The 2021 international cricket season took place from May 2021 to September 2021.[1][2] 13 Tests, 56 One Day Internationals (ODIs), 45 Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is) were scheduled to be held in this season. The final of the 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship took place in June at the Rose Bowl in Southampton, England, with New Zealand beating India by eight wickets.[3] The 2021–2023 ICC World Test Championship started in August 2021, with India's tour of England.[4]

Qualification for the 2023 ICC Women's T20 World Cup also started, with Scotland hosting the first regional qualifier group in August.[5] Also in women's international cricket, 18 Women's One Day International (WODI) and 23 Women's Twenty20 International (WT20I) matches were scheduled to be played, along with a women's Test match between England and India.[6] Additionally, a number of other T20I/WT20I matches were scheduled to be played in minor series involving associate nations.

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continued into the 2021 international calendar. In November 2020, the planned Cricket World Cup Super League fixtures between the Netherlands and England were postponed.[7] The series was originally scheduled to be played in May 2021, but it was moved to May 2022 due to the pandemic.[8] In February 2021, round eight of the ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 tournament, scheduled to take place in Papua New Guinea, was also postponed.[9] In June, the ninth round of the tournament, scheduled to take place in Spain, was postponed until 2022.[10] On 22 July 2021, Cricket Ireland confirmed that their home series against Zimbabwe would be rescheduled due to quarantine requirements needed for the visiting team.[11] Later the same day, the second ODI match between the West Indies and Australia was postponed following a positive COVID-19 case.[12] The Cricket World Cup Challenge League B tournament originally scheduled to be played in Jersey during September, was rescheduled to take place in Hong Kong in December 2021.[13]

In September 2021, the fifth Test match between England and India was cancelled a few hours before the scheduled start, due to COVID-19 cases in the Indian camp.[14] The match was rescheduled to take place in July 2022, ahead of India's white-ball tour of England.[15]

Season overview

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Men's international tours
Start date Home team Away team Results [Matches]
Test ODI T20I
19 May 2021   Netherlands   Scotland 1–1 [2]
23 May 2021   Bangladesh   Sri Lanka 2–1 [3]
2 June 2021   Netherlands   Ireland 2–1 [3]
2 June 2021   England   New Zealand 0–1 [2]
10 June 2021   West Indies   South Africa 0–2 [2] 2–3 [5]
23 June 2021   England   Sri Lanka 2–0 [3] 3–0 [3]
7 July 2021   Zimbabwe   Bangladesh 0–1 [1] 0–3 [3] 1–2 [3]
8 July 2021   England   Pakistan 3–0 [3] 2–1 [3]
9 July 2021   West Indies   Australia 1–2 [3] 4–1 [5]
11 July 2021   Ireland   South Africa 1–1 [3] 0–3 [3]
18 July 2021   Sri Lanka   India 1–2 [3] 2–1 [3]
28 July 2021   West Indies   Pakistan 1–1 [2] 0–1 [4]
July 2021[n 1]   Sri Lanka   Afghanistan [3] [3]
3 August 2021   Bangladesh   Australia 4–1 [5]
4 August 2021[n 2]   England   India 2–2 [5]
27 August 2021[n 3]   Ireland   Zimbabwe 1–1 [3] 3–2 [5]
15 September 2021   Scotland   Zimbabwe 1–2 [3]
Men's international tournaments
Start date Tournament Winners
13 May 2021[n 4]   2021 Papua New Guinea Tri-Nation Series
18 June 2021   ICC World Test Championship Final   New Zealand
20 July 2021[n 4]     2021 Scotland Tri-Nation Series
August 2021[n 5]   2021 United States Tri-Nation Series
Women's international tours
Start date Home team Away team Results [Matches]
WTest WODI WT20I
24 May 2021   Ireland   Scotland 3–1 [4]
16 June 2021   England   India 0–0 [1] 2–1 [3] 2–1 [3]
30 June 2021   West Indies   Pakistan 3–2 [5] 3–0 [3]
26 July 2021   Ireland   Netherlands 2–1 [4]
27 August 2021   Zimbabwe   Thailand 1–2 [3]
31 August 2021   West Indies   South Africa 1–4 [5] 1–1 [3]
1 September 2021   England   New Zealand 4–1 [5] 2–1 [3]

Rankings

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The following were the rankings at the beginning of the season.

ICC Men's Test Team Rankings 13 May 2021[16][17]
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   India 24 2,914 121
2   New Zealand 18 2,166 120
3   England 32 3,493 109
4   Australia 17 1,844 108
5   Pakistan 24 2,247 94
6   West Indies 24 2,024 84
7   South Africa 16 1,273 80
8   Sri Lanka 27 2,095 78
9   Bangladesh 15 694 46
10   Zimbabwe 10 346 35
ICC Men's ODI Team Rankings 3 May 2021[18][19]
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   New Zealand 17 2,054 121
2   Australia 25 2,945 118
3   India 29 3,344 115
4   England 27 3,100 115
5   South Africa 20 2,137 107
6   Pakistan 24 2,323 97
7   Bangladesh 24 2,157 90
8   West Indies 27 2,222 82
9   Sri Lanka 21 1,652 79
10   Afghanistan 17 1,054 62
11   Netherlands 2 99 50
12   Ireland 18 818 45
13   Zimbabwe 15 588 39
14   Oman 7 240 34
15   Scotland 5 148 30
16     Nepal 5 119 24
Only the top 16 teams are shown
ICC Men's T20I Team Rankings 3 May 2021[20][21]
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   England 22 6,088 277
2   India 25 6,811 272
3   New Zealand 23 6,048 263
4   Pakistan 30 7,818 261
5   Australia 23 5,930 258
6   South Africa 19 4,703 248
7   Afghanistan 12 2,826 236
8   Sri Lanka 13 2,957 227
9   Bangladesh 13 2,921 225
10   West Indies 18 3,992 222
11   Zimbabwe 19 3,628 191
12   Ireland 18 3,388 188
13     Nepal 19 3,556 187
14   Scotland 11 2,035 185
15   United Arab Emirates 11 2,023 184
16   Papua New Guinea 14 2,501 179
Only the top 16 teams are shown
ICC Women's ODI Rankings 11 April 2021[22]
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   Australia 18 2,955 164
2   South Africa 24 2,828 118
3   England 17 1,993 117
4   India 20 2,226 111
5   New Zealand 21 1,947 93
6   West Indies 12 1,025 85
7   Pakistan 15 1,101 73
8   Bangladesh 5 306 61
9   Sri Lanka 11 519 47
10   Ireland 2 25 13
ICC Women's T20I Rankings 30 March 2021[23]
Rank Team Matches Points Rating
1   Australia 31 8,967 289
2   England 33 9,358 284
3   India 35 9,344 267
4   New Zealand 28 7,474 267
5   South Africa 30 7,569 252
6   West Indies 26 6,126 236
7   Pakistan 27 6,216 230
8   Sri Lanka 18 3,631 202
9   Bangladesh 26 5,001 192
10   Ireland 13 2,180 168
11   Thailand 26 4,145 159
12   Zimbabwe 11 1,711 156
13   Scotland 10 1,491 149
14     Nepal 11 1,457 132
15   Papua New Guinea 11 1,423 129
16   Samoa 6 749 125
Only the top 16 teams are shown

On-going tournaments

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The following were the rankings at the beginning of the season.

2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship
Rank Team Series PCT
1   India 6 72.2%
2   New Zealand 5 70.0%
3   Australia 4 69.2%
4   England 6 61.4%
5   Pakistan 5.5 43.3%
6   West Indies 5 33.3%
7   South Africa 4 30.0%
8   Sri Lanka 6 27.8%
9   Bangladesh 3.5 4.8%
Full Table
2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League
Rank Team Matches Points
1   England 9 40
2   Pakistan 6 40
3   Australia 6 40
4   New Zealand 3 30
5   Afghanistan 3 30
6   Bangladesh 6 30
7   West Indies 6 30
8   India 6 29
9   Zimbabwe 3 10
10   Ireland 6 10
11   South Africa 3 9
12   Netherlands 0 0
13   Sri Lanka 3 −2
Full Table
2019–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup League 2
Rank Team Matches Points
1   Oman 10 16
2   United States 12 12
3   Scotland 8 9
4   Namibia 7 8
5   United Arab Emirates 7 7
6     Nepal 4 4
7   Papua New Guinea 8 0
Full Table
2019–22 ICC Cricket World Cup Challenge League
League A
Rank Team Matches Points
1   Canada 5 8
2   Singapore 5 8
3   Qatar 5 6
4   Denmark 5 4
5   Malaysia 5 2
6   Vanuatu 5 2
Full Table
2019–22 ICC Cricket World Cup Challenge League
League B
Rank Team Matches Points
1   Uganda 5 10
2   Hong Kong 5 7
3   Italy 5 5
4   Jersey 5 4
5   Kenya 5 3
6   Bermuda 5 1
Full Table

Scotland in Netherlands

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ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4288 19 May Pieter Seelaar Kyle Coetzer Hazelaarweg Stadion, Rotterdam   Netherlands by 14 runs
ODI 4289 20 May Pieter Seelaar Kyle Coetzer Hazelaarweg Stadion, Rotterdam   Scotland by 6 wickets

Sri Lanka in Bangladesh

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The tour was originally scheduled to take place in December 2020, but was moved to May 2021.

2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4290 23 May Tamim Iqbal Kusal Perera Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 33 runs
ODI 4291 25 May Tamim Iqbal Kusal Perera Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 103 runs (DLS)
ODI 4292 28 May Tamim Iqbal Kusal Perera Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Sri Lanka by 97 runs

Scotland women in Ireland

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 892 24 May Laura Delany Kathryn Bryce Stormont, Belfast   Scotland by 11 runs
WT20I 893 25 May Laura Delany Kathryn Bryce Stormont, Belfast   Ireland by 61 runs
WT20I 894 26 May Laura Delany Kathryn Bryce Stormont, Belfast   Ireland by 41 runs
WT20I 895 27 May Laura Delany Kathryn Bryce Stormont, Belfast   Ireland by 6 wickets

2021 Papua New Guinea Tri-Nation Series

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The series was postponed in February 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[24]

2019–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 – Tri-series
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
[ 1st ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby
[ 2nd ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby
[ 3rd ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby
[ 4th ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby
[ 5th ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby
[ 6th ODI] May Amini Park, Port Moresby

June

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Ireland in Netherlands

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2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4293 2 June Pieter Seelaar Andrew Balbirnie Sportpark Maarschalkerweerd, Utrecht   Netherlands by 1 run
ODI 4294 4 June Pieter Seelaar Andrew Balbirnie Sportpark Maarschalkerweerd, Utrecht   Ireland by 8 wickets
ODI 4295 7 June Pieter Seelaar Andrew Balbirnie Sportpark Maarschalkerweerd, Utrecht   Netherlands by 4 wickets

New Zealand in England

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Test series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test 2422 2–6 June Joe Root Kane Williamson Lord's, London Match drawn
Test 2423 10–14 June Joe Root Tom Latham Edgbaston, Birmingham   New Zealand by 8 wickets

South Africa in West Indies

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Sir Vivian Richards Trophy, 2019–2021 ICC World Test Championship – Test series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test 2424 10–14 June Kraigg Brathwaite Dean Elgar Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   South Africa by an innings and 63 runs
Test 2426 18–22 June Kraigg Brathwaite Dean Elgar Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   South Africa by 158 runs
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1176 26 June Kieron Pollard Temba Bavuma National Cricket Stadium, Grenada   West Indies by 8 wickets
T20I 1178 27 June Kieron Pollard Temba Bavuma National Cricket Stadium, Grenada   South Africa by 16 runs
T20I 1179 29 June Kieron Pollard Temba Bavuma National Cricket Stadium, Grenada   South Africa by 1 run
T20I 1180 1 July Kieron Pollard Temba Bavuma National Cricket Stadium, Grenada   West Indies by 21 runs
T20I 1181 3 July Kieron Pollard Temba Bavuma National Cricket Stadium, Grenada   South Africa by 25 runs

India women in England

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Only WTest
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WTest 141 16–19 June Heather Knight Mithali Raj Bristol County Ground, Bristol Match drawn
WODI series
WODI 1198 27 June Heather Knight Mithali Raj Bristol County Ground, Bristol   England by 8 wickets
WODI 1199 30 June Heather Knight Mithali Raj County Ground, Taunton   England by 5 wickets
WODI 1200 3 July Heather Knight Mithali Raj New Road, Worcester   India by 4 wickets
WT20I series
WT20I 916 9 July Heather Knight Harmanpreet Kaur County Cricket Ground, Northampton   England by 18 runs (DLS)
WT20I 919 11 July Heather Knight Harmanpreet Kaur County Cricket Ground, Hove   India by 8 runs
WT20I 920 14 July Heather Knight Harmanpreet Kaur County Cricket Ground, Chelmsford   England by 8 wickets

World Test Championship Final

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Only Test
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
Test 2425 18–23 June   India Virat Kohli   New Zealand Kane Williamson Rose Bowl, Southampton   New Zealand by 8 wickets

Sri Lanka in England

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T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1165 23 June Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera Sophia Gardens, Cardiff   England by 8 wickets
T20I 1168 24 June Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera Sophia Gardens, Cardiff   England by 5 wickets (DLS)
T20I 1174 26 June Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera Rose Bowl, Southampton   England by 89 runs
2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4296 29 June Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street   England by 5 wickets
ODI 4297 1 July Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera The Oval, London   England by 8 wickets
ODI 4298 4 July Eoin Morgan Kusal Perera Bristol County Ground, Bristol No result

Pakistan women in West Indies

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 910 30 June Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   West Indies by 10 runs
WT20I 911 2 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   West Indies by 7 runs (DLS)
WT20I 912 4 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   West Indies by 6 wickets
WODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WODI 1201 7 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   West Indies by 5 wickets
WODI 1202 9 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   West Indies by 8 wickets
WODI 1203 12 July Anisa Mohammed Javeria Khan Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   West Indies by 8 wickets
WODI 1204 15 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   Pakistan by 4 wickets
WODI 1205 18 July Stafanie Taylor Javeria Khan Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   Pakistan by 22 runs (DLS)

July

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Bangladesh in Zimbabwe

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Only Test
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test 2427 7–11 July Brendan Taylor Mominul Haque Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 220 runs
2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4304 16 July Brendan Taylor Tamim Iqbal Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 155 runs
ODI 4306 18 July Brendan Taylor Tamim Iqbal Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 3 wickets
ODI 4308 20 July Brendan Taylor Tamim Iqbal Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 5 wickets
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1196 22 July Sikandar Raza Mahmudullah Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 8 wickets
T20I 1198 23 July Sikandar Raza Mahmudullah Harare Sports Club, Harare   Zimbabwe by 23 runs
T20I 1203 25 July Sikandar Raza Mahmudullah Harare Sports Club, Harare   Bangladesh by 5 wickets

Pakistan in England

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2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4299 8 July Ben Stokes Babar Azam Sophia Gardens, Cardiff   England by 9 wickets
ODI 4300 10 July Ben Stokes Babar Azam Lord's, London   England by 52 runs
ODI 4303 13 July Ben Stokes Babar Azam Edgbaston, Birmingham   England by 3 wickets
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1191 16 July Eoin Morgan Babar Azam Trent Bridge, Nottingham   Pakistan by 31 runs
T20I 1193 18 July Jos Buttler Babar Azam Headingley, Leeds   England by 45 runs
T20I 1195 20 July Eoin Morgan Babar Azam Old Trafford, Manchester   England by 3 wickets

Australia in West Indies

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The second ODI was suspended following a positive test for COVID-19 from a non-playing member of the West Indies team.[25] After no further cases, the second and third ODIs were rescheduled.[26]

T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1185 9 July Nicholas Pooran Aaron Finch Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   West Indies by 18 runs
T20I 1188 10 July Nicholas Pooran Aaron Finch Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   West Indies by 56 runs
T20I 1189 12 July Nicholas Pooran Aaron Finch Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   West Indies by 6 wickets
T20I 1190 14 July Nicholas Pooran Aaron Finch Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   Australia by 4 runs
T20I 1192 16 July Nicholas Pooran Aaron Finch Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, Saint Lucia   West Indies by 16 runs
2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4310 20 July Kieron Pollard Alex Carey Kensington Oval, Barbados   Australia by 133 runs (DLS)
ODI 4311 22–24 July Kieron Pollard Alex Carey Kensington Oval, Barbados   West Indies by 4 wickets
ODI 4313 26 July Kieron Pollard Alex Carey Kensington Oval, Barbados   Australia by 6 wickets

South Africa in Ireland

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2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4301 11 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma The Village, Malahide No result
ODI 4302 13 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma The Village, Malahide   Ireland by 43 runs
ODI 4305 16 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma The Village, Malahide   South Africa by 70 runs
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1194 19 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma The Village, Malahide   South Africa by 33 runs
T20I 1197 22 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma Stormont, Belfast   South Africa by 42 runs
T20I 1200 24 July Andrew Balbirnie Temba Bavuma Stormont, Belfast   South Africa by 49 runs

India in Sri Lanka

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The second T20I was postponed by one day following a positive test for COVID-19 from an Indian cricketer.[27]

2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4307 18 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   India by 7 wickets
ODI 4309 20 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   India by 3 wickets
ODI 4312 23 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Sri Lanka by 3 wickets (DLS)
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1204 25 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   India by 38 runs
T20I 1206 28 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Sri Lanka by 4 wickets
T20I 1207 29 July Dasun Shanaka Shikhar Dhawan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo   Sri Lanka by 7 wickets

2021 Scotland Tri-Nation Series

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The series was postponed in June 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[28]

2019–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 – Tri-series
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
[1st ODI] 20 July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria
[2nd ODI] July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria
[3rd ODI] July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria
[4th ODI] July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria
[5th ODI] July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria
[6th ODI] July Desert Springs Cricket Ground, Almeria

Netherlands women in Ireland

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 921 26 July Laura Delany Heather Siegers The Village, Dublin   Ireland by 28 runs
WT20I 921a 28 July Laura Delany Heather Siegers The Village, Dublin Match abandoned
WT20I 922 29 July Laura Delany Heather Siegers The Village, Dublin   Ireland by 6 wickets
WT20I 923 30 July Laura Delany Heather Siegers The Village, Dublin   Netherlands by 7 wickets (DLS)

Pakistan in West Indies

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T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1205 28 July Kieron Pollard Babar Azam Kensington Oval, Barbados No result
T20I 1208 31 July Kieron Pollard Babar Azam Guyana National Stadium, Guyana   Pakistan by 7 runs
T20I 1209 1 August Kieron Pollard Babar Azam Guyana National Stadium, Guyana No result
T20I 1211 3 August Kieron Pollard Babar Azam Guyana National Stadium, Guyana No result
2021–2023 ICC World Test Championship – Test series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test 2430 12–16 August Kraigg Brathwaite Babar Azam Sabina Park, Jamaica   West Indies by 1 wicket
Test 2431 20–24 August Kraigg Brathwaite Babar Azam Sabina Park, Jamaica   Pakistan by 109 runs

Afghanistan in Sri Lanka

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The series was scheduled to start in July 2021, but did not take place. No official updates were issued by either cricket board or the ICC.

2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
[1st ODI]
[2nd ODI]
[3rd ODI]
T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
[1st T20I]
[2nd T20I]
[3rd T20I]

August

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Australia in Bangladesh

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T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1210 3 August Mahmudullah Matthew Wade Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 23 runs
T20I 1212 4 August Mahmudullah Matthew Wade Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 5 wickets
T20I 1216 6 August Mahmudullah Matthew Wade Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 10 runs
T20I 1218 7 August Mahmudullah Matthew Wade Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Australia by 3 wickets
T20I 1222 9 August Mahmudullah Matthew Wade Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka   Bangladesh by 60 runs

India in England

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The fifth Test was cancelled following a number of COVID cases in the Indian camp.[29] In October 2021, the England and Wales Cricket Board announced that the Test match would be played in July 2022.[30]

Pataudi Trophy, 2021–2023 ICC World Test Championship – Test series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
Test 2428 4–8 August Joe Root Virat Kohli Trent Bridge, Nottingham Match drawn
Test 2429 12–16 August Joe Root Virat Kohli Lord's, London   India by 151 runs
Test 2432 25–29 August Joe Root Virat Kohli Headingley, Leeds   England by an innings and 76 runs
Test 2433 2–6 September Joe Root Virat Kohli The Oval, London   India by 157 runs
Test 2470 1–5 July 2022 Ben Stokes Jasprit Bumrah Edgbaston, Birmingham   England by 7 wickets

Zimbabwe in Ireland

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The series was postponed in July 2021,[31] with rescheduled dates confirmed in August 2021.[32]

T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1241 27 August Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Castle Avenue, Dublin   Zimbabwe by 3 runs
T20I 1242 29 August Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Castle Avenue, Dublin   Ireland by 7 wickets
T20I 1244 1 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Bready Cricket Club Ground, Magheramason   Ireland by 40 runs
T20I 1248 2 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Bready Cricket Club Ground, Magheramason   Ireland by 64 runs
T20I 1256 4 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Bready Cricket Club Ground, Magheramason   Zimbabwe by 5 runs
2020–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup Super League – ODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
ODI 4319 8 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Stormont, Belfast   Zimbabwe by 38 runs
ODI 4321 10 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Stormont, Belfast No result
ODI 4323 13 September Andrew Balbirnie Craig Ervine Stormont, Belfast   Ireland by 7 wickets (DLS)

Thailand women in Zimbabwe

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 934 27 August Mary-Anne Musonda Naruemol Chaiwai Takashinga Cricket Club, Harare   Zimbabwe by 1 wicket
WT20I 936 28 August Mary-Anne Musonda Naruemol Chaiwai Takashinga Cricket Club, Harare   Thailand by 53 runs
WT20I 942 30 August Mary-Anne Musonda Naruemol Chaiwai Takashinga Cricket Club, Harare   Thailand by 27 runs

South Africa women in West Indies

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 943 31 August Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua No result
WT20I 945 2 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   South Africa by 50 runs
WT20I 947 4 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   West Indies by 5 wickets
WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WODI 1206 7 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   South Africa by 8 wickets
WODI 1207 10 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   South Africa by 9 wickets
WODI 1208 13 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Coolidge Cricket Ground, Antigua   South Africa by 8 wickets
WODI 1210 16 September Anisa Mohammed Dane van Niekerk Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua   South Africa by 35 runs
WODI 1212 19 September Deandra Dottin Dane van Niekerk Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, Antigua Match tied (  West Indies won S/O)

2021 United States Tri-Nation Series

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2019–2023 ICC Cricket World Cup League 2 – Tri-series
No. Date Team 1 Captain 1 Team 2 Captain 2 Venue Result
[1st ODI] August
[2nd ODI] August
[3rd ODI] August
[4th ODI] August
[5th ODI] August
[6th ODI] August

September

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New Zealand women in England

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WT20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WT20I 944 1 September Nat Sciver Sophie Devine County Cricket Ground, Chelmsford   England by 46 runs
WT20I 946 4 September Nat Sciver Sophie Devine County Cricket Ground, Hove   New Zealand by 4 wickets
WT20I 952 9 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine County Ground, Taunton   England by 4 wickets
WODI series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
WODI 1209 16 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine Bristol County Ground, Bristol   England by 30 runs
WODI 1211 19 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine New Road, Worcester   England by 13 runs (DLS)
WODI 1214 21 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine Grace Road, Leicester   New Zealand by 3 wickets
WODI 1215 23 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine County Cricket Ground, Derby   England by 3 wickets
WODI 1218 26 September Heather Knight Sophie Devine St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury   England by 203 runs

Zimbabwe in Scotland

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T20I series
No. Date Home captain Away captain Venue Result
T20I 1276 15 September Kyle Coetzer Craig Ervine The Grange Club, Edinburgh   Scotland by 7 runs
T20I 1279 17 September Kyle Coetzer Craig Ervine The Grange Club, Edinburgh   Zimbabwe by 10 runs
T20I 1280 19 September Kyle Coetzer Craig Ervine The Grange Club, Edinburgh   Zimbabwe by 6 wickets

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The series was scheduled to start in July, but did not take place.
  2. ^ The fifth Test was cancelled due to the number of COVID-19 cases in the Indian camp.
  3. ^ The series was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  4. ^ a b The tournament was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  5. ^ The series was scheduled to start in August, but did not take place.

References

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  1. ^ "Schedule for inaugural World Test Championship announced". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  2. ^ "Men's Future Tours Programme" (PDF). International Cricket Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 July 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2019.
  3. ^ "World Test Championship final: New Zealand beat India on sixth day to become world champions". BBC Sport. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  4. ^ "England vs India to kick off the second World Test Championship". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 29 June 2021.
  5. ^ "Qualification for ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2023 announced". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  6. ^ "A historic Test on the cards as England Women announce home summer schedule". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  7. ^ "England won't be going Dutch as Netherlands ODI tour is postponed". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  8. ^ "Netherlands vs England in ICC CWC Super League postponed". Royal Dutch Cricket Association. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  9. ^ "Three Men's Cricket World Cup League 2 series postponed". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  10. ^ "Cricket World Cup League Two matches postponed as Women's and Men's U19 events move to Spain". Cricket Scotland. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  11. ^ "Statement on Zimbabwe Men's tour". Cricket Ireland. Archived from the original on 22 July 2021. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  12. ^ "2nd CG Insurance ODI between West Indies and Australia postponed". Cricket West Indies. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  13. ^ "Jersey to no longer host Cricket World Cup qualifier". ITV News. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  14. ^ "Official Statement: Fifth Test between England and India cancelled". England and Wales Cricket Board. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  15. ^ "England-India agree to series decider at Edgbaston after fifth-Test postponement". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  16. ^ "Men's Test Team Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  17. ^ "India remain on top of MRF Tyres ICC Men's Test team rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
  18. ^ "Men's ODI Team Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  19. ^ "New Zealand top-ranked ODI side after annual update to MRF Tyres ICC Men's Team Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  20. ^ "Men's T20I Team Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  21. ^ "New Zealand climb to top of the ODI rankings in annual update". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  22. ^ "Women's ODI Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  23. ^ "Women's T20I Rankings". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 17 April 2021.
  24. ^ "Covid-19 forces postponement of three men's World Cup League 2 series". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  25. ^ "Tour in doubt, second ODI called off due to COVID case". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  26. ^ "West Indies-Australia series to resume with new dates". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 24 July 2021.
  27. ^ "Indian player tests positive for Covid-19, second T20I against Sri Lanka postponed by a day". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
  28. ^ "Two ICC Europe Qualifiers Relocated From Scotland to Spain". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 24 June 2021.
  29. ^ "Manchester Test postponed indefinitely over Covid-19 fears". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 September 2021.
  30. ^ "England and India to conclude LV=Insurance Test series next year". England and Wales Cricket Board. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  31. ^ "Ireland v Zimbabwe: Series to be rescheduled over Covid-19 quarantine requirements". BBC Sport. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  32. ^ "Graham Ford about Ireland Men's prospects, as new dates released for rescheduled Zimbabwe series". Cricket Ireland. Archived from the original on 5 August 2021. Retrieved 5 August 2021.