Cricinfo ICC Site / News
|
The first attempt at any kind of world championship was in 1912, when a
three-way series was arranged between the then
current Test playing nations, Australia, England and South Africa. Dogged by poor weather, the experiment was dropped
and not repeated until 1975, when, following the success of domestic one-day competitions, the six Test-playing nations
(England, Australia, New Zealand, West Indies, India and Pakistan) were joined by Sri Lanka and East Africa in
the first World Cup in England. A resounding success, the tournament was repeated in 1979 and 1983 in England, before moving abroad, maintaining a four-year cycle. The next tournament takes place in Asia in 2011. A brief history of previous tournaments follows.
Martin Williamson

All-time XI: Six contenders for South Africa's three middle-order spots - none of whom was in the habit of letting the side down
Seven tons in a Test, and Murali's travails
Ask Steven: Teams scoring 400 in both innings, and both wicketkeepers scoring centuries
Reason against force in the free-to-air debate
The battle between the ECB and the government works at two levels. By William Buckland
'I never expected to play Test cricket'
In a little over three years, Brendan Nash has gone from being an Australia substitute fielder to playing a Test against them
Suspect action, suspect reaction
Beyond the Blues: Chucking away chuckers might end careers
Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.
Who is the best footballer in Europe?
Debate now on the new ESPN Soccernet Castrol Rankings Blog
FREE Cricket DVD offer at Cricshop
Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store
Rugby Union Autumn Internationals coverage
on www.scrum.com

