A list of all international Test Matches played by the Wallabies . [1]
Date | Opponent | F | A | Venue | City | Winner | Comments | Tour | Competition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1899-06-24 | British & Irish Lions | 13 | 3 | SCG | Sydney | Australia | Match Details | 1899 British Lions tour | |
1899-07-22 | British & Irish Lions | 0 | 11 | Brisbane Exhibition Ground | Brisbane | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | ||
1899-08-05 | British & Irish Lions | 10 | 11 | SCG | Sydney | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | ||
1899-08-12 | British & Irish Lions | 0 | 13 | SCG | Sydney | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | ||
Date | Opponent | F | A | Venue | City | Winner | Comments | Tour | Competition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1903-08-15 | New Zealand | 3 | 22 | SCG | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | 1903 New Zealand tour | |
1904-07-02 | British & Irish Lions | 0 | 17 | SCG | Sydney | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | 1904 British Lions tour | |
1904-07-23 | British & Irish Lions | 3 | 17 | Brisbane Exhibition Ground | Brisbane | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | ||
1904-07-30 | British & Irish Lions | 0 | 16 | SCG | Sydney | British & Irish Lions | Match Details | ||
1905-09-02 | New Zealand | 3 | 14 | Tahuna Park | Dunedin | New Zealand | Match Details | 1905 Australia tour | |
1907-07-20 | New Zealand | 6 | 26 | SCG | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | 1907 New Zealand tour | |
1907-08-03 | New Zealand | 5 | 14 | The Gabba | Brisbane | New Zealand | Match Details | ||
1907-08-10 | New Zealand | 5 | 5 | SCG | Sydney | Drawn | Match Details | ||
1908-12-12 | Wales | 6 | 9 | Cardiff Arms Park | Cardiff | Wales | Match Details | 1908–09 Australia tour | |
1909-01-09 | England | 9 | 3 | Rectory Field | London | Australia | Match Details | ||
Date | Opponent | F | A | Venue | City | Winner | Comments | Tour | Competition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1910-06-25 | New Zealand | 0 | 6 | SCG | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | 1910 New Zealand tour | |
1910-06-27 | New Zealand | 11 | 0 | SCG | Sydney | Australia | Match Details | ||
1910-07-02 | New Zealand | 13 | 28 | SCG | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | ||
1912-11-16 | United States | 12 | 8 | California Field | Berkeley | Australia | Match Details | 1912 Australia tour | |
1913-09-06 | New Zealand | 5 | 30 | Athletic Park | Wellington | New Zealand | Match Details | 1913 Australia tour | |
1913-09-13 | New Zealand | 13 | 25 | Carisbrook | Dunedin | New Zealand | Match Details | ||
1913-09-20 | New Zealand | 16 | 5 | Lancaster Park | Christchurch | Australia | Match Details | ||
1914-07-18 | New Zealand | 0 | 5 | Sydney Sports Ground | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | 1914 New Zealand tour | |
1914-08-01 | New Zealand | 0 | 17 | The Gabba | Brisbane | New Zealand | Match Details | ||
1914-08-15 | New Zealand | 7 | 22 | Sydney Sports Ground | Sydney | New Zealand | Match Details | ||
Notes:
The New Zealand national cricket team represents New Zealand in men's international cricket. Nicknamed the Black Caps, they played their first Test in 1930 against England in Christchurch, becoming the fifth country to play Test cricket. From 1930 New Zealand had to wait until 1956, more than 26 years, for its first Test victory, against the West Indies at Eden Park in Auckland. They played their first ODI in the 1972–73 season against Pakistan in Christchurch. New Zealand are the inaugural champions of WTC which they won in 2021 and they have also won ICC CT in 2000. They have played in the CWC final twice and the T20 WC final once.
The baggy green is a cricket cap of dark myrtle green colour, which has been worn by Australian Test cricketers since around the turn of the 20th century. The cap was not originally baggy, as evidenced by photographs of early players. The cap has long been a symbol of national pride in Australia, and was described by the chief executive of the MCC as the "most famous cricket cap in the world".
The Western Australian men's cricket team, formerly nicknamed the Western Warriors, represent the Australian state of Western Australia in Australian domestic cricket. The team is selected and supported by the Western Australian Cricket Association (WACA), and plays its home games at the WACA Ground and Perth Stadium in Perth.
In sport, a cap is a player's appearance in a game at international level. The term dates from the practice in the United Kingdom of awarding a cap to every player in an international match of rugby football and association football. In the early days of football, the concept of each team wearing a set of matching shirts had not been universally adopted, so each side would distinguish itself from the other by wearing a specific sort of cap.
The West Indies cricket team, nicknamed The Windies, is a men's cricket team representing the West Indies—a group of mainly English-speaking countries and territories in the Caribbean region—and administered by Cricket West Indies. The players on this composite team are selected from a chain of fifteen Caribbean nation-states and territories. As of 12 July 2024, the West Indies cricket team is ranked eighth in Tests, tenth in ODIs, and third in T20Is in the official ICC rankings.
The Ella-Mobbs Cup is a rugby union trophy contested between Australia and England.
The World Rugby Rankings is a ranking system for national teams in rugby union, managed by World Rugby, the sport's governing body. There are separate men's and women's rankings. The teams of World Rugby's member nations are ranked based on their game results, with the most successful teams being ranked highest. A point system is used, with points being awarded on the basis of the results of World Rugby-recognized international matches. Rankings are based on the team's performance, with more recent results and more significant matches being more heavily weighted to help reflect the current competitive state of a team. The men's ranking system was introduced the month before the 2003 Rugby World Cup, with the first new rankings issued on 8 September 2003, when they were called the "IRB Rankings".
England A is England's men's second national rugby union team. The team has previously been known by a number of names, such as England B, Emerging England and, most recently, England Saxons. England A play a key role in the development of emerging talent, allowing players to gain experience in an international environment and to show that they have the ability to perform at Test level for the England first team. England A were unbeaten for 13 games until losing to Ireland A, now known as Ireland Wolfhounds, in the 2009 Churchill Cup Final on 21 June 2009.
A cricket cap is a type of soft cap, often made from felt, that is a traditional form of headwear for players of the game of cricket, regardless of age or sex. It is usually a tight-fitting skullcap, usually made of six or eight sections, with a small crescent shaped brim that points downwards over the brow to provide shade for the eyes. It is often, but not always, elasticised at the rear to hold it in place upon the wearer's head. Sometimes, rather than tight-fitting, the cricket cap comes in a baggy variety, that is always kept in place by elastic. The style of cap is also often used as official headwear as part of school uniforms for boys from private schools, particularly in the United Kingdom and throughout the Commonwealth of Nations. Although not common in the modern period, the cricket cap used to be a fashionable form of headwear for people who were casually dressed, and not necessarily worn just for playing the game.
A test match in rugby union is an international match, usually played between two senior national teams, that is recognised as such by at least one of the teams' national governing bodies.
The Australian Schoolboys & U18 rugby union team is the national team for schoolboy rugby union & U18 players in Australia. Considered to be the pinnacle of schoolboy & U18 rugby in Australia, the team plays in fixtures against other national representative schoolboy teams from around the world. Many players who have played in the Australian Schoolboys team have gone on to further representative careers with Super Rugby franchise teams and the Australian national rugby union team.
The first clash in Rugby Union between Australia and New Zealand took place in a test match on 15 August 1903 in Sydney, New South Wales. On that occasion, New Zealand won 22–3.
Argentina and New Zealand have been playing each other in the sport of Rugby Union since 1976.
The contest between The Wallabies and The Springboks is one of the major rivalries in rugby union. Since 2000s, the two teams have competed for the Mandela Challenge Plate.
Australia and Italy have played each other in full tests at rugby union a total of nineteen matches, with the first eighteen won by Australia. Italy achieved their first victory in the fixture in the 2022 Autumn Internationals, some 39 years after the first match between the teams. Australia have met Italy once in Rugby World Cup play, winning 32-6 in Auckland in the 2011 Rugby World Cup. All other matches were Test Matches.