Boom vs Blast: India vs Australia T20 series to decide who is real No.1

2 hours ago 4
ARTICLE AD BOX

Not often does a bilateral T20 series generate the hype like the one beginning on Wednesday between India and Australia. In the space of 11 days, the two teams, currently enjoying the cold clime of Canberra, will cross the Bass Strait twice, shuttle between Melbourne, Gold Coast and Brisbane – which reinforces how almost every Australian state wants to have a share of the Indian cricket pie.

For starters, this isn’t doesn’t have the making of a random contextless bilateral series that will be forgotten by the time the fifth and final T20 is done and dusted in Brisbane. At Canberra, if Ravi Shastri is at the toss, one can expect him to throw the intro on these lines: On the blue corner is India, the No 1 T20I side and the reigning World Champions. In the Green corner with the Indigenous artwork decorating the shoulders is Australia, the No 2 T20I side. In essence, this is the fight between the top ranked teams.

Since winning the T20 World Cup, India have only grown from strength to strength, with their recent success in the Asia Cup being a reminder of how good they are. In 27 matches since that Barbados afternoon, India have won a staggering 22 matches, losing just three and two ending in a tie to have win-loss ratio of 7.333.

𝐍𝐞𝐱𝐭 𝐔𝐩 ▶️ 𝐓𝟐𝟎 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐥𝐥𝐞𝐧𝐠𝐞 ⏳
#TeamIndia training in full swing ahead of the 1️⃣st #AUSvIND T20I on Wednesday 💪 pic.twitter.com/aPwl1fT90m

— BCCI (@BCCI) October 27, 2025

But guess what? In the same period, Australia have won 16 of the 19 matches they have played, losing just two and have a win-loss ratio of 8.000. While India’s high-risk approach in the batting led by Abhishek Sharma has been on everyone’s attention, Australia have been no-less. In fact, they have been scoring at a higher rate than India (10.07 to 9.69) per over. And with the ball, India have been the most lethal ones, averaging 17.09 per wicket and conceding just 7.65 per over to Australia’s 19.38 and 8.62.

And for the first time since the last T20 World Cup, the upcoming five-match series will provide a fair indication of where India stands ahead of next year’s T20 World Cup. In the time that India have been flexing their muscles in the format, Australia have transformed into a giant. From a batting unit that has firepower from top to bottom, wrist-spinners who can make a difference and pacers who can take conditions out of equations, they have it all under their new captain Mitchell Marsh.

While Travis Head continues to stay at the top to provide electric starts, after David Warner hung up his boots, the one who has taken the responsibility to infuse power at the top is Marsh. Nicknamed the ‘Bison’, Marsh has shown even in the IPL how with sheer brutality he can provide rapid starts. With Head, there is always an element of unpredictability and combined with Marsh, they have gone about providing the sort of starts that can kill games in the powerplay. The Aussies have averaged 61 runs in the powerplay, going at a strike rate of 169.97, the highest it’s ever been in a single calendar year.

“When you’ve got the power that we’ve got behind us, we’ve got to get a move on,” Head told cricket.com.au. “You don’t want to be chewing up balls up at the start when you’ve got (Tim) David, (Marcus) Stoinis, (Josh) Inglis, (Cameron) Green and (Glenn) Maxwell behind you. It’s huge power,” Head who opens alongside Abhishek for Sunrisers Hyderabad, said.

World Ranking

#2

Australia

Recent Form (Post T20 World Cup)

India

22 Wins

in 27 matches

Australia

16 Wins

in 19 matches

Key Statistics Comparison

Indian Express InfoGenIE

It isn’t just the openers. Armed with a set of batsmen who can all bat anywhere – it is the same flexibility that India have, they also have Josh Inglis, a familiar name in India thanks to his recent stint with Punjab Kings. The wicketkeeper, blessed with a strong game on either side of the square and can nonchalantly deposit the short deliveries anywhere he prefers on the leg-side, has a career strike-rate of 164.41. But in 2025, he has been going at 204.76.

Story continues below this ad

This aggressive, all-out approach at the top means by the time the middle-order arrives, all that they are expected to do is not play any catch-up cricket. The equal distribution of the bold approach means, it doesn’t require one batsman to take more chances than the other. While Glenn Maxwell isn’t available for the first couple of fixtures, his presence further elevates the middle-order which includes Tim David, Matthew Short, Marcus Stoinis, Mitchell Owen – all power-strikers with a tremendous six-hitting capabilities and ones who will offer stern match-ups to Varun Chakaravarthy and Kuldeep Yadav. The bad news for India is all of them have been in form. David, who was part of Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s victorious campaign, has been striking at 202.64 in matches against West Indies, South Africa and New Zealand to go against the career strike-rate of 168.19. Even Owen, who is new to the side has been going at 161.95, which tells what India’s attack should expect.

That each of them play similar roles in franchise cricket means they have effortlessly been able to perform the job at hand. “We’ve tried to be ultra-aggressive, knowing that we’ve got the power throughout our lineup to take down any attack that’s thrown at us. And if we keep throwing punches, hopefully a couple of them land and we’re able to do some damage to the opposition. Obviously spin’s going to probably play a part in the next T20 World Cup, and the way all our batters are playing both types of bowling is really impressive,” Maxwell said.

For a bowling line-up that includes Jasprit Bumrah, Varun and Kuldeep as X-factors and with Arshdeep Singh in the mix, India couldn’t have asked for a sterner test as the conditions Down Under tend to be batting friendly in T20s.

In the bowling front, with Ashes around the corner, Mitchell Starc won’t be around in the series and even Josh Hazlewood will leave mid-way through the series. If one needed where the series will be decided, there it is.

Read Entire Article