From poverty to plenty: 2025 is a bumper Test year for Zimbabwe like none before

It’s quite a radical upgrade for the team’s players, who haven’t ever had this much opportunity thrown at them before

Firdose Moonda17-May-2025In 2025, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and Pakistan will play five Tests each; Bangladesh six; West Indies seven; South Africa eight; India and England ten each; and Australia 11. Only one other team will play as many matches as the last of those: Zimbabwe.Despite not being part of the World Test Championship, Zimbabwe have actively sought out Test fixtures, which they see as their responsibility as an ICC Full Member, even if they have no one holding them to that. “I believe that every Full Member must play all three formats. It’s part of our eligibility criteria,” Tavengwa Mukhulani, Zimbabwe Cricket chairman says. “We are a country that has played over 100 Tests [123 to date] so we are a Test nation.”This staunch commitment has recently been boosted a notch. Since making their Test comeback in 2011, Zimbabwe have played 40 matches in 14 years: an average of just under three Tests a year. In some years, like 2015 and 2019, they did not play any. Before this year, the most Tests they had played in a calendar year since the comeback was six in 2013.Related

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Zimbabwe have already played two home Tests this year, and are due to host six more. They’ve also played two away, and have another such scheduled in England this month, which is historically significant. It is the first time Zimbabwe will play there since 2004, and the first time they will play against England in any format, since 2007.That statistic alone says how starved Zimbabwe are of cricket against the top nations. They haven’t played a Test against Australia since 2003, against India since 2005, and against neighbours South Africa since 2017. Mukuhlani calls it an “informal segregation”, one that “should have no place in sport” because of how it entrenches inequalities.He wants to see an equal spread of fixtures, in which all Full Member teams play each other. “Every one of the 12 Full Members must be given an opportunity to play against each other in all the three formats. If you look at football, which has grown phenomenally globally, Brazil plays Honduras, England plays Malta. This story that there are those who are playing on one side of the aisle and those playing on [the other] has no place in sport,” he says. “We need a bare minimum home-and-away schedule and over and above that, countries can then organise their bilaterals [as] suits their commercial needs.”Mukuhlani is also against a two-tier Test system because he thinks it will leave the smaller nations even further behind. “If you’ve got a two-tier system, the question is, what do you want to achieve? Do you want to formalise segregation?