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Edgbaston Cricket Ground

Cricket ground in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, England

Edgbaston Cricket Ground

Cricket ground in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, England

FieldValue
ground_nameEdgbaston Cricket Ground
countryEngland
logo_image[[File:Edgbaston Cricket Ground Logo 2016.png275px]]
imageEdgbaston - view of new stand from the north.jpg
captionDuring a test match against India in 2011
locationEdgbaston, Birmingham
establishment1882
seating_capacity25,000
end1Birmingham End (previously City End) [[File:EdgbastonCricketGroundPitchDimensions.svg200px]]
end2Pavilion End
internationaltrue
firsttestdate29–31 May
firsttestyear1902
firsttesthomeEngland
firsttestawayAustralia
firsttestawayvar1901
lasttestdate2–6 July
lasttestyear2025
lasttesthomeEngland
lasttestawayIndia
firstodidate28 August
firstodiyear1972
firstodihomeEngland
firstodiawayAustralia
lastodidate29 May
lastodiyear2025
lastodihomeEngland
lastodiawayWest Indies
firstt20idate5 July
firstt20iyear2010
firstt20ihomeAustralia
firstt20iawayPakistan
lastt20idate25 May
lastt20iyear2024
lastt20ihomeEngland
lastt20iawayPakistan
firstwtestdate15–18 June
firstwtestyear1963
firstwtesthomeEngland
firstwtestawayAustralia
lastwtestdate1–3 July
lastwtestyear1979
lastwtesthomeEngland
lastwtestawayWest Indies
onlywodidate28 July
onlywodiyear1973
onlywodihomeEngland
onlywodiawayAustralia
firstwt20idate7 September
firstwt20iyear2014
firstwt20ihomeEngland
firstwt20iawaySouth Africa
lastwt20idate12 July
lastwt20iyear2025
lastwt20ihomeEngland
lastwt20iawayIndia
year11894 – present
club1Warwickshire CCC
year22014 – present
club2Birmingham Bears
year32021 – present
club3Birmingham Phoenix
date12 July
year2025
sourcehttp://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/ground/56788.html ESPN Cricinfo
club4Central Sparksyear4=2020 – present

Edgbaston Cricket Ground in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, England, is home to Warwickshire County Cricket Club. Edgbaston has also been the venue for Test matches, One-Day Internationals and Twenty20 Internationals. Edgbaston has hosted the T20 Finals Day more than any other cricket ground. Edgbaston is the main home ground for the Birmingham Phoenix in The Hundred competition from 2021. With permanent seating for approximately 25,000 spectators, it is the fourth-largest cricketing venue in England, after Lord's, Old Trafford and The Oval.

Edgbaston has played host to matches in major tournaments as it hosted matches in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 where England won its first World Cup and the ICC Champions Trophy 2017 where Pakistan won.

Edgbaston also hosted the first women's T20 event at the 2022 Commonwealth Games where Australia won the gold medal match.

Edgbaston was the venue of the first senior game under floodlights in English cricket in 1997, between Warwickshire and Somerset in the AXA Life Sunday League, and hosted the first day/night Test match in England in 2017 when England played the West Indies.

History

Early history

The land that now makes up Edgbaston Cricket Ground was originally owned by the Calthorpe Estate, who have now sold the site onto Wylam Investments (Edgbaston Holdings) on a long lease. Calthorpe Estates had developed the manor of Edgbaston into an exclusive Birmingham suburb over the course of the 19th century, and believed that a cricket ground would be an asset that would add to the genteel image of the area. Warwickshire County Cricket Club had considered Rugby and Leamington Spa for their headquarters, but club secretary William Ansell believed that Birmingham's large population and comprehensive railway connections made it preferable – envisaging first-class status for the county and Test status for the ground.

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Edgbaston's first Test match was the first in The Ashes series against Australia in 1902, for which the club erected a permanent stand, two temporary stands and facilities for 90 members of the press. These developments cost a total of £1,500, however, and Warwickshire's share of the tour funds was only £750.

Post-war development

1994}}

In 1989 executive boxes were added to the rear of the Priory and Raglan Stands and the Stanley Barnes Stand was reconstructed and enlarged, expanding the ground capacity of 17,500.

In July 1997, Edgbaston was the scene of the first competitive floodlit day-night cricket match in Britain.

The pavilion end on the south side of the ground was completely redeveloped between 2010 and 2011 at a cost of £32 million, partly paid for from a £20 million loan from Birmingham City Council, bringing the ground's capacity up to 25,000. Demolition of the pavilion – parts of which dated back to the 1890s – and the Leslie Deakins, R. V. Ryder and William Ansell Stands took place in January 2010, with construction of the new South and West Stands starting in April 2010 and reaching completion 66 weeks later. 5 permanent floodlight pylons were erected around the ground at the same time, allowing up to 15 days of day-night cricket annually. The new development was officially opened by the Duke of Edinburgh on 25 July 2011. The first test match to be played at the redeveloped venue was the third Test vs India on 10 August 2011, which saw England reach the number 1 position in the ICC Test Championship for the first time with victory by an innings and 242 runs on the fourth day of the match.

Ground

The Eric Hollies and South Stands and the Press Box

Edgbaston is considered to be one of England's leading cricket grounds. *Wisden'''s guide to cricket grounds in 1992 commented that "Lord's is really its only superior in the United Kingdom" with *The Daily Telegraph'' agreeing in 2009 that "taken all in all, it is now the best ground outside Lord's". After the opening of the new South and West Stands in 2011 the England and Wales Cricket Board commented that "the spacious facilities are cutting edge, marginally better than the Home of Cricket".

The atmosphere at Edgbaston is reputed to be the most hostile in England for visiting teams. Former England captain Alec Stewart recalled "On a world level I would put it up there with Eden Gardens in Calcutta, which holds about 100,000. It inspires a team. It's like having another man in your side." and the former England wicketkeeper Geraint Jones describes how "The crowd here makes such a big noise when you are doing well ... it's a unique environment". After winning the 2015 Ashes Test Match with Australia at Edgbaston, England captain Alastair Cook commented "The Edgbaston crowd was up there with the loudest I can remember. With some of the chants, even guys who have played a fair bit of cricket were looking at each other and realising how special it was. Edgbaston has been a fantastic venue for us."

The record attendance at a County Championship match at Edgbaston is 28,000 against Lancashire in the championship-winning season of 1951, and the record for a single day of a test match is 32,000 against the West Indies in 1957.

For some years until 2000, Edgbaston had a distinctive motorized rain cover system, known as the Brumbrella.

Stands and spectator facilities

  • South Stand. Built over the site of the previous pavilion in 2011, the stand is a multi-tiered structure which holds the Press Box, hospitality suites, players changing rooms, administration offices, Visitor and Learning Centre, the Club shop and banqueting halls. The South Stand (Pavilion) has a seating capacity of over 4,000 spectators.
  • West Stand. Built in 2011 on the site of the previous William Ansell Stand, the West Stand has two large tiers of seating. Adjacent to the south is the Edgbaston Suite – a 750-seat banqueting and exhibition space whose bright blue presence is a distinctive feature of both the inside and the outside of the ground – above which facing the pitch is a large electronic scoreboard.
  • Drayton Manor Family Stand – (Priory Stand). This is the main family stand at Edgbaston and was renamed in 2014 with a sponsorship deal with Drayton Manor Theme Park. It has a single tier structure and is between the West and Raglan Stands. The environment of this stand is designed to be suitable for families with children.
  • Raglan Stand. This is a single tier structure and is parallel to the wicket on the opposite side to the Eric Hollies Stand. The Raglan Stand is the location of the Aylesford Hospitality Boxes situated at the rear overlooking the ground.
  • R. E. S. Wyatt Stand. Built at the City End in 1995 and named after the Warwickshire and England all-rounder Bob Wyatt, who died that year, the R. E. S. Wyatt Stand consists of a single tier of seating beneath two rows of executive boxes. Facilities in the stand include two pitch-view restaurants: the Marston's Suite and the Executive Club, together with the David Heath Suite, currently used by Warwickshire members.
  • Scrivens (Press Box) Stand. Built in 1957 and first used for that year's test match against the West Indies, this stand was given to the club by Langton Iliffe, 2nd Baron Iliffe and his fellow directors of the Coventry Evening Telegraph. It hosted the ground's press facilities until the opening of the new South Stand in 2011. A two tier stand, it is allocated as an alcohol-free family area for top-class matches. Now named the Scrivens Stand after a sponsorship deal with Scrivens Opticians.
  • Stanley Barnes Stand. A small single tier stand opened in 1989, the Stanley Barnes Stand is situated in front of the Thwaite Memorial Scoreboard, the ground's most distinctive feature.
  • Eric Hollies Stand. Formerly known as the Rea Bank, after the River Rea which runs immediately to its rear, this is traditionally the most raucous area of the ground. The stand was renamed after the Warwickshire and England leg-spinner Eric Hollies in 1989, and was rebuilt in 2003 with 5,900 seats, an increase of 1,300 over its predecessor. The design won a 2003 Civic Trust Award, and British Constructional Steelwork Association Structural Steel Award. It features a series of eight aluminium sunshades suspended over the single tier of seating on simple steel masts, appearing to hover over the crowd beneath. Both the Drayton Manor Family Stand (Priory Stand), and Raglan Stand are two stands to be rebuilt as part of ongoing development.

Hotel

In 2025, construction began to redevelop the west side of the stadium to construct an adjoining hotel at an estimated cost of £46 million, including a £18 million contribution from the West Midlands Combined Authority. By demolishing the Priory and Raglan stands, the development will result in a new 146-room hotel, 85 of these rooms overlooking the pitch. The hotel would be opened as part of the Radisson RED range of 4-star offerings. When completed, the new replacement stand is expected to seat 3200, offer improved accessibility and a covered concourse, and is to be completed in time for the 2027 Men's Ashes.

File:Edgbaston Cricket Ground 2012.jpg| File:Edgbaston---close-of-play.jpg| File:Edgbaston - England vs Australia 2009.jpg| File:Edgbastonmaisema.JPG| File:Edgbaston---Thwaite-Memorial-Scoreboard.jpg| File:Edgbaston Indoor Cricket Centre 3.JPG|

Other facilities

  • Indoor Cricket Centre. Fronting the Pershore Road side of the ground, the Indoor Cricket Centre was opened by the Duke of Edinburgh in 2000, replacing an earlier indoor cricket school of 1956. Its 41 m × 32 m main hall accommodates either eight net lanes for indoor cricket practice or two six-a-side pitches. The building also houses a small shop, a bar with an outdoor terrace and offices for regional, youth and disabled cricket boards.
  • Visitor & Learning Centre. Created by Museum Curator Phil Britt and opened in 2011 the V & L was situated on the mezzanine level of the South Stand, the 300 m2 Visitor & Learning Centre as an interactive display charting the history of Warwickshire County Cricket Club and of test match cricket at Edgbaston. The experience was introduced with a five-minute film giving a short overview of the history of the club and ground in a small theatre area, and included audio and film records of key moments and figures from Warwickshire's past, and interactive installations demonstrating cricketing techniques and allowing visitors to test their judgement against that of test match umpires. The centre was favourably reviewed by The Independent when it opened in 2011. Commenting on how "the rich history of the club and the ground are told simply, straightforwardly and accessibly", the review concluded by comparing it to the equivalent at Lord's: "The museum at Lord's is cramped and gives an air of scholarly dinginess ... maybe they could learn a lesson or two from Edgbaston now." Despite this the V & L Centre was closed in 2018 and the area used for Corporate entertainment
  • Museum and Library. This is now the only museum on site and is a more traditional museum, housing the club's collection of cricketing memorabilia – one of the largest and most important in the country – and its cricketing library, opened underneath the R. E. S. Wyatt Stand in 2012.
  • Colts' Ground. On the east side of the River Rea, to the rear of the Eric Hollies Stand, the smaller Colts' Ground is used for cricket practice and minor matches.{{Cite report |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181215065942/http://eplanning.birmingham.gov.uk/Northgate/DocumentExplorer/documentstream/documentstream.aspx?name=public:0901487a8081d00f28112008113439.pdf&unique=362372&type=eplprod_DC_PLANAPP |url-status=dead |archive-date=15 December 2018 |access-date=16 August 2011

Notable moments

  • 1886 – Warwickshire's first match at Edgbaston took place on 7 June against the MCC, watched by 3,000 spectators over two days.
  • 1886 – 6,000 spectators turn out on 9 and 10 August to watch Warwickshire play Australia.
  • 1902 – First Test match at Edgbaston was England v. Australia and was drawn due to rain, with England making Australia follow on after bowling them out in the first innings for 36. Wilfred Rhodes had bowling figures of 7 for 17.
  • 1957 – Stand of 411 between Peter May and Colin Cowdrey against the West Indies, England's highest-ever partnership.
  • 1973 – England women's cricket team beat Australia by 92 runs in the final group match at Edgbaston to win the first Women's World Cup. The limited overs tournament was a round robin event with the winners of the final scheduled match becoming champions. Australia were top and England were second in the group going into the match with a one-point difference.
  • 1975 – Hosted group matches in the 1975 ICC Cricket World Cup
  • 1979 – Hosted group matches in the 1979 ICC Cricket World Cup
  • 1981 – England beat Australia to take a 2–1 lead in the Ashes. Australia needed 151 in their second innings to win but were bowled out for 121 with Ian Botham taking 5 wickets in 28 balls, later Botham said the Edgbaston crowd had inspired his performance in a match where no batsman on either side made a 50.
  • 1983 – Hosted group matches in the 1983 ICC Cricket World Cup
  • 1994 – Brian Lara scored 501* for Warwickshire against Durham, the highest score by a batsman in first-class cricket.
  • 1997 – Warwickshire beat Somerset by 35 runs at Edgbaston in the first senior limited overs match to be played under floodlights in England.
  • 1999 – Australia tie with South Africa in the 1999 ICC Cricket World Cup semi final.
  • 2004 – Marcus Trescothick becomes the first player to score a century in both innings of a Test match at Edgbaston, against the West Indies, scoring 105 & 107 for England.
  • 2005 – Australia lose to England by two runs in the second Test of the 2005 Ashes, the closest Ashes match ever.
  • 2008 – South Africa secure their first series win in England since 1965, chasing down 281 to win the third Test, the highest ever successful pursuit at this ground. South African captain Graeme Smith scored 154* to lead his team to victory.
  • 2011 – Alastair Cook scores 294 against India, as England become the number one ranked Test team. England also make the highest innings score in a Test match at Edgbaston, with 710 for 7.
  • 2012 – Tino Best scores 95 for the West Indies against England, the then record highest score for a number 11 batsmen. This notably formed part of a 143 run partnership with Denesh Ramdin, the third-highest Test stand with one wicket remaining.
  • 2013 – India crowned ICC Champions Trophy winners following a nail-biting 5-run victory over England.
  • 2014 – Edgbaston hosts its sixth NatWest t20 Blast Finals Day, with Birmingham Bears being crowned champions on their home ground for the first time in Warwickshire's history.
  • 2015 – England score 408, their highest score ever in a One-Day International (ODI) 50 overs match, against New Zealand. England also recorded their biggest margin of victory of 210 runs in the same match.
  • 2015 – Brendon McCullum scores 158 not out off 64 balls for Birmingham Bears against Derbyshire in a domestic T20 group match. It was the highest score in English domestic T20 history and second-highest ever score in any T20 match.
  • 2016 – The opening partnership of 256 by Jason Roy and Alex Hales for England against Sri Lanka is the highest successful run chase without losing a wicket in ODI history. It is also the highest partnership for England for any wicket in ODIs and only the second time both openers have scored a century for England in the same ODI.
  • 2017 – Edgbaston co-hosts the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy and hosts 5 matches, including the semi-final between India and Bangladesh. The stadium's record attendance for an ODI was raised three times during the Champions Trophy, with the semi-final attracting a crowd of 24,340, which was the highest attendance for any match in the tournament, including the final.
  • 2017 – Edgbaston hosted the first day/night Test match in England, between England and West Indies, starting on 17 August. It would also mark the debut for the pink Dukes ball. England beat the West Indies by an innings and 209 runs within 3 days with Alastair Cook and Joe Root both scoring centuries. Stuart Broad became the second-leading wicket-taker in Test matches for England. The West Indies lost 19 wickets on day 3 of the match, the first time they lost 19 wickets in a single day of a Test match. It was also the 50th Test match to be held at Edgbaston.
  • 2018 – Jos Buttler hits the fastest Twenty20 International half-century by an England batsman to propel the home side to a 28-run win over Australia at Edgbaston. England score 221–5, their second-highest ever T20I score.
  • 2018 – Hosted England's 1,000th Test match during India tour of England. England won the match by 32 runs.
  • 2019 – Hosted 4 group matches and one semi-final in the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup. All matches were sold out months in advance as England advanced to the final by beating Australia by 8 wickets in the semi-final.
  • 2019 – Edgbaston hosts the first Test match in the 2019 Ashes where Australia beat England by 251 runs with Steven Smith getting 144 in the first and 142 in the second innings. Smith helped Australia recover from 122 for 8 in the first innings and became the second batsman to score a century in both innings of a Test match at Edgbaston. It was also the first time Australia had won at Edgbaston since 2001.
  • 2021 - Warwickshire win the Country Championship for the 8th time on the final day of the season after beating Somerset by 118 runs at Edgbaston.
  • 2022 - England beat India by 7 wickets in the fifth and final Test match of the delayed 2021 Indian tour of England to draw the series 2-2. England broke their record for the highest total in a 4th innings to win a Test match on the fifth day by scoring 378 for 3 at Edgbaston.
  • 2022 - Edgbaston hosts the women's T20 event at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games. All group, semi-final and final matches were played at Edgbaston. Australia won the first gold medal in the event by beating India in the final and New Zealand the bronze by beating England.
  • 2022 - Will Smeed becomes the first man to score a century in the Hundred competition scoring 101 off 49 balls for Birmingham Phoenix against Southern Brave at Edgbaston.
  • 2023 - Australia beat England in the first Ashes Test match by 2 wickets after a 55 run 9th wicket stand in the second innings on the fifth day.
  • 2023 - Australia beat England by 4 wickets in the second match of the women's Ashes and the first T20 of the series. The match set an attendance record of 19,527 for a women's match outside the World Cup and was first with an all women grounds staff to prepare the pitch and outfield.
  • 2024 - England beat West Indies by 10 wickets and win the Test series, in a match where England captain Ben Stokes scored England's quickest 50 in a Test match. Stokes scored the 50 off 25 balls whilst opening in the second innings.

Test cricket records

Batting

RunsPlayerPeriod
948 (18 innings)ENG Joe Root2015–2025
869 (16 innings)ENG Alastair Cook2006–2018
767 (14 innings)ENG David Gower1978–1989
737 (13 innings)ENG Colin Cowdrey1957–1971
670 (11 innings)ENG Marcus Trescothick2001–2006
Graeme Smith holds the record for most career runs at the ground by a non-Englishman.
RunsPlayerPeriod
523 (4 innings)SAF Graeme Smith2003–2008
451 (4 innings)IND Shubman Gill2022–2025
326 (7 innings)PAK Javed Miandad1978–1992
323 (6 innings)AUS Steve Smith2015–2023
318 (3 innings)PAK Zaheer Abbas1971–1982
RunsPlayerDate
294 v. IndiaENG Alastair Cook10 Aug 2011
285* v. West IndiesENG Peter May30 May 1957
277 v. EnglandSAF Graeme Smith24 Jul 2003
274 v. EnglandPAK Zaheer Abbas3 Jun 1971
269 v. EnglandIND Shubman Gill2 Jul 2025
Alastair Cook scored 294 against India in 2011, the record score at the ground.
CenturiesPlayerPeriod
3 (9 innings)ENG Mike Gatting1981–1987
3 (11 innings)ENG Marcus Trescothick2001–2006
3 (13 innings)ENG Colin Cowdrey1957–1971
3 (18 innings)ENG Joe Root2015–2025

Note: eight players have also scored two centuries at the ground.

AveragePlayerPeriod
74.71 (9 innings, 2 NO)ENG Mike Gatting1981–1987
68.00 (5 innings, 2 NO)ENG Keith Fletcher1973–1975
67.00 (11 innings, 1 NO)ENG Marcus Trescothick2001–2006
63.50 (5 innings, 1 NO)AUS Mark Waugh1993–2001
63.20 (18 innings, 3 NO)ENG Joe Root2015–2025
James Anderson has taken the most wickets at the ground, with 52.

Bowling

WicketsPlayerPeriod
52 (27 innings)ENG James Anderson2003–2023
49 (22 innings)ENG Stuart Broad2009–2023
39 (13 innings)ENG Fred Trueman1957–1965
29 (15 innings)ENG Ian Botham1978–1992
25 (8 innings)AUS Shane Warne1993–2005
WicketsPlayerPeriod
25 (8 innings)AUS Shane Warne1993–2005
20 (6 innings)AUS Nathan Lyon2015–2023
19 (6 innings)WIN Courtney Walsh1991–2000
17 (6 innings)PAK Imran Khan1971–1987
15 (3 innings)SL Muttiah Muralitharan2002–2006
Shane Warne took 25 wickets at the ground, the most by a non-Englishman.
FiguresPlayerDate
7/17 v. AustraliaENG Wilfred Rhodes29 May 1902
7/44 v. West IndiesENG Fred Trueman4 Jul 1963
7/49 v. EnglandWIN Sonny Ramadhin30 May 1957
7/50 v. PakistanENG Chris Old1 Jun 1978
7/52 v. EnglandPAK Imran Khan29 Jul 1982
FiguresPlayerDate
12/119 v. West IndiesENG Fred Trueman4 Jul 1963
11/90 v. South AfricaENG Arthur Gilligan14 Jun 1924
11/102 v. AustraliaENG Colin Blythe27 May 1909
10/104 v. AustraliaENG Richard Ellison15 Aug 1985
10/115 v. EnglandSL Muttiah Muralitharan25 May 2006
10/162 v. EnglandAUS Shane Warne4 Aug 2005
10/187 v. EnglandIND Akash Deep2 Jul 2025
10/188 v. EnglandIND Chetan Sharma3 Jul 1986
Strike ratePlayerPeriod
22.8 (5 wickets)ENG Mark Butcher1997–2003
31.6 (19 wickets)WIN Courtney Walsh1991–2000
31.6 (11 wickets)IND Mohammed Siraj2022–2025
33.4 (12 wickets)ENG George Hirst1902–1909
34.0 (13 wickets)ENG Mike Hendrick1974–1979

Team records

ScoreTeamDate
710/7dENG England v. India10 Aug 2011
633/5dENG England v. India12 Jul 1979
608/7dPAK Pakistan v. England3 Jun 1971
606v. England14 Jun 1984
595/5dENG England v. Australia15 Aug 1985
ScoreTeamDate
30SA South Africa v. England14 Jun 1924
36AUS Australia v. England29 May 1902
72PAK Pakistan v. England6 Aug 2010
74AUS Australia v. England27 May 1909
89ENG England v. West Indies6 Jul 1995

Partnership records

RunsWicketPlayersMatchDate
4114thPeter May (285*) & Colin Cowdrey (154)v.30 May 1957
3381stGraeme Smith (277) & Herschelle Gibbs (179)v.24 Jul 2003
3312ndDavid Gower (215) & Tim Robinson (148)v.15 Aug 1985
3224thSaleem Malik (165) & Javed Miandad (153*)v.4 Jun 1992
3036thJamie Smith (184*) & Harry Brook (158)v.2 Jul 2025
RunsWicketPlayersMatchDate
3381stGraeme Smith (277) & Herschelle Gibbs (179)v.24 Jul 2003
3312ndDavid Gower (215) & Tim Robinson (148)v.15 Aug 1985
2483rdAlastair Cook (243) & Joe Root (136)v.17 Aug 2017
4114thPeter May (285*) & Colin Cowdrey (154)v.30 May 1957
1855thMichael Clarke (103*) & Marcus North (96)v.30 Jul 2009
3036thJamie Smith (184*) & Harry Brook (158)v.2 Jul 2025
1597thAlan Knott (116) & Peter Lever (47)v.3 Jun 1971
1158thZulqarnain Haider (88) & Saeed Ajmal (50)v.6 Aug 2010
1509thEldine Baptiste (87*) & Michael Holding (69)v.14 Jun 1984
14310thDenesh Ramdin (107*) & Tino Best (95)v.7 Jun 2012

Last updated 25 October 2025.

Limited overs international cricket records

Highest Innings team score

  • ODI: England 408 for 9 v. New Zealand, 9 June 2015
  • T20I: England 221 for 5 v. Australia, 27 June 2018 Lowest innings team score
  • ODI (50 overs): Australia 70 all out v. England, 4 June 1977 Highest individual score
  • ODI (60 overs): Glenn Turner 171* for New Zealand v. East Africa, 7 June 1975
  • ODI (55 overs): Robin Smith 167* for England v. Australia, 21 May 1993
  • ODI (50 overs): Andrew Strauss 154 for England v. Bangladesh, 12 July 2010
  • T20I: Aaron Finch 84 for Australia v. England, 27 June 2018 Best bowling figures
  • ODI: Shahid Afridi 5 for 11 for Pakistan v. Kenya, 14 September 2004
  • T20I: Chris Jordan 4 for 27 for England v. India, 9 July 2022 Highest partnerships
  • ODI: 256* Jason Roy and Alex Hales for England v. Sri Lanka, 24 June 2016
  • T20I: 95 Jos Buttler and Jason Roy for England v. Australia, 27 June 2018

Leading run-scorers

  • In ODIs: Rohit Sharma – 447 runs

Leading wicket-takers

  • In ODIs: Darren Gough – 21 wickets

References

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  41. "Bowling records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  42. "Bowling records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  43. "Bowling records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  44. "Bowling records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  45. "Bowling records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  46. "Team records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  47. "Team records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  48. "Team records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  49. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  50. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  51. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  52. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  53. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  54. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  55. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  56. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  57. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  58. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  59. "Partnership records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
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