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Shubman Gill led India as they faced England in a five-match Test series. India had not won a series in England since 2007. Ben Stokes was back to lead England after an injury layoff. In a closely contested series, India drew the series 2-2.

The first five-day game started at Leeds on 20th June 2025.

India entered this series with a refreshed lineup following the Test retirements of stalwarts Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Ravichandran Ashwin.

Notable inclusions in the 18-member Indian squad were:

  • Karun Nair : Returns after an eight-year hiatus; known for his epic triple century in 2016.
  • Sai Sudharsan: Earns a maiden Test call-up, reflecting the selectors’ focus on emerging talent.
  • Shardul Thakur: Recalled to bolster the pace attack and lower order batting.

India won the 5th Test at the Oval by 6 runs to level the series 2-2.

Key Performers

  • Shubman Gill (India captain) led with remarkable consistency: he amassed 754 runs at an average of 65.76 including a double century at Edgbaston and centuries at Headingley  and the Oval.
  • Harry Brook (England) fired back on both sides: named Player of the Series alongside Gill for his aggregate of 481 runs  at 81.89.
  • Mohammed Siraj played a pivotal role with the ball, claiming 26 Test wickets at 32 in the series and delivering one of the most memorable spells in recent Test history at the Oval.

 

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The Border-Gavaskar Trophy is contested between India and Australia. The trophy is named after two test cricket skippers; Allan Border and Sunil Manohar Gavaskar. The fierce rivalry and rich history between these two top cricketing nations started in 1947 when India under Lala Amaranath toured Australia who were led by Don Bradman. The Test cricket rivalry between England and India began in 1932 and has evolved into one of the sport's most enduring contests. As of March 2025, the two countries have contested 36 Test series.
Border Gavaskar Trophy

The Border-Gavaskar Trophy is contested between ...

Joe Root leads an England team smarting from a 4-0 pounding dealt to them on their tour Down Under in 2017-18. Tim Paine leads an usettled Australian team as Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft re-unite in white colours for the first-time since the infamous Cape Town sandpaper scandal had them banned for a year.
Root will be looking to exact revenge on home soil - where Australia hasn't won an Ashes series since 2001.
The five Test series will be played over seven weeks, with the first Test starting on Thursday August 1 and the fifth Test starting on Thursday September 12. 
2019 Ashes

Joe Root leads an England team smarting from a ...

Joe Root led a resurgent England team on their Ashes defence against an Australia team led by Steve Smith. The Ashes series was played at five venues across Australia between 23 November 2017 and 8 January 2018. 
Australia recovered the Ashes on their home soil with a 4-0 series win.
Top Performers:

Player of the Series:

Steve Smith (Australia): 687 runs at 137.40

Top Wicket-Takers:

Pat Cummins (Australia): 23 wickets
Mitchell Starc & Josh Hazlewood: 22 wickets each
James Anderson (England): 17 wickets

Top Run-Scorers (England):

Dawid Malan: 383 runs
Alastair Cook: 376 runs


Legacy:

Australia’s pace trio of Starc, Hazlewood, and Cummins proved relentless.
Steve Smith’s incredible form led from the front.
England struggled with lacklustre batting and an ineffective bowling attack in Australian conditions.
The win marked a resurgence for Australia after losing the 2015 Ashes in England.

 
2017/18 Ashes

Joe Root led a resurgent England team on their ...

Michael Clarke led a 17 person Australia team that was defending the Ashes in England. Alistair Cook skippered England looking to restore parity after the 5-0 drubbing in the past Ashes series down under in 2013/14. The venues for the 5 Test series were confirmed as Lord's, Trent Bridge, Sophia Gardens, Edgbaston and The Oval.
England won back the Ashes, taking the series 3-2. Joe Root was named the player of the series after scoring 460 runs. Chris Rogers had the highest series aggregate with 480 runs. Stuart Broad with 21 wickets was the outstanding bowler - his 8-15 was the most decisive spell in the series when Australia were shot out for 60 in the 4th Test.
Top Performers:

Player of the Series (England):

Joe Root: 460 runs, including two centuries

Player of the Series (Australia):

Chris Rogers: 480 runs at the top of the order

Top Wicket-Takers:

Stuart Broad (England): 21 wickets
Mitchell Starc (Australia): 18 wickets


Legacy:

The series was marked by short, result-driven Tests — none lasted more than four days.
England’s ability to seize momentum, especially in home conditions, proved decisive.
Australia’s struggles in swinging conditions continued, and Michael Clarke’s retirement ended an era.
Stuart Broad’s 8/15 at Trent Bridge became an iconic Ashes moment.

 
2015 Ashes

Michael Clarke led a 17 person Australia team ...

Beginning with this 2013/14 Ashes series, the four-year cycle of Ashes series in Australia was brought forward one year due to the clash with the 2015 World Cup which was held in Australia Feb-March 2015. England led by Alastair Cook toured Australia just 4 months after retaining the Ashes at home.
On 17 December 2013, Australia led by Michael Clarke regained the Ashes for the first time since 2006–07 by winning the Third Test in Perth by 150 runs and taking an unassailable 3–0 lead in the series. Australia then went on to win the series 5–0 on 5 January 2014, at the Sydney Cricket Ground, only the third 5–0 Ashes clean sweep in history.
Top Performers:

Player of the Series:

Mitchell Johnson (Australia): 37 wickets at 13.97, plus 130 runs

His raw pace, aggression, and moustache became iconic.


Top Run-Scorers:

David Warner (Australia): 523 runs
Brad Haddin (Australia): 493 runs
Ben Stokes (England): 279 runs – one of England’s few positives

Top Wicket-Takers:

Johnson (Australia): 37 wickets
Ryan Harris: 22 wickets
Stuart Broad (England): 21 wickets


Legacy:

This was only the third 5–0 Ashes whitewash in history (after 1920–21 and 2006–07).
Mitchell Johnson’s performances were career-defining and resurrected his international career.
England’s ageing core (Cook, Pietersen, Swann, Prior, Trott) began to disintegrate:

Graeme Swann retired mid-series.
Jonathan Trott left after Brisbane due to stress.
Kevin Pietersen was later dropped from future squads.
2013/14 Ashes

Beginning with this 2013/14 Ashes series, the ...

The 2013 Ashes series featured an experienced England squad and an under-pressure Australia. The matches were played at the five top tier English grounds at Lord's, Old Trafford, Trent Bridge, the Riverside Ground and The Oval with the First Test at Trent Bridge, Nottingham on 10th July 2013. The ultra-modern Riverside ground (Durham) was hosting an Ashes test for the first time.
The 2013 series was the first of two back-to-back Ashes series. The Ashes have being brought forward in the schedule by one year, starting with the 2013/14 series in Australia, due to the clash with the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup that was to be held in Australia in 2015.
The current holders of the Ashes, England, were led by Alastair Cook and Michael Clarke led the touring Australian's for the first time in an Ashes series.
England retained the Ashes after a thumping 3-0 series win. 
Top Performers:

Player of the Series (England):

Ian Bell – 562 runs, including 3 centuries

Top Run-Scorers:

Ian Bell (Eng): 562
Michael Clarke (Aus): 381
Chris Rogers (Aus): 367

Top Wicket-Takers:

Graeme Swann (Eng): 26 wickets
Ryan Harris (Aus): 24 wickets
James Anderson (Eng): 22 wickets


Legacy:

England’s third consecutive Ashes series win (2009, 2010–11, 2013).
Ian Bell was England’s standout batsman in a series where others struggled.
Australia’s top order was unstable, leading to a rebuilding phase.
The series was controversial: DRS disputes, umpiring errors, and questions around sportsmanship (e.g., the Stuart Broad non-walk incident).

 
2013 Ashes

The 2013 Ashes series featured an experienced ...

The 2010–11 Ashes series was played in Australia. Five Tests were played from 25 November 2010 to 7 January 2011. England won the series 3–1 and retained the Ashes, having won the previous series in 2009 by two Tests to one.
England were led by Andrew Strauss. They won an Ashes series in Australia for the first time since 1986/87 when Mike Gatting's touring team defended the Ashes. Ricky Ponting, the Australian skipper, created unwanted history as he became the first ever captain to lose 3 Ashes series (in 2005, 2009 and 2010/11).
Top Performers:

Player of the Series (England):

Alastair Cook – 766 runs at 127.66, including 3 centuries

Top Run-Scorers:

Alastair Cook (Eng): 766
Mike Hussey (Aus): 570
Jonathan Trott (Eng): 445

Top Wicket-Takers:

James Anderson (Eng): 24 wickets
Chris Tremlett (Eng): 17 wickets (in just 3 Tests)
Mitchell Johnson (Aus): 15 wickets


Legacy:

England’s best ever performance in an Ashes series in Australia.
Australia used a record 12 different bowlers, exposing instability.
Ponting became the first Australian captain in over a century to lose three Ashes series.
The tour marked a shift in Ashes dominance, with England rising and Australia entering a rebuilding phase.

 
2010/11 Ashes

The 2010–11 Ashes series was played in ...

The 2009 Ashes series was played over five Tests, with England winning the series 2–1. England thus reclaimed The Ashes from Australia, who had won the previous series in 2006–07.
The series started on 8 July 2009 with England battling to an exciting and defiant draw at Cardiff with last pair James Anderson and Monty Panesar at the wicket.
The series was locked in at 1-1 as they got to the Fifth Test at The Oval that would decide the series. Australia, as holders, needed only a draw to retain the Ashes. An inspired bowling performance from Stuart Broad and and a maiden Test century for Jonathan Trott gave England a 197-run win and a 2–1 series victory.
Top Performers:

Player of the Series (England):

Andrew Strauss – 474 runs, including two centuries

Player of the Series (Australia):

Michael Clarke – 445 runs, most consistent Aussie batsman

Top Run-Scorers:

Andrew Strauss (Eng): 474
Michael Clarke (Aus): 445
Marcus North (Aus): 367

Top Wicket-Takers:

Ben Hilfenhaus (Aus): 22 wickets
Stuart Broad (Eng): 18 wickets
Graeme Swann (Eng): 14 wickets


Legacy:

Flintoff’s final Test series – he retired from Tests after the Oval win.
Jonathan Trott’s debut century set the tone for a strong England future.
England’s tactical use of swing and patience paid off, while Australia’s bowling lacked the same firepower.
It was England’s second Ashes series win in four years, re-establishing them as a serious force at home.

 
2009 Ashes

The 2009 Ashes series was played over five Tests, ...

The 2006/07 Ashes was dubbed the
2006/07 Ashes

The 2006/07 Ashes was dubbed the "revenge" series ...

The 2005 Ashes was one of the most exciting enthralling series of all time. Starting on 21 July 2005, England and Australia played five Tests with Australia having held the Ashes for 16 straight years since 1989. The final result was a 2–1 series win for England with the series in the balance until the last day of the series.
In the leadup, Australia had been the top-ranked test nation since 1995. England had quietly won 14 and drawn three of their 18 previous Test matches, including being victorious in their last six successive series. Fast bowler Glenn McGrath made his now infamous predicton of a
2005 Ashes

The 2005 Ashes was one of the most exciting ...

The England cricket team toured Australia in 2002–03 and played a five-Test series at the major test venues of Gabba, MCG, Adelaide, WACA and SCG.
Australia led by Steve Waugh easily defended the Ashes, winning the series 4-1. England's skipper Nasser Hussain made one of the worst captaincy blunders of all time after sending Australia into bat in the 1st Test at the Gabba after winning the toss. Australia's batsmen took advantage of several dropped catches and other mistakes in the field to amass a staggering 364 for 2 at the end of play and the series went rapidly downhill for the tourists from that point onwards.
Top Performers:

Player of the Series:

Michael Vaughan (England): 633 runs at 63.30, including 3 centuries

Top Run-Scorers:

Michael Vaughan (Eng): 633
Ricky Ponting (Aus): 523
Justin Langer (Aus): 321

Top Wicket-Takers:

Glenn McGrath (Aus): 21 wickets
Andy Caddick (Eng): 20 wickets
Shane Warne (Aus): 14 wickets


Legacy:

Australia’s seventh consecutive Ashes series win, further cementing their dominance.
England’s lone bright spot was Vaughan’s sublime batting, foreshadowing his leadership in 2005.
The series marked the tail end of Steve Waugh’s Test career (he retired a year later).
Australia’s golden era continued unchecked with world-class contributions from Warne, McGrath, Gilchrist, and Ponting.

 
2002/03 Ashes

The England cricket team toured Australia in ...

Steve Waugh led the Australian team on its Ashes tour in 2001 whilst England were captained by Nasser Hussain. Australia won the Test series 4-1 and extended their dominance of the home team since they won back the Ashes in 1989.
On his Ashes debut, Adam Gilchrist smashed 152 in 143 balls in the first Test against England at Edgbaston as Australia won by an innings and 118 runs to take a stranglehold of the series. In the final Test at the Oval, Steve Waugh showed remarkable courage after a calf injury left him hobbling as he made a defiant 157 not out.
The series also marked the retirement of former England captain Mike Atherton, who finished his international career after the Fifth and final Test.
 

Top Performers:

Player of the Series:

Adam Gilchrist (Australia): 340 runs at a strike rate of over 90
Honorable mention: Glenn McGrath (Australia): 32 wickets in 5 Tests

Top Run-Scorers:

Adam Gilchrist (Aus): 340
Mark Butcher (Eng): 456
Ricky Ponting (Aus): 444
Matthew Hayden (Aus): 402

Top Wicket-Takers:

Glenn McGrath (Aus): 32 wickets
Shane Warne (Aus): 31 wickets
Andy Caddick (Eng): 18 wickets


Legacy:

Australia won their eighth consecutive Ashes series since 1989.
Mark Butcher’s 173 at The Oval* was one of the finest innings of his career.
England were competitive at times but lacked consistency and depth.
The series marked continued brilliance from McGrath, Warne, Hayden, and Gilchrist in their prime.

 
2001 Ashes

Steve Waugh led the Australian team on its Ashes ...

Alex Stewart led England's touring party down-under in 1998/99 to take on Mark's Taylor's Australians in a 5 Test series. Australia won the series 3-1 with Taylor winning all five coin tosses.
Late on the first day of the 5th Test at the SCG, Darren Gough took a hat-trick. With Australia cruising at 319-5 following a century from Mark Waugh and 96 from his brother Steve, Dean Headley started the slide by removing Mark. Enter Gough as he snared his hat trick. Australia still won this match by 98 runs after Stuart Macgill (7-50) bowled out England for 188.
Top Performers:

Top Run-Scorers:

Michael Slater (Aus): 428 runs
Mark Waugh (Aus): 407 runs
Alec Stewart (Eng): 385 runs

Top Wicket-Takers:

Glenn McGrath (Aus): 30 wickets
Shane Warne (Aus): 24 wickets
Dean Headley (Eng): 18 wickets


Legacy:

Australia retained the Ashes for the sixth consecutive time, extending their dominance over England.
Dean Headley’s heroics at the MCG gave England their first win in Australia since 1986–87.
Stuart MacGill’s emergence provided Australia with a lethal spin partner to Warne.
England remained competitive in patches but lacked the depth and killer instinct to challenge Australia across five Tests.

 
1998/99 Ashes

Alex Stewart led England's touring party ...

Mike Gatting led the English tourists in 1986–87 for a 5 Test series. His team started badly in the pre-Test state games and attracted severe criticism as one of worst teams to tour Australia. Gatting had the last laugh.
Chris Broad scored three hundreds in successive Tests and fine bowling from Graham Dilley, Ian Botham and Gladstone Small meant England won the series 2–1.
One of the most decisive events took place in the 1st Test at the Gabba. Ian Botham came into bat with England in trouble at 198-4. Botham smashed 138 off 174 balls including 13 fours and four sixes to wrest the game away from Australia. The tourists posted 456 and gained a 7 wicket win. England never looked back and retained the Ashes with an innings and 14 run win in the 4th Test at the MCG.
1986/87 Ashes

Mike Gatting led the English tourists in ...

The Australians under Kim Hughes toured England in 1981 for a 6 Test series. Single Tests are often dubbed after players, but this 1981 series has gone down in history simply as
1981 Ashes

The Australians under Kim Hughes toured England ...

The 1974/75 Ashes series in Australia was played over six Test matches. Australia led by Ian Chappell won the series 4–1 and
1974/75 Ashes

The 1974/75 Ashes series in Australia was played ...

Ray Illingworth led the English team on the 1970/71 Ashes tour. The series was contested over seven Test matches after the 3rd Test match at the MCG was washed out and replayed as the 5th Test . England beat Bill Lawry's Australians 2–0 to retain the Ashes. It was the the only full Test series in Australia in which the home team failed to win a single Test and Bill Lawry was axed at the end of the 6th Test in favour of Ian Chappell.
During the decisive 7th Test at the SCG, England had walked off the field in protest after fast bowler John Snow was manhandled by an Australian supporter on the boundary line. Ray Illingworth led his team back after calm had been restored on the Sydney Hill to regain the Ashes with a 62 run victory.
The first ever One Day International took place at the MCG during this tour after the rain washout of the 3rd Test.
1970/71 Ashes

Ray Illingworth led the English team on the ...

The Australian team, for the 1961 Ashes tour to England, was led by all-rounder Richie Benaud. The tour was a five-Test series, with Test matches played at Edgbaston, Lord's, Headingley, Old Trafford and The Oval. England were led by Peter May.
Australia won the series 2-1 to retain The Ashes.
The decisive moment in the series was in the 4th Test at Old Trafford. The series was locked at 1-1 after three Tests. On the final morning, England was in the driving seat, with Australia nine wickets down and only 162 ahead. Australia's last-wicket pair of Alan Davison and Graham McKenzie added 98 more runs to extend their lead. In England's run chase, a bright 76 from Ted Dexter got them into a winning position. Enter Richie Benaud who tore through the English batting to finish with 6-70, steering his side to a famous 54-run victory to retain the Ashes.
Key Performers

Richie Benaud (Australia): Captain and leg-spinner; led from the front with tactical brilliance and key wickets, including 6/70 in the 4th Test.
Alan Davidson (Australia): All-rounder; crucial contributions with both bat and ball, including match-turning performances in the 2nd and 4th Tests.
Bill Lawry (Australia): Reliable opener; anchored Australia’s innings in key victories, especially at Lord’s.
Bob Simpson (Australia): Solid batting displays in the first Test; provided stability in the middle order.
Garth McKenzie (Australia): Fast bowler; took vital wickets and supported Davidson in the 4th Test winning partnership.
Fred Trueman (England): Exceptional pace bowler; 11-wicket haul at Headingley led England to their sole victory in the series.
Peter May (England): Captain and top-order batsman; notable innings included 71 in the 5th Test, keeping England competitive in draws.
Geoff Pullar (England): Scored vital runs in the first Test to help secure a draw.

 
1961 Ashes

The Australian team, for the 1961 Ashes tour to ...

The Australian team under Ian Johnson toured England in the 1956 summer and played a five-match Test series. Peter May's team won the series 2-1 to retain The Ashes.
The pivotal moment in the series was in the 4th Test at Old Trafford. England retained the Ashes with a bowling performance from off-spinner Jim Laker that is unlikely to ever be matched - let alone bettered. Laker finished the Test with astounding match figures of 19-90. The spinner took 9-37 as the visitors were skittled for 84, and when they followed on he claimed all 10 scalps to seal an innings and 170-run victory.
Laker's achievements was a touch overshadowed by the furore surrounding the pitch. Arthur Morris wrote
1956 Ashes

The Australian team under Ian Johnson toured ...

The Australian team under Lindsay Hassett toured England during the Queen's coronation year of 1953 and played a five-match Test series.
After 4 successive draws in rain affacted matches, 6 days were allocated for the 5th and final Test match at the Oval. England under Len Hutton won the final Test to take the series 1-0 after spin played a decisive factor. Australia went in with no spinners but Engand's Jim Laker and Tony Lock, on their home pitch, led the way for a 8 wicket win.
England thus recovered the Ashes for the first time since 1934 sparking a long celebration.
1953 Ashes

The Australian team under Lindsay Hassett toured ...

The 1948 Ashes series was the first tour by Australia to England after the ravages of World War II. Starting on 10 June 1948, England and Australia played five Tests. Australia were led by Donald Bradman on his last tour and were strong favourites to retain the Ashes as the team contained a good balance.
The England team were led by the amateur Norman Yardley in the dying days of the divide with professionals. Although it had several notable players such as Len Hutton, Denis Compton and Alec Bedser, England were unable to match Australia. The final result was a 4–0 series win for Australia.
Two of the most remarkable feats were when Australia had a record 404-run chase on the final day of the Fourth Test at Leeds with Bradman and Morris smashing centuries. In a first class game, Australia scored a world record 721 runs in a single day against Essex.
The Australians were the first and only team to remain undefeated on an entire tour of England, earning them the label of
1948 Ashes

The 1948 Ashes series was the first tour by ...

Don Bradman led Australia on its 1938 Ashes tour. England and Australia won a Test each, with two of the other Tests drawn and the third game of the series, scheduled for Manchester, abandoned without a ball being bowled. As holders, Australia thus retained The Ashes. Wally Hammond turned amateur to skipper England.
The main drama in the series was in the last Test at the Oval. The hosts needed to win to square the series and did so in style with opener Len Hutton batting for more than 13 hours in compiling a record score of 364. Australia could not match England's then record score of an imposing 903-7 declared to lose by an innings and 579 runs.
In all 30 first-class matches were played, and the Australian team won 15 of them losing only to England and H. D. G. Leveson-Gower's XI. Len Hutton scored 473 runs in the series (2 centuries) in the 3 Tests that he played and Bradman made 434 runs with 3 centuries. Bill O'Reilly was the top wicket taker with 22 victims in the series.
Key Performers

Don Bradman (Australia): Scored 434 runs in 6 innings at an average of 108.50.  
Bill Brown (Australia): Top-scored for Australia with 512 runs at an average of 73.14.  
Stan McCabe (Australia): Contributed 362 runs at an average of 45.25.  
Bill O’Reilly (Australia): Led the bowling attack with 22 wickets at an average of 27.72.  
Ken Farnes (England): Claimed 17 wickets at an average of 34.17.  
Hedley Verity (England): Took 14 wickets at an average of 25.28.  
Leonard Hutton (England): Accumulated 473 runs at an average of 118.25.  
Wally Hammond (England): Scored 379 runs at an average of 54.14.

 
1938 Ashes

Don Bradman led Australia on its 1938 Ashes tour. ...

Bill Woodfull led Australia on the 1934 Ashes series with a quest to repair the damage done by the prior Bodyline series and win back the Ashes. He was successful; winning two of the matches and losing one, with the other two tests drawn. Bob Wyatt led England, with Cyril Walters standing in for Wyatt in the first Test.
England levelled the series at Lord's. This 2nd Test is known as Verity's Match after left-arm spinner Hedley Verity took 15 wickets in the match on a sticky wicket. After draws in the third and fourth Tests, a win in the decisive final Test at the Oval returned the Ashes to Australian control.
The last two Tests of the series were notable for the batting of Bill Ponsford and Don Bradman, who shared partnerships of 388 at Headingley (scoring 181 and 304 respectively) and 451 at the Oval (scoring 266 and 244 respectively).
1934 Ashes

Bill Woodfull led Australia on the 1934 Ashes ...

England toured Australia in the summer of 1932/33 to play five Test matches. The tourists won back the Ashes convincingly by four games to one in one of the most acromonious series of all time.
The tour was highly controversial because of the Bodyline bowling tactics used by the English captain Douglas Jardine. The plan hatched in England with the help of Percy Fender and Arthur Carr, was to specifically limit the extraordinary batting skill of Australia's Don Bradman. In the prior 1930 series, Bradman had plundered a record 974 runs off their attack but had shown some tendency to flinch at the fast rising delivery. When Jardine instructed his two fast bowlers Harold Larwood and Bill Voce to bowl Bodyline, it had the effect of lowering Bradman's extraordinary batting to an average of 53 during the series. Gubby Allen, an amateur fast bowler, refused to bowl Bodyline.
Australian skipper Bill Woodfull's physical courage and dignified leadership won him many admirers. He did not employ retaliatory tactics. When the English team manager and former captain Plum Warner visited the Australian dressing room to express his sympathies during the 3rd Test in Adelaide, Woodfull's famous response meant to be private, but leaked to the press was
1932/33 Ashes

England toured Australia in the summer of 1932/33 ...

Australia, led by Bill Woodfull, toured England in the summer of 1930 for a 5 Test series. The tourists won the Ashes back after winning two of the matches and losing one, with the other two tests drawn.
The 21-year old Don Bradman on his maiden tour to England with just 4 Tests under his belt was the star of the series scoring a record 974 runs. His innings of 334 at Leeds was a ferocious, sustained assault such as cricket had never experienced. This knock paved the way for Australia's Ashes victory. His dominance was established by scoring 2,960 runs on tour at an average of 98.66, with scores of 236, 185, 252, 191, 254, 232 and 205, and capped by the then world record Test innings at Headingley.
Wisden summed up Bradman's record breaking run as
1930 Ashes

Australia, led by Bill Woodfull, toured England ...

Percy Chapman led the England team that toured Australia in 1928–29. England regained The Ashes easily, winning the first four Tests for a comprehensive 4–1 series victory.
England first came across a 20-year-old Don Bradman in the first Test in Brisbane; Bradman scored just 18 and 1, as England secured a mammoth 675-run victory. Bradman was promptly dropped for the next Test.
Wally Hammond was the real star for England having slammed double centuries at Sydney and Melbourne. In five consecutive Test innings, Hammond scored an incredible 779 runs at an average of 113, a record for a series at that time.
1928/29 Ashes

Percy Chapman led the England team that toured ...

Billy Murdoch led the Australian team to England in 1882. The series was at the time considered to be a first-class cricket tour of England but the match at the Oval between the Australians and an England side led by AN Hornby was later accepted to be a Test match. It was a low-scoring affair on a difficult wicket. Australia made a mere 63 runs in its first innings, and England took a 38-run lead after posting 101. In their second innings, the Australians, boosted by a spectacular 55 runs off 60 deliveries from Hugh Massie, managed 122, which left England needing only 85 runs to win. The Australians were greatly demoralised by the manner of their second-innings collapse, but fast bowler Fred Spofforth, spurred on by some gamesmanship by his opponents, refused to give in.
1882 Ashes

Billy Murdoch led the Australian team to England ...

The first Test match between England and Australia was played at the MCG on March 15,16, 17 and 19 in 1877.
Australia defeated England in what became subsequently known as the first 'Test' match. Opening batsman, Charles Bannerman, scored the first ever century having retired hurt on 165 (including the first “five” in Test cricket for a hit over the fence). Bannerman only played three Tests, and retired in 1879/1880 to become coach of the Melbourne Cricket Club.
Australia won the first Test by 45 runs. Australian captain, Dave Gregory, was given a gold medal by the Victorian Cricket Association whilst his team-mates received silver medals. English skipper James Lillywhite stated after the loss
1877 Ashes

The first Test match between England and ...


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