Australia–India cricket rivalry

Australia–India cricket rivalry
2023 Cricket World Cup final match between India and Australia.
SportCricket
Teams
First meeting
  • Test: 28 November-4 December 1947 (Australia won by an innings and 226 runs)
  • ODI: 6 December 1980 (India won by 66 runs)
  • T20I: 22 September 2007 (India won by 15 runs)
Latest meeting
  • Test: 3-5 January 2025 (Australia won by 6 wickets)
  • ODI: 4 March 2025 (India won by 4 wickets)
  • T20I: 22 June 2024 (India won by 24 runs)
Next meeting
  • Test: January 2027
  • ODI: 19 October 2025
  • T20I 29 October 2025
Trophy
  • India: 7 (2 Cricket World Cup, 2 T20 World Cup, 3 Champions Trophy)
  • Australia: 10 (6 Cricket World Cup, 1 T20 World Cup, 2 Champions Trophy, 1 World Test Championship)
Statistics
Meetings total
  • Test: 112
  • ODI: 152
  • T20I: 32
Most wins
  • Test: (Australia 48; India 33)
  • ODI: (Australia 84; India 58)
  • T20I: (India 20; Australia 11)

The Australia–India cricket rivalry is an intense rivalry within the sport of cricket.[1] The matches between these countries are known for their intensity. It is considered as one of the biggest matches in the world, and is among the most-viewed sport games.

History

Australia and India first played Test cricket against each other in 1947, but it's over the last two decades that the rivalry has grown into one of the dominant duels in the game.[2]

Summary of results

The two sides have played a total of 295 times. Australia has won 143 matches compared to India's 111 victories.

Format Matches played India won Australia won Draw/Tie/No Result
Test 112 33 48 31
ODI 152 58 84 10
T20I 32 20 11 1
Total 296 111 143 42
  • Bold indicates most wins.

ICC matches

Australia has the better record in the Cricket World Cup, having faced India 14 times. In the 2003 Cricket World Cup Final, Australia knocked out India tremendously. The last time the two cricket frenzy nations clashed in 2023 Cricket World Cup final match played at the Narendra Modi stadium in Ahmedabad, Australia again dominated India and Australia won by 6 wickets.

In the T20 World Cup, India have mostly got the better of Australia. India has won 4 out of the 6 meetings. India won the 2007 T20 World Cup by defeating Pakistan in the final and 2024 T20 World Cup by defeating South Africa in the final. Australia won the 2021 T20 World Cup by defeating New Zealand.

In the Champions Trophy also, India has a little bit of domination on Australia. India won three of the five meetings between the two sides.

In the World Test Championship, Australia has slight edge against India. India won five of the fourteen meetings while Australia won six matches, which includes 2023 WTC Final which was eventually won by Australia.

Head to Head results in ICC events
Tournament Matches played  India won  Australia won Draw/Tie/No result
World Cup 14 5 9 0
T20 World Cup 6 4 2 0
Champions Trophy 5 3 1 1
World Test Championship 14 5 6 3
Total 38 17 18 4

ICC tournaments won

The two countries have played in World Cups, the Champions Trophy, and the World Test Championship, all of which are organised by the governing body of world cricket, the International Cricket Council. Australia has won 10 ICC tournaments compared to India's 6. At senior-level, Australia has won 10 ICC trophies (6 Cricket World Cups, 1 T20 World Cup, 2 Champions Trophy, 1 World Test Championship), while India has won 7 (2 Cricket World Cup, 2 T20 World Cup, 3 Champions Trophy).

Australia has won the ICC Cricket World Cup six times and India has done so twice. India has won the ICC Men's T20 World Cup twice (in 2007 and 2024) and Australia has won it once (2021). In the ICC Champions Trophy, another ODI tournament, India has won the trophy 3 times while Australia have won it 2 times. Australia has won the World Test Championship once, although India finished as runners-up in both the editions, having played in the finals.

Tournament India Australia
ICC Cricket World Cup 2 6
ICC T20 World Cup 2 1
ICC Champions Trophy 3 2
ICC World Test Championship 0 1
ICC U-19 Cricket World Cup 5 4
Total 12 14

ICC ODI World Cups (Head to Head Results)

Year Stage Venue Result Player of the match Scorecard Ref
1983 Group Stage Trent Bridge, Nottingham, England  Australia won by 162 runs Trevor Chappell Scorecard
County Ground, Chelmsford, England  India won by 118 runs Roger Binny Scorecard
1987 Group Stage MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, India  Australia won by 1 runs Geoff Marsh Scorecard
Arun Jaitley Cricket Stadium, Delhi, India  India won by 56 runs Mohammad Azharuddin Scorecard
1992 Group Stage The Gabba, Brisbane, Australia  Australia won by 1 runs Dean Jones Scorecard
1996 Group Stage Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai, India  Australia won by 16 runs Mark Waugh Scorecard
1999 Group Stage The Oval, London, England  Australia won by 77 runs Glenn McGrath Scorecard
2003 Group Stage Centurion Park, Centurion, South Africa  Australia won by 9 wickets Jason Gillespie Scorecard
Final Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa  Australia won by 125 runs Ricky Ponting Scorecard [3][4]
2011 Quarter-Final Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad, India  India won by 5 wickets Yuvraj Singh Scorecard
2015 Semi-Final Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney, Australia  Australia won by 95 runs Steven Smith Scorecard
2019 Group Stage The Oval, London, England  India won by 36 runs Shikhar Dhawan Scorecard
2023 Group Stage MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai, India  India won by 6 wickets KL Rahul Scorecard
Final Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad, India  Australia won by 6 wickets Travis Head Scorecard [5][6][7]

ICC Men's T20 World Cups (Head to Head Results)

Year Stage Venue Result Player of the match Scorecard Ref
2007 Semi-Final Kingsmead Cricket Ground, Durban, South Africa  India won by 15 runs Yuvraj Singh Scorecard
2010 Super 8s Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados  Australia won by 49 runs David Warner Scorecard
2012 Super 8s R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka  Australia won by 9 wickets Shane Watson Scorecard
2014 Super 10 Sher-e-Bangla Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh  India won by 73 runs Ravichandran Ashwin Scorecard
2016 Super 10 Inderjit Singh Bindra Stadium, Mohali, India  India won by 6 wickets Virat Kohli Scorecard
2024 Super 8 Daren Sammy Ground, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia  India won by 24 runs Rohit Sharma Scorecard

ICC Champions Trophy (Head to Head Results)

Year Stage Venue Result Player of the match Scorecard Ref
1998 Quarter-final Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh  India won by 44 runs Sachin Tendulkar Scorecard
2000 Quarter-final Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya  India won by 20 runs Yuvraj Singh Scorecard
2006 Group stage Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali, India  Australia won by 6 wickets Damien Martyn Scorecard
2009 Group stage SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa No result Scorecard
2025 Semi-final Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai, UAE  India won by 4 wickets Virat Kohli Scorecard [8]

List of test series

Series Season Host team Tests Australia India Drawn Tied Australia Captain India Captain Result Most runs and wkts Player of the series
1 1947–48  Australia
5
4
0
1
0
Don Bradman Lala Amarnath Australia Don Bradman (715 runs)
Ray Lindwall (18 wkts)
2 1956–57  India
3
2
0
1
0
Ian Johnson
Ray Lindwall (2nd test)
Polly Umrigar Neil Harvey (253 runs)
Richie Benaud (23 wkts)
3 1959–60  India
5
2
1
2
0
Richie Benaud Gulabrai Ramchand Nari Contractor (438 runs)
Richie Benaud (29 wkts)
4 1964–65  India
3
1
1
1
0
Bob Simpson Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi Drawn Bob Simpson (292 runs)
Bapu Nadkarni (17 wkts)
5 1967–68  Australia
4
4
0
0
0
Bob Simpson (1st, 2nd tests)
Bill Lawry
Chandu Borde (1st test) Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi Australia Bob Cowper (485 runs)
E.A.S. Prasanna (17 wkts)
6 1969–70  India
5
3
1
1
0
Bill Lawry Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi Keith Stackpole (368 runs)
Ashley Mallett (17 wkts)
7 1977–78  Australia
5
3
2
0
0
Bob Simpson Bishan Singh Bedi Bob Simpson (539 runs)
Bishan Bedi (31 wkts)
8 1979–80  India
6
0
2
4
0
Kim Hughes Sunil Gavaskar India Kim Hughes (594 runs)
Kapil Dev (28 wkts)
9 1980–81  Australia
3
1
1
1
0
Greg Chappell Sunil Gavaskar Drawn Greg Chappell(368 runs)

Dennis Lillee(21 wkts)

10 1985–86  Australia
3
0
0
3
0
Allan Border Kapil Dev Drawn Sunil Gavaskar(356 runs)

Shivlal Yadav(15 wkts)

11 1986–87  India
3
0
0
2
1
Kapil Dev Drawn Dean Jones (371 runs)

Greg Matthews (14 wkts)

12 1991–92  Australia
5
4
0
1
0
Mohammad Azharuddin Australia David Boon (556 runs)

Craig McDermott (31 wkts)

13 1996–97  India
1
0
1
0
0
Mark Taylor Sachin Tendulkar India Nayan Mongia (152 runs )

Anil Kumble (9 wkts)

Nayan Mongia
14 1997–98  India
3
1
2
0
0
Mohd Azharuddin India Sachin Tendulkar (446 runs)

Anil Kumble (23 wkts)

Sachin Tendulkar
15 1999–2000  Australia
3
3
0
0
0
Steve Waugh Sachin Tendulkar Australia Ricky Ponting (375 runs)

Glenn McGrath (18 wkts)

Sachin Tendulkar
16 2000–01  India
3
1
2
0
0
Sourav Ganguly India Matthew Hayden (549 runs)

Harbhajan Singh (32 wkts)

Harbhajan Singh
17 2003–04  Australia
4
1
1
2
0
Sourav Ganguly Drawn Ricky Ponting (706 runs)

Anil Kumble (24 wkts)

Rahul Dravid
18 2004–05  India
4
2
1
1
0
Adam Gilchrist (1-3 Tests)
Ricky Ponting (4th Test)
Sourav Ganguly (1st, 2nd Tests)
Rahul Dravid (3rd, 4th Tests)
Australia Damien Martyn (444 runs)

Anil Kumble (27 wickets)

Damien Martyn
19 2007–08  Australia
4
2
1
1
0
Ricky Ponting Anil Kumble Australia Sachin Tendulkar (493 runs)

Brett Lee (24 wkts)

Brett Lee
20 2008–09  India
4
0
2
2
0
Anil Kumble (1st and 3rd tests)
MS Dhoni(2nd and 4th tests)
India Gautam Gambhir (463 runs)

Ishant Sharma (15 wkts) Harbhajan Singh (15 wkts)

Ishant Sharma
21 2010–11  India
2
0
2
0
0
MS Dhoni India Sachin Tendulkar (403 runs)

Zaheer Khan (12 wkts)

Sachin Tendulkar
22 2011–12  Australia
4
4
0
0
0
Michael Clarke MS Dhoni (1st–3rd Tests)
Virender Sehwag (4th Test)
Australia Michael Clarke (626 runs)

Ben Hilfenhaus (27 wkts)

Michael Clarke
23 2012–13  India
4
0
4
0
0
Michael Clarke
Shane Watson (4th test)
MS Dhoni India Murali Vijay (430 runs)

Ravichandran Ashwin (29 wkts)

Ravichandran Ashwin
24 2014–15  Australia
4
2
0
2
0
Michael Clarke (1st test)
Steve Smith
Virat Kohli (1st, 4th tests)
MS Dhoni (2nd, 3rd tests)
Australia Steve Smith (769 runs)

Nathan Lyon (23 wkts)

Steve Smith
25 2016–17  India
4
1
2
1
0
Steve Smith Virat Kohli
Ajinkya Rahane (4th test)
India Steve Smith (499 runs)

Ravindra Jadeja (25 wkts)

Ravindra Jadeja
26 2018–19  Australia
4
1
2
1
0
Tim Paine Virat Kohli India Cheteshwar Pujara (521 runs)

Jasprit Bumrah(21 wkts) Nathan Lyon(21 wkts)

Cheteshwar Pujara
27 2020–21  Australia
4
1
2
1
0
Tim Paine Virat Kohli (1st test)
Ajinkya Rahane
India Marnus Labuschagne (426 runs)

Pat Cummins (21 wkts)

Pat Cummins
28 2022–23  India
4
1
2
1
0
Pat Cummins
Steve Smith (3rd & 4th tests)
Rohit Sharma India Usman Khawaja (333 runs) Ravichandran Ashwin (25 wkts) Ravindra Jadeja
Ravichandran Ashwin
29 2024-25  Australia 5 3 1 1 0 Pat Cummins Rohit Sharma(2nd - 4th test)

Jasprit Bumrah(1st & 5th tests)

Australia Travis Head(448 runs)

Jasprit Bumrah(32 wkts)

Jasprit Bumrah

See also

References

  1. ^ "India vs Australia: A rivalry of cricket, for cricket and by cricket". Hindistan Times.
  2. ^ "India-Australia rivalry".
  3. ^ Stern, John. "Final – 2003 World Cup: Australia v India". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. reprinted by ESPNcricinfo. Archived from the original on 5 June 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  4. ^ "ICC World Cup, Final: Australia v Sri Lanka at Johannesburg, Mar 23, 2003". ESPNcricinfo. Archived from the original on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  5. ^ ET Online (22 March 2023). "ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 final to be held at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad". The Economic Times. Archived from the original on 16 November 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  6. ^ India Today Sports Desk (16 November 2023). "World Cup: 20 years after Johannesburg classic, India and Australia to meet in final in Ahmedabad". India Today. Archived from the original on 18 November 2023. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  7. ^ "Final: Final, ICC Cricket World Cup at Ahmedabad, Nov 19 2023". 19 November 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
  8. ^ "ICC Champions Trophy 2025: India to face Australia in semifinal on March 4". The Hindu. Retrieved 2 March 2025.