Pataudi Trophy

Defunct Test cricket series between India and England


title: "Pataudi Trophy" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["cricket-awards-and-rankings", "cricket-rivalries", "england-in-international-cricket", "india-in-international-cricket", "test-cricket-competitions", "india–united-kingdom-sports-relations"] description: "Defunct Test cricket series between India and England" topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pataudi_Trophy" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Defunct Test cricket series between India and England ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox cricket tournament main"]

FieldValue
namePataudi Trophy
imagePataudi trophy.jpg
captionThe Trophy
country

| | administrator | England and Wales Cricket Board | | cricket format | Test cricket | | first | 2007 | | last | 2021 | | tournament format | 5-match test series | | participants | 2 | | host | | | trophyholder | | | most successful | (3 series wins & 1 retention) | | qualification | ICC World Test Championship | | most runs | ENG Joe Root (2,111) | | most wickets | ENG James Anderson (105) | | TV | Sky Sports (England) Sony Pictures Networks (India) | ::

| name = Pataudi Trophy | image = Pataudi trophy.jpg | imagesize = | caption = The Trophy | country =

| administrator = England and Wales Cricket Board | cricket format = Test cricket | first = 2007 | last = 2021 | tournament format = 5-match test series | participants = 2 | host = | trophyholder = | most successful = (3 series wins & 1 retention) |qualification = ICC World Test Championship | most runs = ENG Joe Root (2,111) | most wickets = ENG James Anderson (105) | TV = Sky Sports (England) Sony Pictures Networks (India) The Pataudi Trophy was given to the winner of each Test cricket series between England and India for Test series played in England. The trophy was named after Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi, who played for both India and England. It was designed and made by Jocelyn Burton. The trophy was first awarded in 2007 to mark 75 years since the two teams played their first Test match in 1932. India won the first Pataudi Trophy series in England in 2007. A team had to win a series to hold the Pataudi Trophy; if the series ended in a draw, the team that already held the Trophy retained it.

In 2025, the Pataudi Trophy was replaced by the Anderson–Tendulkar Trophy. A new Pataudi Medal of Excellence was announced to be awarded to the winning captain of the Anderson Tendulkar series.

Background

The first Test series between England and India took place in 1932. Over the following decades, India toured England on fourteen occasions, with England winning eleven series, India winning two, and one series drawn.

In 2007, to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the inaugural series, the England and Wales Cricket Board formally introduced a cricket trophy, named after the Pataudi family.⁣

Introduction of the trophy

In 2007, the Marylebone Cricket Club commissioned a new trophy to celebrate the 75th anniversary of India's first Test match in 1932. The trophy was designed and crafted by London silversmith Jocelyn Burton in her studio in Holborn. It was later displayed at Jocelyn's exhibition in November and December 2012 at Bentley & Skinner, London.

Naming and renaming

The trophy was originally named in honour of Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi, who remains the only cricketer to have represented both India and England in Test matches – having made three appearances for each national side, and his son Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi who captained India after from playing schools cricket in England.⁣ Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi studied at Winchester College, one of the prestigious public schools in England and played for the school's cricket team. After Winchester, he went on to Balliol College, Oxford, where he played first-class cricket for Oxford University and also made appearances for Sussex County Cricket Club.

In 2025, a new trophy was created to jointly honour England's former fast bowler James Anderson, the leading wicket-taker among pace bowlers (with 704 wickets), and India's former batter Sachin Tendulkar, the highest run-scorer (15,921 runs) in Test cricket history.The renaming was criticized, including by late Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi's wife Sharmila Tagore , former cricketers Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev. In order to help address the criticism against the renaming of the trophy and to continue to honour the legacy of Pataudis, the winning captain of the trophy would be presented the Pataudi medal, an idea by Sachin Tendulkar.

Series results

Since 2007, five Test series have been played in England under the officially named trophy. England have won three of these series, India have won one, and one series ended in a draw.

List of series

::data[format=table title="India–England Test series before Pataudi series (pre-2007)"]

SeriesYearsTest matchesDrawnResult
11932110
21936320
31946310
41952430
51959550
61967330
71971301
81974330
91979410
101982310
111986302
121990310
131996310
142002411
::

::data[format=table]

SeriesDrawn
1411
::

::data[format=table title="India–England Test series played for the Pataudi Trophy"]

SeriesSeasonTestsDrawnResultHolderPlayer(s) of the series12345Total
2007ENG James Anderson
IND Zaheer Khan
2011ENG Stuart Broad
IND Rahul Dravid
2014ENG James Anderson
IND Bhuvneshwar Kumar
2018ENG Sam Curran
IND Virat Kohli
2021DrawnENG Joe Root
IND Jasprit Bumrah
::

::data[format=table]

SeriesDrawn
53
::

Notes

References

References

  1. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test Matches / Batting Records". Cricinfo.
  2. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test Matches / Bowling Records". Cricinfo.
  3. (6 November 2012). "Recognise India-England series as Pataudi Trophy".
  4. https://www.livemint.com/sports/cricket-news/kapil-dev-breaks-silence-on-anderson-tendulkar-trophy-controversy-feels-a-little-strange-does-this-also-happen-11750328321918.html
  5. "Pataudi Trophy 2007 | Live Score, Schedule, News".
  6. https://www.msn.com/en-in/sports/cricket/james-anderson-gets-emotional-as-pataudi-trophy-replaced-with-anderson-tendulkar-series/ar-AA1GpJce
  7. (4 June 2025). "India, England to now play for the Anderson–Tendulkar Trophy; legends to unveil silverware".
  8. (2025-06-05). "ENG v IND: Pataudi Trophy To Be Renamed After Two Modern-Day Test Record-Breakers {{!}} Cricket News Today".
  9. (17 June 2025). "ENG vs IND series-winning captain to get Pataudi medal on Sachin Tendulkar's request".
  10. (19 November 2024). "India-Australia Test series: How India's first Australia tour almost did not happen".
  11. "Renaming the Pataudi Trophy: Understanding Why the Decision Matters".
  12. (9 August 2007). "MCC commissions trophy for England v India series".
  13. "'Can't quite believe it' - Anderson chuffed after England-India Test series named Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy".
  14. Frith, David. (25 September 2011). "Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi obituary".
  15. "The Tiger’s lair".
  16. Miller, Andrew. (2025-06-09). "'Can't quite believe it' - Anderson chuffed after England-India Test series named Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy".
  17. (7 June 2025). "No disrespect to Anderson-Tendulkar, but renaming the Pataudi Trophy isn’t quite cricket".
  18. "Renaming the Pataudi Trophy: Understanding Why the Decision Matters".
  19. "'Wanted to keep Pataudi legacy alive' - how Tendulkar helped in creating Pataudi medal".
  20. "Team records {{!}} Test matches {{!}} Cricinfo Statsguru {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  21. "Pataudi Trophy, 2007". ESPNcricinfo.
  22. "Pataudi Trophy, 2011". ESPNcricinfo.
  23. "Pataudi Trophy, 2014". ESPNcricinfo.
  24. "Pataudi Trophy, 2018". ESPNcricinfo.
  25. "England v India Cricket Team Records & Stats | ESPNcricinfo.com".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

cricket-awards-and-rankingscricket-rivalriesengland-in-international-cricketindia-in-international-crickettest-cricket-competitionsindia–united-kingdom-sports-relations