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  1. England win by 11 runs ( D/L) Clontarf Cricket Club Ground, Dublin. Umpires: Steve Davis (Aus) and Mark Hawthorne (Ire) Player of the match: Eoin Morgan (Eng) Ireland won the toss and elected to field. Rain reduced match to 42 overs per innings. Rain shortened Ireland's innings to 23 overs with a revised target of 129 runs.

  2. An English cricket team managed by Major R. G. Warton toured South Africa from December 1888 to March 1889. Warton was a retired British Army officer who had served on the general staff in Cape Town and was a member of the Western Province Cricket Club. He had been invited by local enthusiasts to bring a team of English first-class cricketers ...

  3. The English cricket team toured India during February, March and April 2006. The English cricket team was aspiring to maintain the form that took them to second place in the ICC Test Championship and helped them to win the 2005 Ashes series at home to Australia. This goal was substantially hindered by an injury to the captain Michael Vaughan ...

  4. The West Indian cricket team in England in 1991 played three one day internationals and five Tests, under the captaincy of Viv Richards, as part of an extensive tour in which they also played first-class matches against 11 first-class county teams, the combined Minor Counties, the Combined Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and a World XI to finish, plus 55-over one-day matches against one ...

  5. Kapil Dev 2/26 (8 overs) DB Vengsarkar 88 * (107) GA Gooch 2/25 (7 overs) India won by 6 wickets. Gandhi Stadium, Jalandhar. Umpires: JD Ghosh and S Kishen. Player of the match: DB Vengsarkar (IND) India won the toss and elected to field. The match was reduced before play started from 50 overs to 36 overs per side.

  6. In the early 1960s, English county cricket teams began playing a shortened version of cricket which only lasted for one day. Starting in 1962 with a four-team knockout competition known as the Midlands Knock-Out Cup, [16] and continuing with the inaugural Gillette Cup in 1963 , one-day cricket grew in popularity in England.

  7. The Indian cricket team toured England in the 1932 season under the title of "All-India". [1] They were captained by the Maharaja of Porbandar. It was the national team's second tour of England following the one in 1911. India had just been granted the status of ICC Full Member and they played their inaugural Test match at Lord's in June.