The ultimate guide to WTC final as Australia seek to defend title

ANI May 19, 2025 307 views

Australia and South Africa will battle for the World Test Championship title at Lord's in June 2025. The Aussies, led by Pat Cummins, look to defend their crown, while South Africa, captained by Temba Bavuma, chase their first ICC trophy in over 20 years. Key players like Kagiso Rabada and Travis Head could decide the outcome. The match promises high stakes as both teams bring strong recent form into the final.

"Travis Head set the WTC Final stage on fire in 2023, scoring a stunning 163 that took away the Test mace from India." – ICC
Melbourne, May 19: Pat Cummins-led Australia will be looking to retain the mace that they claimed after defeating India in the previous edition of the ICC World Test Championship Final at the Oval in June 2023.

Key Points

1

Australia aims to defend WTC title after 2023 win

2

South Africa seeks first ICC trophy in decades

3

Rabada leads Proteas with 47 wickets

4

Head crucial for Australia with 1,177 runs

On the other side, a determined South Africa aims for their first ICC trophy in over two decades, with Temba Bavuma leading the charge. South Africa and Australia announced their squads for the World Test Championship Final on Monday, 13 May.

-South Africa v Australia

Dates: June 11-15, 2025 (Reserve Day: June 16)

Venue: Lord's, London

Start Time: 10:30 AM Local Time

-SquadsSouth Africa: Tony de Zorzi, Ryan Rickelton, Aiden Markram, Temba Bavuma (c), David Bedingham, Tristan Stubbs, Kyle Verreynne, Wiaan Mulder, Marco Jansen, Corbin Bosch, Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi, Dane Paterson, Keshav Maharaj, Senuran Muthusamy

Australia: Usman Khawaja, Sam Konstas, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Alex Carey, Josh Inglis, Cameron Green, Beau Webster, Pat Cummins (c), Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Scott Boland, Nathan Lyon, Matt Kuhnemann. Travelling reserve: Brendan Doggett

-South Africa's road to the finalMatches Played: 12

Wins: 8

Losses: 3

Draws: 1

Points: 100

PCT: 69.44 per cent

The Proteas' WTC journey started with a 1-1 drawn series against India at home, before being handed a 2-0 series defeat by New Zealand, as per ICC.

They then travelled to the West Indies, winning 1-0, before picking up pace with 2-0 wins against both Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

This meant that a thrilling two-wicket win against Pakistan at Centurion was enough to help them seal their berth in the showdown.

They eventually went on to win the series 2-0 against Pakistan, earning their seventh consecutive Test win in this cycle, helping the Proteas qualify as the table toppers.''

-Australia's road to the final

Matches Played: 19

Wins: 13

Losses: 4

Draws: 2

Points: 154

PCT: 67.54 per cent

The ICC number one-ranked Test team started their journey to the WTC Final with two Ashes wins before England's comeback to draw the series 2-2.

This was followed by a clinical clean sweep at home, winning three Tests against Pakistan. They were not able to finish the home Test summer unbeaten, dropping the second Test against the West Indies to draw 1-1 thanks to Shamar Joseph's heroics for the tourists in Brisbane.

A 2-0 sweep away from home against New Zealand followed, before Australia hosted India for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

After being handed a huge defeat in the first Test, Australia hit back with three wins in the next four Tests to help them seal their spot in the Ultimate Test.

The Aussies' final two Tests of the WTC 2023-25 cycle concluded with the visitors defeating Sri Lanka 2-0 in the subcontinent and finishing second in the table.

-Key players

*South Africa: Kagiso Rabada

The world number two-ranked bowler has been the torchbearer for the Proteas in the pace unit, with his 47 wickets in 10 Tests crucial in South Africa's run to the Final.

His three five-wicket hauls and a sizzling 19.97 average in the current WTC cycle have played a key role in the Proteas' triumphs at home as well as away.

The right-armer also enjoys English conditions, picking up 30 wickets in six Tests there, with a five-wicket haul as well to his name.

*Australia: Travis Head

Australia's left-hander has taken part in all 19 assignments for Australia so far in the current cycle, amassing 1,177 runs and scoring three centuries, playing a major role in Australia's road to back-to-back WTC Finals.

The eighth-ranked Test batter brings plenty of experience playing in English conditions, making 734 runs in 10 Test outings over his career.

Travis also set the WTC Final stage on fire in 2023, scoring a stunning 163 that took away the Test mace from India at the Oval. Australia would hope for their talented southpaw to repeat his heroics at Lord's.

Reader Comments

Here are 6 authentic Indian perspective comments for the WTC Final article:
R
Rahul K.
After our heartbreaking loss last time, I'm still not over it 😢 But this should be a cracking contest! Rabada vs Cummins will be the battle to watch. Hope the weather doesn't ruin this at Lord's - we want a proper 5-day Test!
P
Priya M.
South Africa deserves this after their consistent performances. But Australia's experience in big finals is unmatched. Travis Head is such a dangerous player - reminds me of our own Rishabh Pant with his aggressive batting.
A
Arjun S.
Interesting to see both teams have strong pace attacks but relatively weaker spin options. This might come back to haunt them if the pitch starts turning later. Where are the quality spinners these days apart from Ashwin and Jadeja?
S
Sneha R.
Can't believe ICC is still hosting this at Lord's when most Test cricket fans are in Asia! Should rotate venues like they do for World Cups. That said, hoping for a close contest 🤞 May the best team win (but secretly rooting for SA after what Aus did to us last time!)
V
Vikram J.
Australia's squad depth is scary good. Even their reserves like Boland could walk into most Test teams. Hope BCCI is taking notes on how they maintain such quality across formats. Our next gen needs to step up!
N
Neha P.
The timing is terrible for Indian fans - matches start at 3 PM IST when most are at work! ICC should consider Asian timezones more. That said, will be following ball-by-ball updates. Cricket without India feels strange but good to appreciate other teams too.

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