India to open Women's T20 World Cup 2026 campaign against Pakistan
The ICC and hosts England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on Wednesday announced the full schedule of the tournament, featuring 12 teams.
PTI
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The 24-day long tournament will be held from 12 June to 5 July next year and will consist of a total of 33 matches
Dubai,
18 June
India will take on arch-rivals Pakistan in their opening match of
ICC Women's T20 World Cup 2026 at Edgbaston on 14 June.
The ICC and hosts England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) on
Wednesday announced the full schedule of the tournament, featuring 12 teams.
The
24-day long tournament will be held from 12 June to 5 July next year and will
consist of a total of 33 matches to be played across seven venues in England.
Arch-rivals
India and Pakistan will kickstart their campaigns at Edgbaston, whereas the
opening match of the tournament will be between hosts England and Sri Lanka at
Edgbaston on 12 June.
Hampshire
Bowl, Headingley, Old Trafford, The Oval, Bristol County Ground and Lord's are
the other venues of the competition.
The
two semifinals will be played at The Oval on 30 June and 2 July, and the final
will be at Lord's on 5 July.
The
12-team competition will have two groups of six teams each. The Group 1
consists of six-time winners Australia, last edition's runner-up South Africa,
India, Pakistan and two qualifying teams.
The
Group 2 consists of defending champions New Zealand, West Indies, Sri Lanka,
hosts England and two qualifying teams.
The
top two teams from each group will advance to the semifinals.
After
their opening clash against Pakistan, India will move to Headingley for their
contest against a qualifying team on 17 June, followed by contest against South
Africa at the Old Trafford on 21 June.
While
India will face the second qualifying team of Group 1 on 25 June at Old
Trafford, their toughest game will be against Australia on 28 June at the 'Home
of Cricket'.
"At
iconic venues across the country, we'll see incredible, world-class athletes
battling it out in front of hundreds of thousands of fans, who with every ball
bowled and run scored, will be contributing to lasting change," said
tournament director Beth Barrett-Wild.
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