This championship was first proposed in 1996 by
Clive Lloyd, former cricketer and then manager of the
West Indies team. Later, in 2009, when the ICC met the
MCC to discuss a proposed Test match championship. Former New Zealand captain
Martin Crowe was one of the main brains behind this proposal. In July 2010 ICC chief executive
Haroon Lorgat suggested a quadrennial tournament with the four best-ranked nations meeting in the semi-finals and a final, in a bid to boost flagging interest in the longest form of the sport. The first tournament was meant to replace the
2013 ICC Champions Trophy in England and Wales. The idea of a Test championship was considered by the ICC Chief Executives' Committee at a meeting at their headquarters in
Dubai in mid-September 2010. ICC spokesperson Colin Gibson said that much more would be revealed after the meeting, and that if the championship was held in England, then the favoured final venue would be
Lord's. As expected, the ICC approved the plan and said that the first tournament would be held in
England and
Wales in 2013. The format of the tournament was also announced. It would comprise an inaugural league stage, played over a period of four years, with all ten current
Test cricket nations (
Australia,
India,
England,
South Africa,
Pakistan,
Sri Lanka,
New Zealand,
West Indies,
Zimbabwe, and
Bangladesh) participating. After the league stage the top four teams will take part in the play-offs, with the final determining the Test cricket champions. There was a debate as to whether the play-off would take place between the top eight teams or the top four teams, but the latter was unanimously chosen by the board. It was also announced that the tournament would replace the
ICC Champions Trophy. This drew widespread criticism; both
Greg Chappell and
Graeme Smith criticised the ICC, saying that postponing the Test Championship was wrong and unjustified.
The Guardian reported that this postponement was a blow to Lord's, which had been expected to host the final. At the ICC Chief Executives' meeting in April 2012, it was confirmed that the
ICC Champions Trophy would be last held in 2013 with the inaugural Test Championship play-offs being scheduled for June 2017. The ICC said that there would be only one trophy for each format of the game, which meant that the Champions Trophy would no longer take place since the
Cricket World Cup is the premier event for 50-over cricket. The final would possibly have followed the historical
timeless test format. Further improvements in the structure of the championship have also been discussed. However, in January 2014, the 2017 ICC World Test Championship was cancelled and the
2017 ICC Champions Trophy was reinstated. In October 2017, the ICC announced that a Test league had been agreed upon by its members, which would involve the top nine teams playing series over two years with the top two teams qualifying for a World Test League Championship Final, which will be considered as an ICC event. ==Tournament summary==