Indian cricket team in Australia in 2015–16 | |||
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Australia | India | ||
Dates | 8 – 31 January 2016 | ||
Captains | Steve Smith (ODIs) Aaron Finch (1st & 2nd T20Is) Shane Watson (3rd T20I) | MS Dhoni | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | Australia won the 5-match series 4–1 | ||
Most runs | Steve Smith (315) | Rohit Sharma (441) | |
Most wickets | John Hastings (10) | Ishant Sharma (9) | |
Player of the series | Rohit Sharma (Ind) | ||
Twenty20 International series | |||
Results | India won the 3-match series 3–0 | ||
Most runs | Shane Watson (151) | Virat Kohli (199) | |
Most wickets | Shane Watson (3) | Jasprit Bumrah (6) | |
Player of the series | Virat Kohli (Ind) |
The Indian cricket team toured Australia from 8 to 31 January 2016 to play two tour matches, [1] five One Day International (ODI) and three Twenty20 International (T20I) matches. [2] The full schedule for the tour was announced by Cricket Australia on 9 July 2015. [3]
Australia won the ODI series 4–1. The series broke the record for the most runs scored in a bilateral ODI series of five matches or fewer, with a total of 3,159. [4] Eleven centuries were also scored in the ODI series, which was also a record. [4] India won the T20I series 3–0 and became the number one ranked team in the ICC T20I Championship. [5]
ODIs | T20Is | ||
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Australia [6] | India [7] | Australia [8] | India [9] |
Mohammed Shami was ruled out of the tour with a hamstring injury. He was replaced by Bhuvneshwar Kumar for the ODI matches and Jasprit Bumrah for the T20I matches. [10] [11] John Hastings was added to Australia's squad to replace Mitchell Marsh for the second ODI. [12] Usman Khawaja was added to Australia's squad to replace David Warner for the second and third ODIs who left the group on paternity leave. [13] Nathan Lyon and David Warner were added to Australia's squad for the 4th and 5th ODIs. Joel Paris and Usman Khawaja were both dropped. Bhuvneshwar Kumar was ruled out of the T20 series due to a thumb injury. He was replaced in the squad by Rishi Dhawan. [14] Cameron Bancroft was added to Australia's squad for the third T20I as a replacement for Matthew Wade. [15] Shane Watson replaced Aaron Finch as captain of Australia's team for the last T20I match, due to Finch being injured. [16]
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Rohit Gurunath Sharma is an Indian international cricketer who currently plays and captains the India national cricket team across all formats. Considered one of the best batsmen of his generation and one of greatest opening batters of all time, Sharma is known for his timing, elegance, six-hitting abilities and leadership skills. Sharma holds several batting records which famously includes most double centuries in ODI cricket (3) and most centuries in Cricket World Cup (7). He is a right-handed batsman. He plays for Mumbai Indians in IPL and for Mumbai in domestic cricket. Sharma was a former captain of Mumbai Indians and the team won 5 titles under his leadership.
The Australia national cricket team toured India between 10 October to 2 November 2013, playing a Twenty20 International match and seven-match One Day International series against India. Due to an ongoing back injury, Australian captain Michael Clarke was replaced by Callum Ferguson and George Bailey captained the side. During the second ODI match, all of the first five Australian batsmen made a score of fifty or more, a feat which no side had previously done. In the second match, India chased down the target of 360 runs to win, making this the second highest run-chase to win an ODI game. Two weeks later in the sixth match, India again chased down the Australian total of 350 runs to record the third highest run-chase to win a game. Coincidentally, all three highest run chases had come against Australia. In the seventh and final match, Indian batsman Rohit Sharma became the third man to make a double-century in ODI cricket, when he scored 209 from 158 balls. His innings included 16 sixes, the most in an ODI innings beating the previous record of 15 held by Australian cricketer Shane Watson. The record was later broken by England's Eoin Morgan who hit 17 sixes against Afghanistan in 2019.
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