Crowe–Thorpe Trophy
| Countries |  England New Zealand  | 
|---|---|
| Administrator | International Cricket Council England and Wales Cricket Board New Zealand Cricket  | 
| Format | Test cricket | 
| First edition | 2024–25 (New Zealand) | 
| Tournament format | Test series | 
| Number of teams | 2 | 
| Current trophy holder | England (2024–25) | 
| Most successful | England (1 series win) | 
| Qualification | ICC World Test Championship | 
| Most runs | Kane Williamson (395) | 
| Most wickets | Brydon Carse (18) | 
The Crowe–Thorpe Trophy is a Test cricket series played between the men's cricket teams of England and New Zealand. It was launched in November 2024 during England's tour of New Zealand. The two countries have played each other in international cricket since England's 1929–30 tour of New Zealand.
The trophy commemorates the late Martin Crowe (New Zealand) and the late Graham Thorpe (England).
The trophy, made by David Ngawati, is constructed from bats used by each player to score centuries in series between New Zealand and England in 1994 and 1997. It is inlaid with jade/pounamu. According to the artist, it signifies the pinnacle or highest mountain, and the base represents the players' foundation, "their family members on each side, their clubs, their community". Sir Alastair Cook commented, "It’s not often that boards get things absolutely spot on but that is a brilliant trophy"
Prior to the first named edition in 2024, the Crowe–Thorpe Trophy was unveiled by Deb Crowe (Martin's sister) and the former captain of England, Michael Atherton. England won the series in New Zealand, 2–1; the next will be held in England in 2026.
The competition continued a trend in bilateral international cricket series being named after a famous player from each country, such as the Border–Gavaskar Trophy, the Richards–Botham Trophy and the Chappell–Hadlee Trophy.