ICC willing to back four-day Tests in World Test Championship

Discussions held last week with ICC Chairman Jay Shah supporting the idea for WTC 2027-29 cycle

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Sports Desk
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South Africas Keshav Maharaj shakes hands with fans in the stands as a giant screen displays the message of Champions 2025 after South Africa won the ICC World Test Championship final against Australia  at the Lords Cricket Ground in London, UK on June 14, 2025. — Reuters
South Africa's Keshav Maharaj shakes hands with fans in the stands as a giant screen displays the message of 'Champions 2025' after South Africa won the ICC World Test Championship final against Australia  at the Lord's Cricket Ground in London, UK on June 14, 2025. — Reuters 

In a noteworthy move concerning cricket's longest format, the International Cricket Council (ICC) has expressed readiness to back four-day Tests in the World Test Championship instead of the traditional five-day duration.

The move, as reported by The Guardian on Monday, is aimed at facilitating smaller teams to play more games and more matches in a series.

The development comes days after South Africa secured a a five-wicket win over Australia in the World Test Championship final at Lord's ending their decades-long wait for a major global cricket trophy.

The title victory marked their first since 1998 when they won the inaugural edition of the men’s Champions Trophy, called the Knockout Trophy at that time.

In 18 previous attempts in the one-day international and T20 World Cups, South Africa had only reached one solitary final.

Meanwhile, with regard to the future of the WTC, whose next cycle will commence via a two-Test series between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, the ICC has retained the five-day format.

A total of 27 Test series are scheduled between nine teams competing in the WTC 2025-27, 17 will have only two matches, and three will be six three-match series.

However, England, Australia and India will all play one five-match Test series against each other.

Discussions were held last week at the WTC final at Lord's where ICC Chairman Jay Shah supported four-day Tests which could be sanctioned in time for the WTC 2027-29 cycle.

The publication further reported that England, Australia and India — if the four-day Tests are implemented — would still be able to play five Test series of five-day Tests for the Ashes, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy and the newly named Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy.

It is pertinent to know that the cricketing body had previously approved four-day Tests for bilateral series back in 2017 which saw England going up against Ireland in four-day fixtures in 2019 and 2023. Last month England also took on Zimbabwe in a four-day red-ball game.

The ICC's openness for four-day games is to be taken against the backdrop that smaller playing countries hesitate in hosting Tests, firstly due to the costs and secondly due to the extra time it takes out of their schedule. 

However, a four-day Test will allow such teams to play a three-match series in less than three weeks — coupled with the fact that in four-day fixtures playing hours are extended to 98 overs per day instead of the traditional 90 overs in five-day Tests.