Women’s Tests have almost died out, with the last six fixtures in the format – since August 2015 – all pitting England against Australia, the only teams to still play long-form cricket internationally. India played their last Test match against South Africa, back in November 2014 in Mysore, a game they won by an innings and 34 runs. In all India have played 36 women’s Tests (and had one abandoned without a ball bowled), dating back to 1976.The announcement may also pave the way for India’s leading women’s players to feature in the inaugural season of the Hundred. The 100-ball competition is due to start on July 21, with five overseas spots still available, and it is understood that the ECB has discussed the prospect with the BCCI.Related

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Shah’s tweet, on International Women’s Day, came hours after the ICC announced plans to expand the women’s global tournaments – the World Cup and the T20 World Cup – in the next cycle of events, which runs from 2023 to 2031. The governing body had also announced a new competition for the women: the Women’s T20 Champions Cup, which, on paper, resembles the men’s Champions Trophy.For India’s women, the sudden prospect of more game-time came after a break of 364 days from international cricket, amid the pandemic: following last year’s T20 World Cup final against Australia at a packed MCG, the team had not taken the field for an international until Sunday, when they faced South Africa in an ODI in Lucknow as part of a five-match one-day series followed by three T20Is.

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