing the home series 1 0 which marked the end of Dexter s captaincy However from 1968 to 1971 they played 27 consecutive Test matches without defeat winning 9 and drawing 18 including the abandoned Test at Melbourne in 1970 71 The sequence began when they drew with Australia at Lord s in the Second Test of the 1968 Ashes series and ended in 1971 when India won the Third Test at The Oval by four wickets They played 13 Tests with only one defeat immediately beforehand and so played a total of 40 consecutive Tests with only one defeat dating from their innings victory over the West Indies at The Oval in 1966 During this period they beat New Zealand India the West Indies and Pakistan and under Ray Illingworth s leadership regained The Ashes from Australia in 1970 71 1970s edit The 1970s for the England team can be largely split into three parts Early in the decade Illingworth s side dominated world cricket winning the Ashes away in 1971 and then retaining them at home in 1972 The same side beat Pakistan at home in 1971 and played by far the better cricket against India that season However England were largely helped by the rain to sneak the Pakistan series 1 0 but the same rain saved India twice and one England collapse saw them lose to India This was however one of if not the strongest England team ever with the likes of Illingworth Geoffrey Boycott John Edrich Basil D Oliveira Dennis Amiss Alan Knott John Snow and Derek Underwood at its core The mid 1970s were more turbulent Illingworth and several others had refused to tour India in 1972 73 which led to a clamour for Illingworth s job by the end of that summer England had just been beaten 2 0 by a flamboyant West Indies side with several England players well over 35 Mike Denness was the surprising choice but only lasted 18 months his results against poor opposition were good but England were badly exposed as ageing and lacking in good fast bowling against the 1974 75 Australians losing that series 4 1 to lose the Ashes Denness was replaced in 1975 by Tony Greig While he managed to avoid losing to Australia his side were largely thrashed the following year by the young and very much upcoming West Indies for whom Greig s infamous grovel remark acted as motivation Greig s finest hour was probably the 1976 77 win over India in India When Greig was discovered as being instrumental in World Series Cricket he was sacked and replaced by Mike Brearley Brearley s side showed again the hyperbole that is often spoken when one side dominates in cricket While his side of 1977 80 contained some young players who went on to become England greats most notably future captains Ian Botham David Gower and Graham Gooch their opponents were often very much weakened by the absence of their World Series players especially in 1978 when England beat New Zealand 3 0 and Pakistan 2 0 before thrashing what was effectively Australia s 2nd XI 5 1 in 1978 79 1980s edit The England team with Brearley s exit in 1980 was never truly settled throughout the 1980s which will probably be remembered as a low point for the team While some of the great players like Botham Gooch and Gower had fine careers the team seldom succeeded in beating good opposition throughout the decade and did not score a home Test victory except against minnows Sri Lanka between September 1985 and July 1990 Botham took over the captaincy in 1980 and they put up a good fight against the West Indies losing a five match Test series 1 0 although England were humbled in the return series After scoring a pair in the first Test against Australia Botham lost the captaincy due to his poor form and was replaced by Brearley Botham returned to form and played exceptionally in the remainder of the series being named man of the match in the third fourth and fifth Tests The series became known as Botham s Ashes as England recorded a 3 1 victory Keith Fletcher took over as captain in 1981 but England lost his first series in charge against India Bob Willis took over as captain in 1982 and enjoyed victories over India and Pakistan but lost the Ashes after Australia clinched the series 2 1 England hosted the World Cup in 1983 and reached the semi finals but their Test form remained poor as they suffered defeats against New Zealand Pakistan and the West Indies Gower took over as skipper in 1984 and led the team to a 2 1 victory over India They went on to win the 1985 Ashes 3 1 although after this came a poor run of form Defeat to the West Indies dented the team s confidence and they went on to lose to India 2 0 In 1986 Micky Stewart was appointed the first full time England coach England beat New Zealand but there was little hope of them retaining the Ashes in 1986 87 However despite being described as a team that can t bat can t bowl and can t field they went on to win the series 2 1 After losing consecutive series against Pakistan England drew a three match Test series against New Zealand 0 0 They reached the final of the 1987 World Cup but lost by seven runs against Australia After losing 4 0 to the West Indies England lost the Ashes to a resurgent Australia led by Allan Border With the likes of Gooch banned following a rebel tour to South Africa a new look England side suffered defeat again against the West Indies although this time by a margin of 2 1 1990s edit If the 1980s were a low point for English Test cricket then the 1990s were only a slight improvement The arrival of Gooch as captain in 1990 forced a move toward more professionalism and especially fitness though it took some time for old habits to die Even in 2011 one or two successful county players have been shown up as physically unfit for international cricket Creditable performances against India and New Zealand in 1990 were followed by a hard fought draw against the 1991 West Indies and a strong performance in the 1992 Cricket World Cup in which the England team finished as runners up for the second consecutive World Cup but landmark losses against Australia in 1990 91 and especially Pakistan in 1992 showed England up badly in terms of bowling So bad was England s bowling in 1993 that Rod Marsh described England s pace attack at one point as pie throwers Having lost three of the first four Tests played in England in 1993 Gooch resigned to be replaced by Michael Atherton More selectorial problems abounded during Atherton s reign as new chairman of selectors and coach Ray Illingworth then into his 60s assumed almost sole responsibility for the team off the field The youth policy which had seen England emerge from the West Indies tour of 1993 94 with some credit though losing to a seasoned Windies team was abandoned and players such as Gatting and Gooch were persisted with when well into their 30s and 40s England continued to do well at home against weaker opponents such as India New Zealand and a West Indies side beginning to fade but struggled badly against improving sides like Pakistan and South Africa Atherton had offered his resignation after losing the 1997 Ashes series 3 2 having been 1 0 up after two matches eventually to resign one series later in early 1998 England looking for talent went through a whole raft of new players during this period such as Ronnie Irani Adam Hollioake Craig White Graeme Hick and Mark Ramprakash At this time there were two main problems The lack of a genuine all rounder to bat at 6 Botham having left a huge gap in the batting order when he retired from Tests in 1992 Alec Stewart a sound wicket keeper and an excellent player of quick bowling could not open and keep wicket hence his batting down the order where he was often exposed to spin which he did not play as well Stewart took the reins as captain in 1998 but another losing Ashes series and early World Cup exit cost him Test and ODI captaincy in 1999 This should not detract from the 1998 home Test series where England showed great fortitude to beat a powerful South African side 2 1 Another reason for their poor performances were the demands of County Cricket teams on their players meaning that England could rarely field a full strength team on their tours This eventually led to the ECB taking over from the MCC as the governing body of England and the implementation of central contracts 1992 also saw Scotland sever ties with the England and Wales team and begin to compete as the Scotland national team By 1999 with coach David Lloyd resigning after the World Cup exit and new captain Nasser Hussain just appointed England hit rock bottom literally ranked as the lowest rated Test nation after losing 2 1 to New Zealand in shambolic fashion Hussain was booed on the Oval balcony as the crowd jeered We ve got the worst team in the world to the tune of He s Got the Whole World in His Hands 2000s edit Central contracts were installed reducing players workloads and following the arrival of Zimbabwean coach Duncan Fletcher England thrashed the fallen West Indies 3 1 England s results in Asia improved that winter with series wins against both Pakistan and Sri Lanka Hussain s side had a far harder edge to it avoiding the anticipated Greenwash in the 2001 Ashes series against the all powerful Australian team The nucleus the side was slowly coming together as players such as Hussain himself Graham Thorpe Darren Gough and Ashley Giles began to be regularly selected By 2003 though having endured another Ashes drubbing as well as another first round exit from the World Cup Hussain resigned as captain after one Test against South Africa Michael Vaughan took over with players encouraged to express themselves England won five consecutive Test series prior to facing Australia in the 2005 Ashes series taking the team to second place in the ICC Test Championship table During this period England defeated the West Indies home and away New Zealand and Bangladesh at home and South Africa in South Africa In June 2005 England played its first ever T20 international match defeating Australia by 100 runs Later that year England defeated Australia 2 1 in a thrilling series to regain the Ashes for the first time in 16 years having lost them in 1989 Following the 2005 Ashes win the team suffered from a spate of serious injuries to key players such as Vaughan Giles Andrew Flintoff and Simon Jones As a result the team underwent an enforced period of transition A 2 0 defeat in Pakistan was followed by two drawn away series with India and Sri Lanka In the home Test series victory against Pakistan in July and August 2006 several promising new players emerged Most notable were the left arm orthodox spin bowler Monty Panesar the first Sikh to play Test cricket for England and left handed opening batsman Alastair Cook The 2006 07 Ashes series was keenly anticipated and was expected to provide a level of competition comparable to the 2005 series In the event England captained by Flintoff who was deputising for the injured Vaughan lost all five Tests to concede the first Ashes whitewash in 86 years In the 2007 Cricket World Cup England lost to most of the Test playing nations they faced beating only the West Indies and Bangladesh although they also avoided defeat by any of the non Test playing nations Even so the unimpressive nature of most of their victories in the tournament combined with heavy defeats by New Zealand Australia and South Africa left many commentators criticising the manner in which the England team approached the one day game Coach Duncan Fletcher resigned after eight years in the job as a result and was succeeded by former Sussex coach Peter Moores In 2007 08 England toured Sri Lanka and New Zealand losing the first series 1 0 and winning the second 2 1 These series were followed up at home in May 2008 with a 2 0 home series win against New Zealand with the results easing pressure on Moores who was not at ease with his team particularly star batsman Kevin Pietersen Pietersen succeeded Vaughan as captain in June 2008 after England had been well beaten by South Africa at home The poor relationship between the two came to a head on the 2008 09 tour to India England lost the series 1 0 and both men resigned their positions although Pietersen remained a member of the England team Moores was replaced as coach by Zimbabwean Andy Flower Against this background England toured the West Indies under the captaincy of Andrew Strauss and in a disappointing performance lost the Test series 1 0 The 2009 Ashes series featured the first Test match played in Wales at Sophia Gardens Cardiff England drew the match thanks to a last wicket stand by bowlers James Anderson and Panesar A victory for each team followed before the series was decided at The Oval Thanks to fine bowling by Stuart Broad and Graeme Swann and a debut century by Jonathan Trott England regained the Ashes 2010s edit nbsp 2019 World cup winning team with prime minister Theresa MayAfter a drawn Test series in South Africa England won their first ever ICC world championship the 2010 World Twenty20 with a seven wicket win over Australia in Barbados The following winter in the 2010 11 Ashes they beat Australia 3 1 to retain the urn and record their first series win in Australia for 24 years Furthermore all three of their wins were by an innings the first time a touring side had ever recorded three innings victories in a single Test series Cook earned Man of the Series with 766 runs England struggled to match their Test form in the 2011 Cricket World Cup Despite beating South Africa and tying with eventual winners India England suffered shock losses to Ireland and Bangladesh before losing in the quarter finals to Sri Lanka 25 However the team s excellent form in the Test match arena continued and on 13 August 2011 they became the world s top ranked Test team after comfortably whitewashing India 4 0 their sixth consecutive series victory and eighth in the past nine series However this status only lasted a year having lost 3 0 to Pakistan over the winter England were beaten 2 0 by South Africa who replaced them at the top of the rankings It was their first home series loss since 2008 against the same opposition This loss saw the resignation of Strauss as captain and his retirement from cricket Cook who was already in charge of the ODI side replaced Strauss and led England to a 2 1 victory in India their first in the country since 1984 85 In doing so he became the first captain to score centuries in his first five Tests as captain and became England s leading century maker with 23 centuries to his name nbsp The England team celebrate victory over Australia in the 2015 Ashes seriesAfter finishing as runners up in the ICC Champions Trophy England faced Australia in back to back Ashes series A 3 0 home win secured England the urn for the fourth time in five series However in the return series they found themselves utterly demolished in a 5 0 defeat their second Ashes whitewash in under a decade Their misery was compounded by batsman Jonathan Trott leaving the tour early due to a stress related illness and the mid series retirement of spinner Graeme Swann Following the tour head coach Flower resigned his post while Pietersen was dropped indefinitely from the England team 26 Flower was replaced by his predecessor Moores but he was sacked for a second time after a string of disappointing results including failing to advance from the group stage at the 2015 World Cup 27 He was replaced by Australian Trevor Bayliss 28 who oversaw an upturn of form in the ODI side including series victories against New Zealand and Pakistan In the Test arena England reclaimed the Ashes 3 2 in the summer of 2015 England entered the 2019 Cricket World Cup as favourites having been ranked the number one ODI side by the ICC for over a year prior to the tournament 29 However shock defeats to Pakistan and Sri Lanka during the group stage left them on the brink of elimination and needing to win their final two games against India and New Zealand to guarantee progression to the semi finals 30 This was achieved putting their campaign back on track and an eight wicket victory over Australia in the semi final at Edgbaston meant England were in their first World Cup final since 1992 31 The final against New Zealand at Lord s has been described as one of the greatest and most dramatic matches in the history of cricket with some calling it the greatest ODI in history 32 as both the match and subsequent Super Over were tied after England went into the final over of their innings 14 runs behind New Zealand s total England won by virtue of having scored more boundaries throughout the match securing their maiden World Cup title in their fourth final appearance 33 34 2020s edit Recent results edit HOME AWAYTest One Day International Twenty20 International Test One Day International Twenty20 InternationalLast match won 5th Test v Australia 2023 2nd ODI v South Africa 2022 1st T20I v South Africa 2022 1st Test v New Zealand 2023 2nd ODI v Bangladesh 2023 World Cup Final v Pakistan 2022Last match lost 2nd Test v Australia 2023 1st ODI v South Africa 2022 3rd T20I v South Africa 2022 2nd Test v New Zealand 2023 3rd ODI v Bangladesh 2023 3rd T20I v Bangladesh 2023Last series won South Africa 2022 Pakistan 2021 Sri Lanka 2021 Pakistan 2022 23 Bangladesh 2023 2022 World CupLast series lost New Zealand 2021 India 2022 South Africa 2022 West Indies 2021 22 Australia 2022 23 Bangladesh 2023 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 12 September 2022 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 12 September 2022 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 12 September 2022 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 28 February 2023 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 10 March 2023 Source ESPNcricinfo com Last updated 14 March 2023 Forthcoming fixtures editAs set out by the ICC s Future Tours Programme below is England s full international fixture list until the end of the 2024 international season 35 36 Winter 2023 24 December English cricket team in the West Indies in 2023 24 for three ODIs and five T20Is January to March English cricket team in India in 2023 24 for five TestsSummer 2024 May Pakistani cricket team in England in 2024 for five T20Is June 2024 ICC Men s T20 World Cup in the West Indies and USAGoverning body editMain article England and Wales Cricket Board The England and Wales Cricket Board ECB is the governing body of English cricket and the England cricket team The Board has been operating since 1 January 1997 and represents England on the International Cricket Council The ECB is also responsible for the generation of income from the sale of tickets sponsorship and broadcasting rights primarily in relation to the England team The ECB s income in the 2006 calendar year was 77 million 37 Prior to 1997 the Test and County Cricket Board TCCB was the governing body for the English team Apart from in Test matches when touring abroad the England team officially played as MCC up to and including the 1976 77 tour of Australia reflecting the time when MCC had been responsible for selecting the touring party The last time the England touring team wore the bacon and egg colours of the MCC was on the 1996 97 tour of New Zealand Status of Wales edit See also Cricket in Wales and Proposed Wales national cricket team Historically the England team represented the whole of Great Britain in international cricket with Scottish or Welsh national teams playing sporadically and players from both countries occasionally representing England Scotland became an independent member of the ICC in 1994 having severed links with the TCCB two years earlier 38 39 40 41 Criticism has been made of the England and Wales Cricket Board using only the England name while utilising Welsh players 41 40 such as Simon and Geraint Jones With Welsh players pursuing international careers exclusively with an England team there have been a number of calls for Wales to become an independent member of the ICC or for the ECB to provide more fixtures for a Welsh national team 42 However both Cricket Wales and Glamorgan County Cricket Club have continually supported the ECB with Glamorgan arguing for the financial benefits of the Welsh county within the English structure and Cricket Wales stating they are committed to continuing to play a major role within the ECB 43 44 45 The absence of a Welsh cricket team has seen a number of debates within the Welsh Senedd In 2013 a debate saw both Conservative and Labour members lend their support to the establishment of an independent Welsh team 46 In 2015 a report produced by the Welsh National Assembly s petitions committee reflected the passionate debate around the issue Bethan Jenkins Plaid Cymru s spokesperson on heritage culture sport and broadcasting and a member of the petitions committee argued that Wales should have its own international team and withdraw from the ECB Jenkins noted that Ireland with a population of 6 4 million was an ICC member with 6 000 club players whereas Wales with 3 million had 7 500 Jenkins said Cricket Wales and Glamorgan CCC say the idea of a Welsh national cricket team is an emotive subject of course having a national team is emotive you only have to look at the stands during any national game to see that To suggest this as anything other than natural is a bit of a misleading argument 47 48 49 50 51 52 In 2017 the First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones called for the reintroduction of the Welsh one day team stating It is odd that we see Ireland and Scotland playing in international tournaments and not Wales 53 54 Team colours editPeriod Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1994 1996 Tetley Bitter1996 1998 ASICS1998 2000 Vodafone2000 2008 Admiral2008 2010 Adidas2010 2014 Brit Insurance2014 2017 Waitrose2017 2021 New Balance NatWest2021 2022 Cinch2022 present CastoreIn February 2021 the England and Wales Cricket Board announced that England s principal partner NatWest has been replaced by Cinch an online used car marketplace 55 England s kit is manufactured by Castore who replaced previous manufacturer New Balance in April 2022 56 When playing Test cricket England s cricket whites feature the three lions badge on the left of the shirt and the name of the sponsor Cinch on the centre English fielders may wear a navy blue cap or white sun hat with the ECB logo in the middle Helmets are also coloured navy blue Before 1997 the uniform sported the TCCB lion and stumps logo on the uniforms while the helmets jumpers and hats had the three lions emblem 57 Before 1996 the caps used in test touring squads featured a crest deptcting St George and a dragon 58 In limited overs cricket England s ODI and Twenty20 shirts feature the Cinch logo across the centre with the three lions badge on the left of the shirt and the New Balance logo on the right In ODIs the kit comprises a blue shirt with navy trousers whilst the Twenty20 kit comprises a flame red shirt and navy trousers In ICC limited overs tournaments a modified kit design is used with sponsor s logo moving to the sleeve and ENGLAND printed across the front Over the years England s ODI kit has cycled between various shades of blue such as a pale blue used until the mid 1990s when it was replaced in favour of a bright blue 59 60 with the occasional all red kit 61 In April 2017 the ECB brought back the traditional cable knit sweater for test matches under new supplier New Balance 62 International grounds editMain article List of international men s cricket grounds in England and Wales nbsp nbsp Bristol nbsp Taunton nbsp Edgbaston nbsp Headingley nbsp The Oval nbsp Lord s nbsp Old Trafford nbsp Riverside nbsp Sophia Gardens nbsp Rose Bowl nbsp Trent Bridgeclass notpageimage Locations of current international cricket grounds in England and Wales Listed chronologically in order of first match and include neutral fixtures such as World Cup and Champions Trophy games Venue City County team Capacity Years used Test ODI T20ICurrent venuesThe Oval London Surrey 26 000 1880 102 74 16Old Trafford Manchester Lancashire 26 000 1884 82 55 10Lord s London Middlesex 28 000 1884 140 67 10Trent Bridge Nottingham Nottinghamshire 17 500 1899 63 49 12Headingley Leeds Yorkshire 17 500 1899 78 45 1Edgbaston Birmingham Warwickshire 25 000 1902 53 64 5Riverside Ground Chester le Street Durham 19 000 1999 6 20 3Sophia Gardens Cardiff Glamorgan 15 500 1999 3 29 8Rose Bowl Southampton Hampshire 25 000 2003 7 31 9County Ground Taunton Somerset 12 500 1983 6 1County Ground Bristol Gloucestershire 17 500 1983 19 3Former venuesBramall Lane Sheffield Yorkshire 32 000 1902 1 St Helen s Swansea Glamorgan 4 500 1973 1983 2 North Marine Road Ground Scarborough Yorkshire 11 500 1976 1978 2 Grace Road Leicester Leicestershire 12 000 1983 1999 3 New Road Worcester Worcestershire 5 500 1983 1999 3 County Ground Southampton Hampshire 7 000 1983 1999 3 County Ground Derby Derbyshire 9 500 1983 1999 2 Nevill Ground Tunbridge Wells Kent 6 000 1983 1 County Ground Chelmsford Essex 6 500 1983 1999 3 St Lawrence Ground Canterbury Kent 15 000 1999 2005 4 County Ground Northampton Northamptonshire 6 500 1999 2 As of 18 July 2021 63 Tournament history editKey ChampionsRunners upThird placeFourth place Indicates tournaments played within England ICC World Test Championship edit ICC World Test Championship recordYear League stage Final Host Final Final PositionPos Matches Ded PC Pts PCTP W L D T2019 21 64 4 9 21 11 7 3 0 0 720 442 61 4 Rose Bowl England DNQ 4th2021 23 65 4 9 22 10 8 4 0 12 264 124 47 The Oval England DNQ 4thICC Cricket World Cup edit Main article England at the Cricket World Cup World Cup recordYear Round Position GP W L T NR Win nbsp 1975 Semi final 3 8 4 3 1 0 0 75 00 nbsp 1979 Runners up 2 8 5 4 1 0 0 80 00 nbsp 1983 Semi final 3 8 7 5 2 0 0 71 43 nbsp nbsp 1987 Runners up 2 8 8 5 3 0 0 62 50 nbsp nbsp 1992 2 9 10 6 3 0 1 66 67 nbsp nbsp nbsp 1996 Quarter final 8 12 6 2 4 0 0 33 33 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1999 Pool stage 5 3 2 0 0 60 00 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2003 Pool stage 9 14 6 3 3 0 0 50 00 nbsp 2007 Super 8 5 16 9 5 4 0 0 55 55 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2011 Quarter final 7 14 7 3 3 1 0 50 00 nbsp nbsp 2015 Pool stage 10 14 6 2 4 0 0 33 33 nbsp nbsp 2019 Champions 1 10 11 8 3 0 0 68 18 nbsp 2023 Pool Stage 7 10 9 3 6 0 0 33 33 nbsp nbsp nbsp 2027 TBD nbsp nbsp 2031Total 1 title 13 13 93 52 39 1 1 56 45 The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win ICC T20 World Cup edit T20 World Cup recordYear Round Position GP W L T NR Win nbsp 2007 Super 8 7 12 5 1 4 0 0 20 00 nbsp 2009 6 12 5 2 3 0 0 40 00 nbsp 2010 Champions 1 12 7 5 1 0 1 83 33 nbsp 2012 Super 8 6 12 5 2 3 0 0 40 00 nbsp 2014 Super 10 7 16 4 1 3 0 0 25 00 nbsp 2016 Runners up 2 16 6 4 2 0 0 66 67 nbsp nbsp 2021 Semi final 4 16 6 4 2 0 0 66 67 nbsp 2022 Champions 1 16 7 5 1 0 1 83 33 nbsp nbsp 2024 Qualified nbsp nbsp 2026 TBD nbsp nbsp 2028 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2030 Qualified as co hostsTotal 2 titles 8 8 45 25 19 0 2 55 55 The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win ICC Champions Trophy edit Champions Trophy recordYear Round Position GP W L T NR Win nbsp 1998 Quarter final 5 9 1 0 1 0 0 0 00 nbsp 2000 7 11 1 0 1 0 0 0 00 nbsp 2002 Pool stage 6 12 2 1 1 0 0 50 00 nbsp 2004 Runners up 2 12 4 3 1 0 0 75 00 nbsp 2006 Pool stage 7 10 3 1 2 0 0 33 33 nbsp 2009 Semi final 4 8 4 2 2 0 0 50 00 nbsp 2013 Runners up 2 8 5 3 2 0 0 60 00 nbsp 2017 Semi final 3 8 4 3 1 0 0 75 00 nbsp 2025 QualifiedTotal 0 titles 8 8 24 13 11 0 0 54 17 The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win Other tournaments edit Summer Olympics edit Summer Olympics recordYear Round Position GP W L T NR Win nbsp 1900 Champions 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 100 00Total 1 title 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 The win percentage excludes no results and counts ties as half a win Honours editICC edit Cricket World Cup Champions 1 2019 Runners up 3 1979 1987 1992 T20 World Cup Champions 2 2010 2022 Runners up 1 2016 Champions Trophy Runners up 2 2004 2013Other edit Summer Olympics Gold Medal 1 1900Records editMain article England cricket team record by opponent Test matches edit Main article List of England Test cricket records Test team records edit Highest team total 903 7 dec v Australia at The Oval in 1938 Lowest team total 45 v Australia at Sydney in 1886 87 England are the only team in the history of Test cricket to have secured 100 victories by an innings 66 Test individual records edit Most matches 183 Tests James Anderson 67 Longest serving captain 64 Tests Joe RootTest batting records edit Most runs 12 472 Alastair Cook 68 Best average 60 73 Herbert Sutcliffe 69 Highest individual score 364 Len Hutton v Australia at The Oval in 1938 Record partnership 411 Colin Cowdrey and Peter May v West Indies at Edgbaston in 1957 Most centuries 33 Alastair Cook Most double centuries 7 Wally Hammond England s most prolific opening partnership was Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe In 38 innings they averaged 87 81 for the first wicket with 15 century partnerships and 10 others of 50 or more Most ducks 39 Stuart Broad 70 Test bowling records edit Most wickets 690 James Anderson Best average 10 75 George Lohmann Best innings bowling 10 53 Jim Laker v Australia at Old Trafford in 1956 Best match bowling 19 90 Jim Laker v Australia at Old Trafford in 1956 Best strike rate 34 1 George Lohmann Best economy rate 1 31 William Attewell Five England bowlers have taken four wickets in an over three of these at Headingley They were Maurice Allom v New Zealand at Christchurch in 1929 30 Kenneth Cranston v South Africa at Headingley in 1947 Fred Titmus v New Zealand at Headingley in 1965 Chris Old v Pakistan at Edgbaston in 1978 and Andy Caddick v West Indies at Headingley in 2000 Test fielding records edit Most catches by an outfielder 183 Joe Root Most dismissals as wicketkeeper 269 Alan Knott Most dismissals in an innings 7 Bob Taylor v India at Bombay in 1979 80 Most dismissals in a match 11 Jack Russell v South Africa at Johannesburg in 1995 96Test record versus other nations edit Opponent M W L T D Win First win nbsp Australia 361 112 152 0 97 31 02 4 April 1877 nbsp South Africa 156 66 35 0 55 42 31 13 March 1889 nbsp West Indies 163 51 59 0 53 31 29 26 June 1928 nbsp New Zealand 112 52 13 0 46 46 43 13 January 1930 nbsp India 131 50 31 0 50 38 16 28 June 1932 nbsp Pakistan 89 29 21 0 39 32 58 5 July 1954 nbsp Sri Lanka 36 17 8 0 11 47 22 21 February 1982 nbsp Zimbabwe 6 3 0 0 3 50 00 21 May 2000 nbsp Ireland 2 2 0 0 0 100 00 26 July 2019 nbsp Bangladesh 10 9 1 0 0 90 00 25 October 2003 nbsp Afghanistan Yet to playRecords complete to Test 2515 Last updated 31 July 2023 71 One Day Internationals edit Main article List of England One Day International cricket records ODI team records edit Highest team total 498 4 50 overs v Netherlands at VRA Cricket Ground in 2022 Lowest team total 86 32 4 overs v Australia at Old Trafford in 2001ODI individual records edit Most matches 225 Eoin Morgan Longest serving captain 126 matches Eoin Morgan 72 ODI batting records edit Most runs 6 957 Eoin Morgan Best average 51 25 Jonathan Trott Best strike rate 117 97 Jos Buttler Highest individual score 182 Ben Stokes v New Zealand at Kia Oval London in 2023 Record partnership 256 Alex Hales and Jason Roy v Sri Lanka at Edgbaston in 2016 Most centuries 16 Joe Root Most ducks 15 Eoin MorganODI bowling records edit Most wickets 269 James Anderson Best average 19 45 Mike Hendrick Best bowling 6 31 Paul Collingwood v Bangladesh at Trent Bridge in 2005 Best strike rate 30 6 Liam Plunkett Best economy rate 3 27 Mike HendrickODI fielding records edit Most catches by an outfielder 108 Paul Collingwood Most dismissals as wicketkeeper 238 Jos Buttler Most dismissals in a match 6 Alec Stewart v Zimbabwe at Old Trafford in 2000 Matt Prior v South Africa at Trent Bridge in 2008 Jos Buttler v South Africa at The Oval in 2013ODI record versus other nations edit Opponent M W L T NR Win First winv Test nations nbsp Afghanistan 3 2 1 0 0 66 67 13 March 2015 nbsp Australia 156 63 88 2 3 40 38 24 August 1972 nbsp Bangladesh 25 20 5 0 0 80 00 5 October 2000 nbsp India 107 44 58 2 3 41 12 13 July 1974 nbsp Ireland 15 11 2 0 2 73 33 13 June 2006 nbsp New Zealand 96 44 45 3 4 45 83 18 July 1973 nbsp Pakistan 91 56 32 0 3 63 63 23 December 1977 nbsp South Africa 70 30 34 1 5 42 86 12 March 1992 nbsp Sri Lanka 79 38 37 1 3 48 10 13 February 1982 nbsp West Indies 102 52 44 0 6 54 16 5 September 1973 nbsp Zimbabwe 30 21 8 0 1 72 41 7 January 1995v Associate Members nbsp Canada 2 2 0 0 0 100 00 13 June 1979 nbsp East Africa 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 14 June 1975 nbsp Kenya 2 2 0 0 0 100 00 18 May 1999 nbsp Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 19 February 2003 nbsp Netherlands 6 6 0 0 0 100 00 22 February 1996 nbsp Scotland 5 3 1 0 1 75 00 19 June 2010 nbsp United Arab Emirates 1 1 0 0 0 100 00 18 February 1996Last updated 4 November 2023 Win percentages exclude no results and count ties as half a win 73 T20 Internationals edit Main article List of England Twenty20 International cricket records Figures include games up to 13 November 2022 T20I team records edit Highest team total 241 3 v New Zealand at McLean Park in 2019 Lowest team total 80 v India at Colombo RPS in 2012T20I individual records edit Most matches 115 Eoin Morgan Longest serving captain 72 matches Eoin MorganT20I batting records edit Most runs 2 713 Jos Buttler Best average 37 93 Kevin Pietersen Best strike rate 147 90 Liam Livingstone Highest individual score 116 Alex Hales v Sri Lanka at Chittagong in 2014 Record partnership 182 Dawid Malan and Eoin Morgan v New Zealand at McLean Park in 2019 Most centuries 1 Alex Hales Dawid Malan Liam Livingstone Jos Buttler Most ducks 9 Luke Wright and Moeen AliT20I bowling records edit Most wickets 96 Chris Jordan Best average 16 84 Graeme Swann Best bowling 5 10 Sam Curran v Afghanistan at Perth in 2022 Best strike rate 13 2 Mark Wood Best economy rate 6 36 Graeme SwannT20I fielding records edit Most catches by an outfielder 46 Eoin Morgan Most dismissals as wicket keeper 64 Jos Buttler a Most dismissals in an innings 4 Matt Prior v South Africa at Cape Town in 2007T20I record versus other nations edit Opponent M W L T W T L NR Win First winv Test nations nbsp Afghanistan 3 3 0 0 0 0 100 00 21 September 2012 nbsp Australia 23 11 10 0 0 2 47 82 13 June 2005 nbsp Bangladesh 4 1 3 0 0 0 25 00 27 October 2021 nbsp India 23 11 12 0 0 0 47 82 14 June 2009 nbsp Ireland 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 00 nbsp New Zealand 23 13 8 1 0 1 56 52 5 February 2008 nbsp Pakistan 29 18 9 1 0 1 66 07 7 June 2009 nbsp South Africa 25 12 12 0 0 1 50 00 13 November 2009 nbsp Sri Lanka 14 10 4 0 0 0 71 43 13 May 2010 nbsp West Indies 24 10 14 0 0 0 41 67 29 June 2007 nbsp Zimbabwe 1 1 0 0 0 0 100 00 13 September 2007v Associate Members nbsp Netherlands 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 00 Records complete to T20I 2026 14 March 2023 T W and T L indicate matches tied and then won or lost in a tiebreaker such as a Super Over Win percentages exclude no results and count ties irrespective of tiebreakers as half a win 74 Most England appearances edit Main articles List of England Test cricketers List of England ODI cricketers and List of England Twenty20 International cricketers These lists show the five players or those tied for fifth with the most appearances for England in each form of the game The lists are correct up to match starting on 11 November 2023 players who are available for selection and have represented England in the format during the past 12 months Most Test caps 75 183 James Anderson 167 Stuart Broad161 Alastair Cook135 Joe Root 133 Alec Stewart Most ODI caps 76 225 Eoin Morgan197 Paul Collingwood194 James Anderson178 Jos Buttler 171 Joe Root Most T20I caps 77 115 Eoin Morgan109 Jos Buttler 99 Adil Rashid 88 Chris Jordan 78 Moeen Ali Current squad editThis lists all the active players who are contracted to or have played for England in the past year since 3 December 2022 and the forms in which they have played and any players in italics outside this criteria who have been selected in the team s most recent Test ODI or T20I squad The ECB offers a number of contracts in October each year to England players which covers both red ball and white ball players considers the likelihood of players featuring in England teams across formats over the next period while recognising performances in the preceding year 78 Multi year contracts have been awarded for the first time since central contracts were established in 2000 Moeen Ali Stuart Broad and David Willey have made international appearances during this period however have announced their retirements from Test cricket cricket and International cricket respectively Key No Shirt number Con 78 Contract type Central Development Name Age Batting style Bowling style Domestic team Con Forms No Captaincy Last Test Last ODI Last T20IBattersHarry Brook 24 Right handed Right arm medium Yorkshire C Test ODI T20I 88 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Zak Crawley 25 Right handed Kent C Test ODI 6 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Ben Duckett 29 Left handed Nottinghamshire C Test ODI T20I 17 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Sam Hain 28 Right handed Warwickshire ODI 48 nbsp 2023 Dawid Malan 36 Left handed Right arm leg spin Yorkshire C ODI T20I 29 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Ollie Pope 25 Right handed Surrey C Test ODI 80 Test VC nbsp 2023 Joe Root 32 Right handed Right arm off break leg spin Yorkshire C Test ODI 66 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2019Phil Salt 27 Right handed Lancashire ODI T20I 61 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023All roundersRehan Ahmed 19 Right handed Right arm leg spin Leicestershire C ODI T20I 53 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Moeen Ali 36 Left handed Right arm off break Warwickshire C ODI T20I 18 T20I VC nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Brydon Carse 28 Right handed Right arm fast Durham C ODI T20I 92 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Sam Curran 25 Left handed Left arm medium fast Surrey C ODI T20I 58 nbsp 2021 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Will Jacks 25 Right handed Right arm off break Surrey ODI T20I 85 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Liam Livingstone 30 Right handed Right arm leg spin off break Lancashire C ODI T20I 23 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Ben Stokes 32 Left handed Right arm fast medium Durham C Test ODI 55 Test C nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022Chris Woakes 34 Right handed Right arm fast medium Warwickshire C Test ODI T20I 19 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Luke Wood 28 Left handed Left arm fast medium Lancashire ODI T20I 77 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Wicket keepersJonny Bairstow 34 Right handed Yorkshire C Test ODI T20I 51 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Jos Buttler 33 Right handed Lancashire C ODI T20I 63 ODI and T20I C nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Ben Foakes 30 Right handed Surrey C Test 50 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2019 nbsp 2019Jamie Smith 23 Right handed Surrey ODI 39 nbsp 2023 Pace bowlersJames Anderson 41 Left handed Right arm fast medium Lancashire C Test 9 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2015 nbsp 2009Jofra Archer 28 Right handed Right arm fast Sussex C 22 nbsp 2021 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Gus Atkinson 25 Right handed Right arm fast medium Surrey C ODI T20I 37 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Matthew Fisher 26 Right handed Right arm fast medium Yorkshire D 40 nbsp 2022 Chris Jordan 35 Right handed Right arm fast medium Surrey T20I 34 nbsp 2015 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023Saqib Mahmood 26 Right handed Right arm fast medium Lancashire D 25 nbsp 2022 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022Tymal Mills 31 Right handed Left arm fast Sussex T20I 72 nbsp 2022Matthew Potts 25 Right handed Right arm fast medium Durham C Test ODI 35 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 Ollie Robinson 30 Right handed Right arm medium fast Sussex C Test 45 nbsp 2023 George Scrimshaw 25 Right handed Right arm medium fast Derbyshire ODI 52 nbsp 2023 Josh Tongue 26 Right handed Right arm fast medium Nottinghamshire C Test 56 nbsp 2023 Reece Topley 29 Right handed Left arm fast medium Surrey C ODI T20I 38 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2022John Turner 22 Right handed Right arm fast medium Hampshire D ODI T20I Mark Wood 33 Right handed Right arm fast Durham C Test ODI 33 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Spin bowlersTom Hartley 24 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox Lancashire ODI 79 nbsp 2023 Jack Leach 32 Left handed Slow left arm orthodox Somerset C Test 77 nbsp 2023 Adil Rashid 35 Right handed Right arm leg spin Yorkshire C ODI T20I 95 nbsp 2019 nbsp 2023 nbsp 2023Coaching staff editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Test edit Position NameHead coach Brendon McCullumAssistant coach Paul CollingwoodAssistant coach Marcus TrescothickSpin bowling coach Jeetan PatelPace bowling coach Neil KilleenLimited overs edit Position NameHead coach Matthew MottAssistant coach Richard DawsonAssistant coach David SakerAssistant coach Carl HopkinsonEngland Men s Cricketer of the Year editAt the start of each season the ECB presents the England Men s Cricketer of the Year award to recognise outstanding performances in all formats of international cricket over the past year 79 voted on by members of the cricket media 80 The previous winners of this award are 2006 07 Andrew Flintoff 81 2007 08 Ian Bell 2008 09 Kevin Pietersen 2009 10 Graeme Swann 82 2010 11 Jonathan Trott 83 2011 12 James Anderson 84 2012 13 Matt Prior 85 2013 14 Ian Bell 79 2014 15 Joe Root 86 2015 16 Joe Root 87 Eligibility of players editThe England cricket team represents England and Wales However under ICC regulations 88 players can qualify to play for a country by nationality place of birth or residence so as with any national sports team some people are eligible to play for more than one team ECB regulations 89 state that to play for England a player must be a British citizen and have either been born in England or Wales or have lived in England or Wales for three years This has led to players who also held other nationalities becoming eligible to play for England The qualification period for those born outside England and Wales has varied in the past but in November 2018 the ECB announced that the period would be reduced to three years in all circumstances in line with ICC regulations 90 Of the current squad see above Jason Roy was born to British parents in South Africa so had to fulfil residency requirements In addition Chris Jordan and Ben Stokes have British citizenship having lived in England since their youth Jofra Archer though born in Barbados to a Barbadian mother qualifies through his English father Brydon Carse were both born in South Africa and had to serve qualification periods after arriving in England having already played top level cricket in the country of their birth ICC regulations also allow cricketers who represent associate i e non Test playing nations to switch to a Test playing nation provided nationality requirements are fulfilled In recent years this has seen Irish internationals Ed Joyce Boyd Rankin and Eoin Morgan switch to represent England before Ireland were promoted to full member status in 2018 whilst Gavin Hamilton previously played for Scotland though Joyce Rankin and Hamilton were later able to re qualify for and represent the countries of their birth See also editPortal nbsp Cricket List of England cricket captains List of England cricket team coaches List of England Test cricketers List of England ODI cricketers List of England Twenty20 International cricketersNotes edit Some sources list Butler with 65 dismissals as keeperReferences edit a b ICC Rankings International Cricket Council Test matches Team records ESPNcricinfo Test matches 2023 Team records ESPNcricinfo ODI matches Team records ESPNcricinfo ODI matches 2023 Team records ESPNcricinfo T20I matches Team records ESPNcricinfo T20I matches 2023 Team records ESPNcricinfo About the ECB England and Wales Cricket Board Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2016 MCC History MCC Archived from the original on 18 February 2012 Retrieved 7 October 2007 Records Test matches Team records Results summary ESPNcricinfo com Cricinfo Retrieved 20 December 2021 Records One Day Internationals Result summary ESPNcricinfo Archived from the original on 24 February 2013 Retrieved 17 July 2018 Records Twenty20 Internationals Result summary ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 16 February 2020 Waghorn pp 22 23 a b England v Australia 1864 1888 ESPNcricinfo 19 September 2006 Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Australia in England 1880 Wisden Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Williams Marcus 6 November 2002 The Ashes in The Times The Times London Archived from the original on 10 February 2008 Retrieved 5 February 2008 a b England in Australia 1882 83 Wisden Archived from the original on 19 January 2013 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Australia v England Wisden Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Test matches ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 5 February 2008 South Africa v England Wisden Archived from the original on 10 July 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Test matches ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 5 February 2008 Test matches ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 5 February 2008 England v Australia 1890 1914 ESPNcricinfo 27 September 2006 Archived from the original on 8 October 2008 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Australia v South Africa Wisden 14 February 2006 Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2008 Sri Lanka vs England 4th quarter final ICC World Cup 2011 26 March 2011 Archived from the original on 18 August 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