Texaco Trophy

The Texaco Trophy was the name used for One Day International cricket tournaments held in England from 1984 until 1998.

The series were sponsored by American oil company Texaco replacing the previous sponsorship by the UK's Prudential (between 1972 and 1982). Depending on the number of teams touring England in a given season, there would typically be either one or two series each year, involving the home side and each visiting side. The series usually consisted of three matches, but varied in length between one and five matches.

Series by year

Year Teams Matches Result Notes
1984 England vs West Indies 3 12  
1985 England vs Australia 3 12  
1986 England vs India 2 11 India awarded series on scoring rate
1986 England vs New Zealand 2 11 New Zealand awarded series on scoring rate
1987 England vs Pakistan 3 21  
1988 England vs West Indies 3 30  
1988 England vs Sri Lanka 1 10  
1989 England vs Australia 3 11 England awarded series on least wickets lost
1990 England vs New Zealand 2 11 England awarded series on scoring rate
1990 England vs India 2 02  
1991 England vs West Indies 3 30  
1992 England vs Pakistan 5 41  
1993 England vs Australia 3 03  
1994 England vs New Zealand 2 10  
1994 England vs South Africa 2 20  
1995 England vs West Indies 3 21  
1996 England vs India 3 20  
1996 England vs Pakistan 3 21  
1997 England vs Australia 3 30  
1998 England vs South Africa 3 12  

Notable matches

In a 1984 match at Old Trafford between England and the West Indies, Vivian Richards scored 189 not out, then the world-record score for a limited-overs international match.[1]

In the second match of the 1993 series against Australia, Robin Smith scored 167 not out, which remained the record score by any England batsman in One Day Internationals until August 2016 when Alex Hales scored 171 against Pakistan at Trent Bridge. England, however, went on to lose the match.[2][3]

The 2nd match of the 1989 series at Trent Bridge, Nottingham was a tie with both England and Australia scoring 226 from 55 overs.

Replacement series

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.