The Women's Ashes Test countdown is underway thanks to magnificent photos from Cricket Australia.

July 30, 2024, is the 90th anniversary of the inaugural women's Test match at the MCG, and the Women's Ashes Day Night Test match falls on that date.

Alyssa Healy, the captain of Australia, and Tahlia McGrath, the vice captain, pose before the historic Women's Ashes day-night Test match. — File/Cricket Australia

The countdown to the historic Women's Ashes day-night Test match at Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) is on as captain Alyssa Healy and vice captain Tahlia McGrath prepare for the match.

On Monday night, Healy and McGrath celebrated reaching a milestone of six months at the MCG, which will serve as the venue for Australia's opening day-night Test match against England.

The test will begin on January 30 and run until February 2, 2025. https://globtouch.blogspot.com/The historic encounter commemorates the 90th anniversary of the MCG's inaugural women's Test match, which happened in 1934–1935 during the Australia–England series.

"We are very excited to play the first day-night Test at the MCG," stated Australia's skipper, Alyssa Healy.

We will be celebrating the inaugural women's Test series' 90th anniversary under the lights at this legendary venue, so it will be a very memorable occasion exist.

The ICCT20 World Cup in Bangladesh, the domestic white-ball series against New Zealand and India, and the multi-format Ashes series are setting the stage for an exciting summer. We hope that come summer, the Australian supporters will be cheering us on."

Six months from now, the "fantastic" Australian women's team will play their "historic first day-night Test at a world-renowned venue," according to Cricket Australia CEO Nick Hockley.

In addition to thanking the MCG and the Victorian Government for their support, Hockley said the series "promises to be a historic occasion for Australian sport."


CEO Stuart Fox of the MCG stated: "The MCG hosted the first international Test match in 1877, the first one-day international in 1971, and 86,000 for Australia vs. India in the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup final." More times seen.


"Now that we have the chance, the legendary history of the MCG will undoubtedly witness another historic occasion as we host our first day-night Test.

"That this historic occasion coincides with two of the MCG's most cherished series, the 90th anniversary of our inaugural Women's Test and the Women's Ashes Test, is very remarkable."