Breaking

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot

Tuesday, 21 May 2019

The Ashes 2019: How to watch The Ashes 2019 – TV channel, live stream, schedule, dates, times, highlights

PERTH, AUSTRALIA - DECEMBER 18: A replica Ashes urn is pictured in front of the scoreboard during day five of the Third Test match during the 2017/18 Ashes Series between Australia and England at WACA on December 18, 2017 in Perth, Australia. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

The Ashes has seen England and Australia competing at Test cricket since 1883.

More than a hundred years later, the series remains one of the most important and viewed events in world cricket.

The Australian team will travel to England in 2019 with the Ashes following hot on the heels of the Cricket World Cup, which is hosted by England and Wales this summer.

After a long period of Australian domination both home and away during the 1990s and early 2000s, the past decade has seen the urn change hands regularly between both teams.

Australia won convincingly in the 2017/18 series but England will be hoping to get revenge on home soil.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about the upcoming 2019 Ashes.

The Ashes 2019 schedule

1st Test

Dates: Thursday 1st – Monday 5th August 2019

Venue: Edgbaston, Birmingham


2nd Test

Dates: Wednesday 14th – Sunday 18th August 2019

Venue: Lord’s, London


3rd Test

Dates: Thursday 22nd – Monday 26th August 2019

Venue: Headingley, Leeds


4th Test

Dates: Wednesday 4th – Sunday 8th September 2019

Venue: Old Trafford, Manchester


5th Test

Dates: Thursday 12th – Monday 16th September 2019

Venue: The Oval, London

How to watch and stream The Ashes live on TV in the UK

The Ashes will be available to watch live in the UK on Sky TV and NOW TV.

Viewers will be able to watch all the matches live on Sky Sports Cricket, which in the past has been renamed Sky Sports Ashes for the course of the series.

Sky Sports subscribers will also be able to stream the matches via the SkyGo and Sky Sports apps.

If you don’t have Sky, you’ll be able to watch the matches through NOW TV without signing up for a full contract. You can get a Sky Sports day pass for £7.99, a week pass for £12.99 or a month pass for £33.99. NOW TV can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones and consoles.

How to watch highlights of The Ashes in the UK

Free-to-air highlights of the matches will be available daily during the tournament on Channel 5.

How to watch and stream The Ashes live in Australia

For those willing to stay up late and get up early, The Ashes will be broadcast on Channel 7 and Fox Sports in Australia.

How to buy tickets for The Ashes

The ballots for Ashes tickets at all of the host grounds are now closed.

For further details and future opportunities to buy Ashes tickets, visit the ECB website.

Why is it called The Ashes?

The term originates from The Sporting Life newspaper, which in 1882 published a satirical obituary of English cricket after Australia had beaten England at The Oval – the first time the tourists won a game on English soil.

The piece stated that “the body [of English cricket] will be cremated and the ashes taken to Australia.”

The following Test series was thus dubbed by the media as an attempt to win the ‘ashes’ of cricket back, with then-England cricket captain Ivo Bligh vowing to “regain those ashes.”

The name has stuck for well over a century.

Who won The Ashes in 2018?

Australia are current holders of The Ashes, having won the series in Australia in 2017-18 by four matches to nil.

Australia won all but the fourth Test in Melbourne, which ended in a draw.

Which team has won The Ashes the most times?

For a series that has gone on for more than 130 years, the overall tally is remarkably close.

In total there have been 70 series. Australia have won 33, England 32, and five have been drawn.


Some of our articles contain contextual affiliate links. You can support us by clicking on these as we may earn commission if you make a purchase. There is no extra cost to you and we never allow this to bias our content.



from Radio Times http://bit.ly/2JwT6kV

Post Top Ad

Your Ad Spot