Cricket-England and India ready for ground-breaking first women's test at Lord's


Cricket - ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 - Final - England v Australia - Lord's Cricket Ground, London, Britain - July 5, 2026 England's Nat Sciver-Brunt in action Action Images via Reuters/Peter Cziborra/File Photo

LONDON, July 9 (Reuters) - Lord's, the ⁠Home of Cricket since 1814, will mark another milestone on Friday when ⁠England and India step out for the first women's test match at ‌the sport's most famous venue.

The four-day test comes 50 years on from Rachael Heyhoe-Flint leading England out for the first women's match at Lord's.

"It's a huge honour and a privilege to be walking ​out there tomorrow," said England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt on ⁠Thursday.

"I think we are pretty ⁠deserved of being here and we'll relish the opportunity.

"We are looking forward to such ⁠a ‌special week here at Lord's, doing something that we dreamt of as kids growing up playing cricket."

Women were not allowed to join the Marylebone ⁠Cricket Club (MCC) or enter the Lord's pavilion until 1999, when ​the club founded in ‌1787 announced its first 10 female honorary members.

Lord's has hosted 150 men's ⁠tests to date, ​most recently against New Zealand last month.

The ground in north-west London will be the country's 20th venue since the 1930s to host an England women's test.

More than 30,000 tickets have ⁠been sold for England's 103rd women's test, with ​a special opening ceremony on Friday featuring 50 England players past and present including Enid Bakewell who featured in the 1976 international.

Heyhoe-Flint, who died in 2017 and was in ⁠2004 the first woman to join the MCC committee, has a gate named in her honour at the ground.

The test will be the first against India on home soil since 2021 and also a farewell for England batter Tammy Beaumont, who ​missed out on the World Cup squad and announced ⁠on Wednesday her retirement from international cricket at the age of 35.

England and India ​have played 15 women's tests previously, 11 ending in ‌a draw and England winning only once.

England ​lost to Australia by seven wickets at Lord's last Sunday in the women's Twenty20 World Cup final.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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