Liverpool star Florian Wirtz's girlfriend is TikTok sensation with 115,000 fans

Florian Wirtz signed for Liverpool for a fee which could rise to £116m, but his social media sensation girlfriend is stealing the spotlight after the Germany star’s move to England.

Wirtz, 22, penned a five-year deal on Merseyside which will keep him at Liverpool until at least 2030. The former Bayer Leverkusen playmaker makes £200,000-a-week at Liverpool, placing him among Liverpool’s top earners behind Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah.

Wirtz revealed he chose Liverpool because he believes they are one of the top three clubs in the world, and said his family took little convincing.

He is joined on Merseyside by his partner Aaliyah Cloßen, who is a model and social media influencer with over 100,000 followers on TikTok.

Who is Florian Wirtz's girlfriend?

Aaliyah Cloßen, known by her TikTok username simply as Aaliyah (@aaliyahcl), has reportedly been dating Wirtz since 2022. The pair have kept their private lives relatively quiet, but have been photographed together several times, most notably celebrating Leverkusen’s Bundesliga title in 2024.

Born in the early 2000s, she is a similar age to Wirtz, and is thought to be from the Cologne region of Germany.

Although not much is known about her professional activities, she rose to fame on TikTok, where she now has over 115,000 followers and 2.5 million likes thanks to her ‘get ready with me’ content, displaying her fashion, lifestyle and make-up.

She is also involved in modeling, and has worked with Cologne-based photographer Jonas Herrlein.

Aaliyah is regularly spotted in the stands watching Wirtz in action, and is thought to have a great relationship with his parents, father Hans-Joachim and mother Karin, as the trio were often seated alongside each other at Leverkusen and Germany matches.

She posted a video during Wirtz’s transfer saga with the song I Follow Rivers by Lykke Li, in which the lyrics repeat “I follow you”. One hopeful Bayern Munich fan commented on the post: “Munich is better than Liverpool is all I’m saying.”

Wirtz and Liverpool have had a poor start to the season, as the midfielder had to wait until mid October for his first goal contributions in a red shirt, assisting twice in a 5-1 win against Eintracht Frankfurt in the Champions League.

Byron Buxton Had Perfect Reaction to James Woods's Monster 486-Foot Blast at Home Run Derby

James Wood put on a show during his first round performance at the 2025 Home Run Derby.

The Washington Nationals star crushed 16 home runs in the first round to open up the competition. One of those homers flew outside of Truist Park in Atlanta—yes, you read that right—to go a whopping 486 feet.

Woods's blast went further than any homer has gone during the 2025 season so far. Mike Trout currently holds that lead with a 484-foot home run he hit earlier this season.

This home run sparked a lot of good reactions from Woods's fellow MLB stars. His Derby opponent Byron Buxton of the Minnesota Twins had a spot-on reaction when the camera panned to him. His jaw was dropped, similarly to how a lot of MLB fans at home looked when Wood crushed that ball.

Although Woods's homer was extremely impressive, it's not the farthest hit home run in Derby history by any means. That record is held by Juan Soto, who hit a 520-foot homer in 2021. There's been quite a few 500-plus foot home runs recorded in Derby history.

Stats – Australia's crown slips as their unbeaten run at the Women's T20 World Cup ends

They had won 15 straight matches in this tournament until they were knocked out on Thursday by South Africa

Sampath Bandarupalli17-Oct-202415 Consecutive wins for Australia at the Women’s T20 World Cup until their eight-wicket loss to South Africa on Thursday. Australia’s previous defeat at this competition came in their opening fixture of the 2020 edition against India.Australia’s 15-match winning run is twice as good as the next best at the Women’s T20 World Cup – seven by West Indies across 2016 and 2018, and England across 2020 and 2023.1-7 South Africa’s win-loss record at the Women’s T20 World Cup against Australia. South Africa had lost all of their previous seven meetings against Australia, the joint-most defeats for a team against an opponent.3 Number of defeats for Australia in the knockout stages of the Women’s T20 World Cup – all three by eight wickets. England won in the semi-final of the inaugural edition in 2009, while West Indies got the better of them in the 2016 final.Related

No DNA, just RSA: SA channel a champion mindset for another final

Annerie Dercksen, from farm girl to fast bowling allrounder

Grounding, poems and bird videos – how Paul Adams is inspiring South Africa

South Africa stun serial winners Australia to enter World Cup final

31 Balls needed for Anneke Bosch to complete her fifty, the fastest for South Africa at the Women’s T20 World Cup. The previous quickest fifty was off 35 balls by Lizelle Lee and Sune Luus, both against Thailand in 2020.It is also the joint-second fastest fifty by any batter against Australia in the Women’s T20 World Cup, behind Deandra Dottin’s 22-ball effort in 2009. Smriti Mandhana also scored a 31-ball fifty against Australia in 2018.74* Bosch’s score is the third-highest in a run-chase at the Women’s T20 World Cup. Claire Taylor’s unbeaten 76 against Australia in 2009 is the highest, followed by Sophie Devine’s 75* against Sri Lanka in 2020.200 Bosch’s strike rate against the Australian spinners, against whom she scored 46 off 23 balls with six fours and a six. Against the seamers, she scored 28 off 25, with two fours.5 Instances of Australian spinners bowling eight or more overs without taking a wicket in a women’s T20I. Only one of the previous four came at the T20 World Cup – against Ireland in Delhi in 2016.86 for 3 Australia’s total at the end of the 15th over in the semi-final. It is Australia’s lowest 15-over total while batting first in women’s T20Is since the 2016 T20 World Cup game against New Zealand, where they scored 63 for 5.Australia’s 134 for 5 is also their lowest total while batting first since the 129 for 4 against New Zealand in March 2021.100 Innings for Beth Mooney to complete 3000 runs in T20Is, the fastest woman to the milestone. Stafanie Taylor was the previous fastest, having got there in 103 innings.5-0 Win-loss record of the teams electing to bowl first in the ongoing T20 World Cup, including South Africa on Thursday. The teams choosing to bat first have won nine and lost seven.

Nawaz-Talat stand takes Pakistan over the line in first ODI

One debutant and another playing only the second ODI of his career shepherded the visitors’ chase to give them a 1-0 lead

Danyal Rasool08-Aug-2025An unbeaten 104-run partnership between debutant Hasan Nawaz and Hussain Talat – playing his second game – helped a nervous Pakistan overcome a stutter to chase down 281 in the penultimate over and take a 1-0 lead in the ODI series with a five-wicket win.West Indies had put up 280 through three half-centuries in the first innings, but Pakistan’s spinners contained them to keep them to a below-par score with Shaheen Shah Afridi (4 for 51) and Naseem Shah (3-55) mopping the hosts up at the death.Pakistan’s pursuit was far from convincing, struggling to pace the innings too. Babar Azam (47) and Mohammad Rizwan (53) each fell after promising, if placid, starts, and West Indies found themselves burrowing into the lower order when Rizwan fell with 101 still to get. But Nawaz overcame early struggles and briefly rode his luck with a couple of dropped chances to turn the game around with 63 not out, eventually finishing it at a canter alongside the more solid Talat, who made an unbeaten 41 in 37 balls.Much of Pakistan’s ODI success over the past year depended on Saim Ayub getting them off to a flyer, so it felt significant West Indies neutralised that threat early, Jayden Seales extracting rubber-ball bounce that took his edge and flew on command into the keeper’s gloves. While Babar took his time to settle, Abdullah Shafique looked classically pretty through an even-paced knock, but found himself undone by slightly lower bounce that excited Shamar Joseph enough to force his captain’s hand into a successful review.Initially, it appeared the worst of Babar and Rizwan was on display in that third-wicket partnership. At one point early on, they would play sixteen successive dot balls as the asking rate crept above six. They began, as they so often do, to catch up, finding regular boundaries and running a few twos, and the asking rate gradually eased back down into the fives. Whether that redeemed their slow start or made them even more culpable is by now an intractable question to answer.But West Indies trusted their pace bowlers longer than Pakistan had, only delivering one over of spin until the 20th over. But that wasn’t a commentary on Gudakesh Motie’s skills, who began to trouble the pair, ultimately sending Babar packing when he ventured out for a slog and was deceived by the turn three runs short of his half-century.Salman Ali Agha was more proactive, but threw away a decent start when he scooped a ball that gripped right back into a grateful Roston Chase’s hands. The value of Rizwan’s wicket was growing with each passing wicket, and he’d eased himself past a half-century by once more, Joseph found a way to rap him in front of the pads, this time securing the on-field decision that put West Indies on top.Nawaz and Talat, one ODI in 2019 the sum total of their 50-over international experience, seemed unlikely saviours at that point. Hasan scored just three off his first 12 balls, and looked vulnerable against spin. Shai Hope dropped him early as a nick off an attempted slog couldn’t nestle into his gloves, and with the asking rate rising, he was the one Pakistan required out there until the very end.The tide began to turn in the 39th over by which time the dew was making the ball hard to grip. Talat smacked Chase for two boundaries, before a rare errant over from Joseph saw five wides and 17 runs scored which brought the asking rate to just above seven. It was the break Pakistan needed to pace the innings on their terms, with each player finding the boundary anytime the equation became uncomfortable.With four overs to go and Nawaz on 49, Motie put down an unforgivably easy chance at short third, and as Seales went down on his knees in disbelief, the fate of the game was sealed. Talat plundered 15 off the following over, and five balls later, Nawaz had sealed the win.Evin Lewis and Keacy Carty’s 77-run stand got West Indies flowing despite losing an early wicket•AFP/Getty ImagesEarlier, West Indies were put in to bat partially because of the uncertainty of conditions both overhead and underfoot, and once they’d brushed off the customary first-over wicket Afridi tends to take so often, Evin Lewis and Keacy Carty began to set a platform in the powerplay. Shaheen and Naseem struggled to find bite with the new ball, and by the eighth over, Rizwan had turned to the spin of Ayub. On a surface that has seen just the one ODI played, no one really knew how successful that would be, but the next two and a half-hours answered that question.With the surface gripping, each of Pakistan’s three spinners – Ayub, Agha, and Sufiyan Muqim – were thrust in immediately. The following 27 overs saw just one over of seam bowled as West Indies found themselves bleeding the occasional wicket while the run-rate Lewis and Carty had helped keep around six dipped below five. It was telling that the one over of seam – from Faheem Ashraf, saw Lewis pillage a six and a four bringing up his half-century in the process.But Lewis – on 60 – felt Ayub was the spinner to target, and having dispatched him for a boundary, opted to heave the final ball of his third over into the air. Shaheen spun himself around a couple of times before improbably holding onto it. A tortured innings from Sherfane Rutherford then concluded when he spooned Agha to cover-point.Chase (53) and Hope (55) put together a stand for the fifth wicket, but with no break from the stifling spinners, the run-rate began to fall. The 64 they added came off 89 deliveries, and with just one ball after the 34th over, Shaheen and Naseem began to find reverse swing. It took them a couple of overs to find their accuracy, during which Chase brought up his half-century. But he holed out to Naseem almost immediately afterwards, and just as the ball began to reverse, West Indies’ tail was exposed.The yorkers began to land, and West Indies had no answer. Naseem and Shaheen found pinpoint accuracy, and any runs West Indies scored had luck attached to them. At one point, the matting for the stump-mic helped lift the ball over Rizwan for four byes, and the following over a 140kmph yorker from Naseem hit leg stump, but without dislodging the bails.Even so, the last three were cleaned up by Pakistan’s two frontline quicks hitting the base of the stumps, and bowling West Indies out with an over to spare. Later, Pakistan would achieve their own target with seven balls to go.

London City Lionesses star Freya Godfrey handed maiden England call-up as Lauren Hemp & Grace Clinton return to Sarina Wiegman's squad for final 2025 fixtures

London City Lionesses star Freya Godfrey has been handed a maiden call-up to the England squad, as Manchester City duo Lauren Hemp and Grace Clinton return to the fold. Sarina Wiegman has selected 25 players for the upcoming ‘Homecoming Series’ that will see the Euro 2025 winners take on China at Wembley Stadium and Ghana at St Mary’s in Southampton.

England fixtures: Next up for the Lionesses

The Lionesses will play host to the Asian champions on November 29, with 80,000 tickets being issued for that game at the home of English football, before tackling African opposition when heading to the south coast on December 2.

A meeting with China will see England complete a hat-trick of outings under the famous Wembley arch in 2025. They were beaten 1-0 by World Cup winners Spain in January, before crushing Portugal 6-0 on home soil in May.

AdvertisementGettyEngland squad in full

Goalkeepers: Sophie Baggaley (Brighton & Hove Albion), Khiara Keating (Manchester City), Anna Moorhouse (Orlando Pride)

Defenders: Lucy Bronze (Chelsea), Niamh Charles (Chelsea), Anouk Denton (West Ham United), Grace Fisk (Liverpool), Taylor Hinds (Arsenal), Maya Le Tissier (Manchester United), Esme Morgan (Washington Spirit), Lotte Wubben-Moy (Arsenal)

Midfielders: Laura Blindkilde Brown (Manchester City), Grace Clinton (Manchester City), Missy Bo Kearns (Aston Villa), Lucia Kendall (Aston Villa), Georgia Stanway (Bayern Munich), Ella Toone (Manchester United), Keira Walsh (Chelsea)

Forwards: Aggie Beever-Jones (Chelsea), Freya Godfrey (London City Lionesses), Lauren Hemp (Manchester City), Chloe Kelly (Arsenal), Beth Mead (Arsenal), Jess Park (Manchester United), Alessia Russo (Arsenal)

Who has been named in the latest Lionesses squad?

Wiegman has made a point of keeping a pathway open between the U23 ranks and her senior squad across a glittering reign as England manager. Godfrey is the latest to tread that path after landing a well-deserved promotion. The Arsenal academy graduate gets the nod after catching the eye for WSL newcomers the London City Lionesses.

Elsewhere, two-time European Championship winner Hemp returns from injury alongside club colleague Clinton. Sophie Baggaley, Anouk Denton, Grace Fisk, Taylor Hinds and Lucia Kendall all retain their places having been named in England’s last camp during the October international window.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty ImagesWho misses out and why?

While plenty of familiar faces are involved this time around, a number of others are absent. Euro 2025 penalty shootout hero Hannah Hampton is missing through injury. Michelle Agyemang tore her ACL in the last camp, Alex Greenwood is nursing a knock and Lionesses captain Leah Williamson is still working her way back from a knee issue sustained during the summer. Chelsea forward Lauren James has made her comeback with Chelsea but is absent as she rebuilds her fitness.

Jess Park has not been called upon following a busy campaign with club and country. Having reached the end of the NWSL play-offs, and ahead of the FIFA Women’s Champions Cup with Gotham FC early in 2026, the 28-year-old defender has been awarded a much-needed break.

De Zerbi in frame to become Man City manager as Guardiola exit timeline revealed

Roberto De Zerbi is now in the frame to replace Pep Guardiola, amid a new update on the Manchester City manager’s future at the Etihad Stadium.

Guardiola’s contract isn’t due to expire until the summer of 2027, having penned an extension last season, and Man City fans will no doubt be hoping he stays for the foreseeable future, given the unprecedented success he has brought to the blue side of Manchester.

Trophies Pep Guardiola has lifted at Manchester City

Number of times won

Premier League title

6

Champions League

1

UEFA Super Cup

1

Club World Cup

1

FA Cup

2

League Cup

4

Community Shield

3

However, Jurgen Klopp resigning as Liverpool manager at the end of the 2023-24 campaign due to fatigue displayed just how draining it is to be a Premier League manager for a sustained period of time, and there will come a point where City need to start seriously thinking about successors.

At the moment, the former Barcelona boss will be focusing on closing the gap to Arsenal at the top of the Premier League table, while also attempting to win a second Champions League, but there has now been a new update on when he could leave the Blues.

Man City targeting De Zerbi amid Guardiola future update

According to reliable reporter Paul Hirst, in a report for The Times, an exit at the end of the 2026-27 campaign is on the cards as the 54-year-old has won everything there is to win since arriving at the Etihad Stadium back in 2016.

The three-time Champions League-winning manager is expected to see out his current contract, but Man City may then be faced with the difficult task of bringing in a successor, and De Zerbi is in the frame, as the former Brighton & Hove Albion boss has admirers within the club.

Guardiola is personally a fan of the Marseille manager, who has made a fantastic start to the 2025-26 campaign, with his side currently second in Ligue 1, just two points behind Paris Saint-Germain at the top of the Ligue 1 table.

Not only is the 46-year-old impressing in France, but he was also hailed by Statman Dave for the work he did during his first year as Brighton manager.

The Italian is well-known to favour a possession-based style of football, so he may not need to make wholesale changes at Man City, which is another bonus, alongside his experience in the Premier League.

The only concern will be that De Zerbi is yet to lift many major trophies, winning only the Ukrainian Super Cup with Shakhtar Donetsk in the 2021-22 season.

In truth, whoever replaces Pep will find it almost impossible to eclipse what the Spaniard has achieved at City, and supporters will be hoping he extends his stay beyond the end of next season.

Every current manager in the Premier League has been ranked Every current manager in the 2025/26 Premier League ranked

Every current Premier League boss ranked from best to worst.

ByCharlie Smith Nov 8, 2025

Cubs' Nico Hoerner Had the Best Reaction to Notching a Check-Swing RBI

Cubs second baseman Nico Hoener wasn't expecting to hit a low slider by Reds relief pitcher Yosver Zulueta in the eighth inning of Wednesday afternoon's game. He attempted a check swing, but ended up hitting the ball instead of avoiding contact.

Luckily for Hoerner, his swing had enough power behind it for him to hit a single to left field. As he eyed the ball to make sure it dropped, Hoerner got extremely excited when he realized his mistaken hit was turning into an RBI for him and a run for the Cubs. He was able to bring in his teammate Matt Shaw from second base to home.

Marquee Network caught the perfect shot of Hoerner's reaction once he realized his hit was a happy accident.

Hoerner's RBI single brought in the sixth and final run of the day for the Cubs. Chicago beat Cincinnati 6-1, pushing the Cubs to a 66-48 record to secure a stronger second-place hold in the NL Central behind the MLB-best Brewers.

Muzumdar: Dropping Rodrigues against England 'one of the toughest decisions'

The India head coach said a decision on Rodrigues’ inclusion in the XI against New Zealand will be taken on match day

Sruthi Ravindranath22-Oct-20254:19

Preview: ‘Wounded’ India favourites against New Zealand?

India head coach Amol Muzumdar has said leaving Jemimah Rodrigues out of the World Cup clash against England on Sunday was “one of the toughest decisions” the team has had to make, and one dictated purely by combination and conditions.”To be fair, Jemi [Rodrigues] has been a very important player, an integral part of this side we have built,” Muzumdar said. “Sometimes you just have to take those tough calls. That game, particularly against England, required the sixth bowling option, given the ground of Indore and the [high-scoring] conditions over there, we thought six bowling options would be a better call on that particular day and for that particular match.”Rodrigues, who has managed just 65 runs from four innings this tournament, including two ducks, made way for seamer Renuka Singh in the weekend.”It was a tough call, there is no doubt about it,” Muzumdar said. “One of the toughest decisions, but sometimes tough calls do need to be taken. She took it really nicely and very sportingly.”Related

Rosemary Mair is fast, relentless, and coming for your stumps

Jemimah Rodrigues is at 80%. The last 20 is nearly here

The biggest hurdle for India at the Women's World Cup

CK Nayudu's kit bag, Syed Mushtaq Ali's letter

New Zealand in must-win territory with rain in the Navi Mumbai air

Ahead of India’s crucial clash against New Zealand, Rodrigues had an extended net session, closely working on her drives, though Muzumdar said the decision to bring her back into the XI will be taken only on match day.India have now lost three consecutive matches, to South Africa, Australia, and England, all after getting into promising positions. Muzumdar conceded that the pressure of playing a home World Cup is being felt, but backed the squad, including young pacer Kranti Gaud, who’s gone for runs in her second spell in all three games, to bounce back.”I think a home World Cup, of course, there has to be some kind of pressure. But this side, this particular side is well-equipped to handle that. We’ve built a side around it and I think all the players are well-equipped to handle pressure.5:13

‘Fans need to temper expectations with India’

“[Gaud] had not much of experience in international cricket, but that’s the stage we are in. She’s been the spearhead of the fast bowlers in the team. And we’ve had several discussions, we’ve not left any stone unturned with regards to discussion and taking the load off her.”While six Indian batters have crossed fifty in the tournament so far, none has reached three-figures, something Muzumdar said the team is actively trying to address. Smriti Mandhana and Harmanpreet Kaur had laid the platform in the England game with a 125-run stand but were dismissed for 88 and 70 respectively.”We are well aware that a three-figure mark hasn’t come this World Cup. But if you look at the past year-and-a-half, the 18 months that have passed before the World Cup, we’ve had definitely a lot of hundreds that we’ve seen than ever before. I don’t think there is a lot of load on anyone. But we’ve had honest discussions about it. And the players also have been honest that, ‘Yes, instead of a fifty, we could have converted that into a hundred’. They are aware of it. And I’m hopeful that it will come in the next couple of games.”Muzumdar also said there was no burden on either Harmanpreet as captain or on Richa Ghosh to finish games single-handedly.”As a batting group, we’ve discussed we need to get into a certain stage where we can have that, that kind of a liberty for Richa to go out there and play her shots.”

Back in the squad! Ellie Roebuck receives first Lionesses call-up since 2023 after stroke left her fearing she'd never play football again

Ellie Roebuck has returned to the England squad for meetings with China and Ghana, the FA has confirmed. The Aston Villa stopper replaces Manchester City goalkeeper Khiara Keating due to injury, her first time being selected by the Lionesses since shortly after the 2023 World Cup. In the intervening years, Roebuck's health issues had put her entire career in severe jeopardy.

Roebuck suffered a stroke that could have left her blind

Roebuck was a backup goalkeepr in the England squad that achieved European Championship success in 2022 and reached the World Cup final in Australia in 2023. England fell to a penalty shootout defeat to Spain two-and-a-half years ago, but six months after the showdown with La Roja, Roebuck suffered a stroke that she said should have left her blind.

"I'm lucky because I should have lost my vision," Roebuck told in February. "I should have lost my peripheral vision for sure. The majority of people that suffer a stroke [like mine] do that. So, I probably should have been blind, which is quite a miracle that that didn't happen."

Having been struck in the back of the head with a ball in training with Manchester City, the 26-year-old was treated for a concussion but further tests revealed that Roebuck had actually suffered a stroke.

"I knew it wasn't concussion," she said. "I've had concussion. I just knew something wasn't right. I said 'for my peace of mind I need a head scan, something is not right and I know it'."

Having been called back in by the club doctor, Roebuck added: "It filled me with panic, but I never had in my mind that it was a stroke. He sat me down and was like, 'you've had an infarct in your left occipital lobe'. I asked 'what's that in English?' And then he said it was a type of stroke."

AdvertisementGetty Images SportRoebuck replaces Man City's Keating in the England squad

The diagnosis came at the worst possible time for Roebuck, who two weeks previously had formalised her City exit having signed a pre-contract with Barcelona. "I was sat in A&E with all the people on a Thursday night that'd been out drinking," Roebuck added. "They'd come in with their cuts and bruises and I was just sat there [thinking] 'what is happening?' And then I got taken to the stroke ward which was something that I'd never really want to remember.

"You're in there with people that I thought were 'normal people' to have strokes – older people. It was just a crazy experience." Roebuck also added: "The nurses said you can't carry shopping for six weeks. You can't do any exercise. I thought, 'I'm a professional footballer, I can't do that'."

After a year in Spain, Roebuck went on to sign for Aston Villa coming into 2025-26, though has made only two appearances for the Villans in the WSL this season due to Sabrina D'Angelo's solid status as No. 1. Even so, with Hannah Hampton already not part of the squad through injury, England have confirmed that Roebuck has returned to the England setup, replacing Manchester City's Khiara Keating, who was forced to withdraw due to "a small groin injury" suffered in training.

AFPMoorhouse in line to make England debut

Keating's withdrawal from the England squad not only paved the way for Roebuck to return to the Lionesses squad, but means Anna Moorhouse is now line to make her England debut against China.

Moorhouse received her first call up in July 2024, but found herself behind Keating, the retired Mary Earps and the currently injured Hampton in the pecking order over the past 17 months. The 30-year-old didn't play a single minute as England successfully defended their Euros crown in Switzerland.

However, as next in line, Orlando Pride's Moorhouse is tipped to start at Wembley, while Roebuck will hope to feature in some capacity in the coming days following her return to the setup. Brighton's uncapped Sophie Baggaley is the other goalkeeper in the squad named by Sarina Wiegman.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

What comes next for the Lionesses?

After their upcoming friendlies against China and Ghana, the former of which was originally intended to mark a special farewell to Mary Earps, England are not in action again until March, when they kick off the 2027 World Cup qualifiers. The Lionesses begin their qualification campaign against Ukraine before they welcome Iceland in their Group 3 clash.

England and Spain then renew rivalries in April when the Lionesses face off against La Roja at Wembley as the duo battle to secure automatic qualification to Brazil 2027.

The changing game: bowlers rise, batters fall, Tests get faster and shorter

The format of the WTC discourages defensive cricket, and that has made Test matches look and feel very different to what they were – the story in numbers

Sampath Bandarupalli07-Jun-2025In November 2015, South Africa lost an away Test series for the first time in nearly a decade when they went 2-0 down after three of the four Tests in India.In the final Test, a dead rubber in Delhi, South Africa focused solely on playing for a draw instead of trying to get a consolation win when set a target of 481 in five full sessions. To achieve that, they scored 143 runs in 143.1 overs. They were on track for the longest time, but then lost their last five wickets in just 31 balls after tea on the final day. Morne Morkel was the fastest scorer with a strike rate of 33.33.No team in the 152-year history of Test cricket has gone that long while scoring as slowly.Fast forward ten years, and teams have a solid reason to do what South Africa tried to do in Delhi. You get four crucial points to help your cause on the World Test Championship (WTC) table, after all, and prevent the opposition from claiming the full 12 points.Except, no one seems to be thinking that. There were only four draws in the WTC cycle which will have it’s winner at Lord’s in just over a week’s time.

Faster Tests, shorter TestsThe introduction of the WTC in 2019 significantly changed the game. Teams actively work to avoid draws, and the pitches now favour bowlers more than ever before. In the six years leading up to the WTC’s arrival (from 2013 to the end of the 2018-19 season), the average number of balls bowled per Test was 1946.64, with an average of 32.06 runs per wicket.From 2019 to 2024-25, the average length of a Test has been 1785.87 balls, while the average runs per wicket fell to 30.31. Consequently, the number of balls taken per wicket declined from 59.52 to 54.72. The run rate, though, experienced a marginal increase – from 3.23 to 3.32.

The first two WTC cycles, 2019-21 and 2021-23, exhibited similar overall statistics. The average runs per wicket was 30.63 and 30.47, respectively, and wickets fell at a similar rate, 58.45 and 57 balls per wicket. Matches during those cycles lasted an average of 1855 balls.The WTC 2023-25 cycle has been very different. Wickets have fallen every 47.81 balls, with only 1638.09 balls bowled per Test. At the same time, the average runs per wicket came down by only a run (29.11), as the scoring rate increased to 3.65 runs per over. Notably, 50 out of the 69 Tests in this cycle produced a result by the fourth day. Test cricket is now quicker both in terms of the scoring and wickets falling, resulting in shorter matches.

Only four Tests in this cycle ended in a draw – and all of them were affected by rain, preventing 300 overs of play.However, these shifts didn’t necessarily begin with the WTC. In the three years leading up to the first edition of the WTC, from 2016 to 2018-19, the draw percentage had dropped to 12.08%. Nearly half the Tests concluded within four days. The average number of balls bowled per Test was 1897.36, almost 19 overs fewer than the previous period – from 2013 to 2015-16 – when the average was 2009.39 balls. The average runs per wicket decreased by three, going from 33.99 (from 2013 to 2015-16) to 30.58 (from 2016 to 2018-19).This trend remained consistent in the first three years of the WTC, from 2019 to 2021-22, with matches averaging 1878.38 balls, and runs scored per wicket averaging 30.09 – only slightly lower than the figures from 2016 to 2018-19.

The big change came in the latest cycle. Over the past three years, the average number of balls bowled per match has been just 1701.07, or about 283 overs. Out of the 120 Tests played during this period, 15 were completed in fewer than 200 overs, and 31 did not last beyond three days.Of the 120 Tests played between 2022 and 2024-25, including Tests that were not a part of the WTC, 81 concluded with a win/loss by the fourth day. This means that only one in every three Tests has gone to the fifth day. In contrast, from 2013 to 2015-16, only 45 of the 117 Tests ended in four or fewer days.Between 2022 and 2024-25, just 11 out of 120 Tests ended in draws. Because of the weather, fewer than 300 overs were bowled in five of them, and two others had fewer than 400 overs. In contrast, from 2013 to 2015-16, 26 matches ended in draws. In 17 of those 26 drawn Tests, at least 400 overs were bowled, and only six had fewer than 300 overs.Fall of the fortressesMany teams now prefer to chase wins on pitches that support bowlers, but that seems to be backfiring. Between 2013 and 2018-19, home teams won twice as many matches as they lost; however, that win-loss ratio has decreased to 1.488 since 2019 (until 2024-25).The decline of home dominance in Tests is evident in the matches played during the three WTC cycles. Teams are looking to secure the full 12 points while playing at home by dishing out favourable pitches, but are instead conceding points to visiting teams.

In the first two WTC cycles, home teams had a win-loss ratio of 1.888 and 2.000, which dropped significantly to 1.166 in the third cycle. During this latest cycle, home teams won only 11 series while losing ten, compared to the first two cycles, where they won 15 series and lost just 11.India were clean swept at home for the first time in a series of three or more Tests when New Zealand beat them 3-0. That ended India’s record streak of 18 consecutive Test series wins at home. New Zealand themselves suffered twin series losses at home, having not lost a series there in nearly seven years. Bangladesh also took down Pakistan while touring, winning both Tests in a two-match series.

No easy conditionsBowlers have had a bigger say on the first day of matches. Between 2022 and 2024-25, the average runs per wicket was 33.7, with a wicket falling every 56.77 balls. The corresponding figures from 2013 to 2015-16 were more than 40 and 78.Although the average dropped to 37.8 in the three-year periods from 2016 to 2018-19 and 2019 to 2021-22, wickets were harder to come by. The average balls per wicket in those were 70.79 and 75.19, respectively.

A similar trend is observed when classifying the first-day averages across WTC cycles. The latest cycle shows an average of 32.28 runs per wicket, five below the previous two. The average balls per wicket slid to 54.28, nearly 15 balls fewer than in earlier periods.Bowlers’ rise, batters’ declineAnother trend shaping modern Test cricket is the decline in batting, which some attribute to the rise of white-ball cricket and the dominance of bowlers in the longest format. The basic numbers of individuals do back that claim.

In the six years leading up to the 2019 season, 37 batters scored over 2000 runs, with nine players averaging 50. Among them, two batters maintained an average above 60. Since 2019, none of the 29 batters who have scored over 2000 runs have an average over 60, and only four have an average of 50 or more.Bowlers, however, have significantly improved their averages and strike rates.Over six years leading up to 2019, 48 bowlers took more than 50 wickets, but only 12 had an average below 25.

In contrast, since 2019, that number has risen to 19 out of 48. Bowling strike rates have also improved; half of the 48 bowlers have struck every 50 balls since 2019, whereas only eight bowlers did that in the six years before the WTC.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus