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For the last two T20Is, Sean Abbott, Josh Inglis, Glenn Maxwell, Steve Smith, Marcus Stoinis and Adam Zampa were released from the Australia's squad, [14] while Ben Dwarshuis, Chris Green, Ben McDermott and Josh Philippe were added to Australia's squad. [15] On 28 November 2023, Deepak Chahar was added to India's squad for the last two T20Is. [16]
Virat Kohli was granted paternity leave to leave the squad after the first Test match, [66] and Rohit Sharma was added to India's Test squad for the tour. [67] T. Natarajan was added to India's T20I squad, replacing Varun Chakravarthy who was ruled out due to an injury, [68] and Sanju Samson was added to India's ODI squad as an extra wicket ...
Ahead of the second Test, Matthew Kuhnemann replaced Mitchell Swepson in Australia's squad. [34] On 12 February 2023, Jaydev Unadkat was released from India's squad for second Test, to play Ranji Trophy Final. [35] On 20 February 2023, Australia's Josh Hazlewood was ruled out of Test series. [36]
A Twenty20 International (T20I) is a form of cricket match between two representative teams, each having T20I status as determined by the International Cricket Council (ICC), and is played under the rules of Twenty20 cricket. [1] The first such match was played between Australia and New Zealand on 17 February 2005. [2]
Cricket Australia announced their summer cricket schedule in March 2024. [9] The series will be played at the main cricket grounds in Australia's five largest cities. It will be the first five-match test series to be played between the two nations since India's tour of Australia in 1991/92.
Mitchell Starc was added to Australia's T20I squad for the third match, replacing Billy Stanlake, who was injured. [30] Prithvi Shaw was ruled out of India's Test squad due to injury and was replaced by Mayank Agarwal. [31] Hardik Pandya was also added to India's squad for the last two Test matches. [32]
The Indian cricket team toured Australia from 15 December 2011 to 28 February 2012. [1] The tour included four Tests to contest the Border–Gavaskar Trophy (which was held by India at the start of the tour), [2] two Twenty20s (T20Is), [3] [4] and eight ODIs as part of the Commonwealth Bank Tri-Series which also involved Sri Lanka.
The Australia cricket team toured India from February and March 2019 to play two Twenty20 International (T20I) and five One Day International (ODI) matches. [1] [2] [3] The ODI fixtures were part of both teams' preparation for the 2019 Cricket World Cup. [4] Australia won the T20I series 2–0, their first T20I series win against India. [5]