India vs England Mixed Disability T20I series 2025: 7-match tour ends at Lord's
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The iconic Lord's Cricket Ground in London will host the final match of a seven-match Mixed Disability International T20 (IT20) series between India and England in August 2025, capping what promises to be a landmark bilateral series for disability cricket. The series decider is scheduled for 19 August, just weeks after Lord's hosted its first Women's Test match.
Full Series Schedule
The seven-match Vitality IT20 series gets underway on 5 August at the County Ground, Derby, with the first match starting at 14:30 BST. The second IT20 follows at the same venue on 7 August.
The third match moves to Grace Road, Leicester on 8 August, before the fourth IT20 heads south to the County Ground, Hove. The fifth and sixth matches are both scheduled at Arundel — notably, the fifth falls on 15 August, India's Independence Day, with the sixth played the following day on 16 August.
The series concludes on 19 August at Lord's Cricket Ground, starting at 14:30 BST, in what the England Disability Cricket Board has billed as a potential series decider.
England Disability Cricket Board Announcement
The England Disability Cricket Board confirmed the tour via its official Instagram handle. 'England Men's Mixed Disability squad will play seven Vitality IT20s against India in August, including a potential series decider at Lord's!' the board stated in its post, which also carried the full match schedule.
Context and Rivalry History
This series represents a return leg for India. Earlier this year, England's Mixed Disability team toured India for a series played between 29 January and 6 February across Greater Noida and Jaipur. Prior to that, the Indian Mixed Disability Cricket Team had toured England for a seven-match T20 series in 2025, which the home side won comfortably — a series that also featured a stop at Lord's.
Significance for Disability Cricket
A fixture at Lord's carries particular symbolic weight for disability cricket, a format that has historically struggled for mainstream visibility. The ground's inclusion on the itinerary — following its landmark Women's Test hosting — signals a broadening of the MCC's commitment to inclusive cricket. Notably, this is the second consecutive year that Lord's will feature on a Mixed Disability international schedule, suggesting the venue is becoming a regular fixture for the format.
With India arriving as the touring side and England holding home advantage, all eyes will be on whether the hosts can replicate their dominant run from the previous series, or whether India will level the ledger on English soil.