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Australia won the third and final match by 12 runs, with India winning the series 2–1. [15] In the first Test, India were bowled out for 36 runs in the second innings, [16] their lowest team total in a Test match. [17] Australia went on to win the match by eight wickets. [18] India then won the second Test by the same margin to level the ...
In the ODI series that followed, Australia won the first match by 34 runs, recording their 1,000th win in international cricket. [20] However, India went on to win the next two games, and consequently the series 2–1; [ 21 ] in the process recording their first bilateral ODI series victory in Australia.
India won the first two ODIs of the series, and with their victory in the second match, registered their 500th win in the format. [6] India became the second team, after Australia, to record 500 wins in ODIs. [7] Despite losing the first two matches, Australia went on to win the ODI series 3–2. [8]
Glenn Maxwell’s record equaling fourth T20 hundred helped Australia beat India by five wickets Tuesday to stay alive in the five-match series after back-to-back losses. Maxwell scored 104 not ...
The 2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup Super 8 stage was played in two groups of four teams advanced from the group stage. Top two of each group advanced to the knockout stage. [1] [2] On 24 June 2024, India became the third team to qualify for the semi-finals after defeating Australia at Daren Sammy Cricket Ground. [3]
The Australia cricket team toured India in January 2020 to play three One Day International (ODI) matches. [1] [2] [3] Normally, Australia would have played the matches at home, but international fixture congestion caused the ODIs to be brought forward. [4] India won the series 2–1, after losing the opening match by ten wickets. [5]
The 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup Final was a day/night Women's Twenty20 International cricket match played on 8 March 2020 between Australia and India at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne. [2] It was the culmination of the 2020 ICC Women's T20 World Cup, the seventh of the tournament history since it started in 2009.
Josh Hazlewood was ruled out of Australia's squad, after suffering an injury during the first Test against Bangladesh in August 2017. [14] Kane Richardson was added to Australia's squad as a replacement for Hazlewood. [15] Peter Handscomb was added Australia's ODI squad as a cover for Aaron Finch, who was struggling with a calf injury. [16]