Australian cricket team in India in 2009–10

Australian cricket team in India 2009–10
 
  India Australia
Dates 25 October – 11 November 2009
Captains Mahendra Singh Dhoni Ricky Ponting
One Day International series
Results Australia won the 7-match series 4–2
Most runs Mahendra Singh Dhoni (285) Michael Hussey (313)
Most wickets Harbhajan Singh (8) Shane Watson (10)
Player of the series Shane Watson (Aus)

The Australia Cricket Team toured India from 25 October to 11 November 2009. The tour consisted of seven One Day International matches and the series was won by Australia with a final tally of 4-2 (one match was abandoned due to rain).[1]

Squads

India India[2][3]  Australia[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
MS Dhoni (c) (wk) Ricky Ponting (c)
Virendar Sehwag (vc) Michael Hussey (vc)
Gautam Gambhir Doug Bollinger
Sachin Tendulkar Nathan Hauritz
Yuvraj Singh Ben Hilfenhaus
Suresh Raina Jon Holland
Ravindra Jadeja James Hopes 1
Praveen Kumar Mitchell Johnson
Harbhajan Singh Brett Lee 2
Ishant Sharma Shaun Marsh
Ashish Nehra Tim Paine (wk) 3
Virat Kohli Peter Siddle4
Munaf Patel Adam Voges
Sudeep Tyagi Shane Watson
Amit Mishra Cameron White
Dinesh Karthik (wk)
  1. ^ James Hopes flew home after suffering a hamstring injury in the first ODI. Victorian Bowler Clint McKay took Hopes' place in the squad.
  2. ^ Brett Lee flew home after suffering an elbow injury in the first ODI. New South Wales all-rounder Moises Henriques5 took Lee's place in the squad.
  3. ^ Wicket-keeper Tim Paine flew home after seriously breaking his finger in the second ODI. South Australian wicket-keeper Graham Manou took Paine's place in the squad.
  4. ^ Peter Siddle flew home after suffering soreness in the left side of his body in the fourth ODI. New South Wales bowler Burt Cockley took Siddle's place in the squad.
  5. ^ Moises Henriques flew home after suffering a damaged hamstring in the fourth ODI. Victorian all-rounder Andrew McDonald took Henriques' place in the squad.

ODI series

1st ODI

25 October
09:00 IST
Scorecard
Australia 
292/8 (50 overs)
v
 India
288/8 (50 overs)
Ricky Ponting 74 (85)
Ishant Sharma 3/50 (10 overs)
Gautam Gambhir 68 (85)
Mitchell Johnson 2/59 (10 overs)
Australia won by 4 runs
Reliance Stadium, Vadodara
Umpires: Mark Benson (Eng) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind)
Player of the match: Michael Hussey (Aus)

2nd ODI

28 October
14:30 IST (D/N)
Scorecard
India 
354/7 (50 overs)
v
 Australia
255 (48.3 overs)
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 124 (107)
Mitchell Johnson 3/75 (10 overs)
Michael Hussey 53 (60)
Ravindra Jadeja 3/35 (6.3 overs)
India won by 99 runs
Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium, Nagpur
Umpires: Amish Saheba (Ind) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind)
Player of the match: MS Dhoni (Ind)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to field.
  • This was the First ODI at this venue

3rd ODI

31 October
14:30 IST (D/N)
Scorecard
Australia 
229/5 (50 overs)
v
 India
230/4 (48.2 overs)
Michael Hussey 81* (82)
Ravindra Jadeja 2/41 (9 overs)
Yuvraj Singh 78 (96)
Mitchell Johnson 1/43 (9.2 overs)
India won by 6 wickets
Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi
Umpires: Amiesh Saheba (Ind) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind)
Player of the match: Yuvraj Singh (Ind)

4th ODI

2 November
14:30 IST (D/N)
Scorecard
Australia 
250 (49.2 overs)
v
 India
226 (46.4 overs)
Cameron White 62 (71)
Ashish Nehra 3/37 (8 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 40 (68)
Shane Watson 3/29 (7.4 overs)
Australia won by 24 runs
PCA Stadium, Mohali
Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Amiesh Saheba (Ind)
Player of the match: Shane Watson (Aus)
  • India won the toss and elected to field.

5th ODI

5 November
14:30 IST (D/N)
Scorecard
Australia 
350/4 (50 overs)
v
 India
347 (49.4 overs)
Shaun Marsh 112 (112)
Praveen Kumar 2/68 (9 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 175 (141)
Shane Watson 3/47 (8.4 overs)
Australia won by 3 runs
Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, Hyderabad
Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind)
Player of the match: Sachin Tendulkar (Ind)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
  • Clint McKay (Aus) made his ODI debut.
  • Sachin Tendulkar (Ind) became the first batsman to reach 17,000 runs in ODIs.[12]
  • Sachin Tendulkar equalled the record for the highest individual score against Australia in ODIs (175), before it was surpassed by Rohit Sharma in 2013.

6th ODI

8 November
08:30 IST
Scorecard
India 
170 (47 overs)
v
 Australia
172/4 (41.5 overs)
Ravindra Jadeja 57 (103)
Doug Bollinger 5/35 (10 overs)
Shane Watson 49 (49)
Harbhajan Singh 2/23 (10 overs)
Australia won by 6 wickets
Nehru Stadium, Guwahati
Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Shavir Tarapore (Ind)
Player of the match: Doug Bollinger (Aus)
  • India won the toss and elected to bat.

7th ODI

11 November
14:30 IST (D/N)
Scorecard
v
Match abandoned due to Cyclone Phyan
DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai
Umpires: Asoka de Silva (SL) and Amiesh Saheba (Ind)
  • No toss made.

Media coverage

Television
  • Sky Sports (live) – United Kingdom
  • Fox Sports (live) – Australia
  • NEO Cricket (live) – India and Middle East
  • Star TV (live) – Singapore and Malaysia
  • Supersport (live) – South Africa, Kenya and Zimbabwe
  • Zee Sports (live) – USA
  • CBS (live) – Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad
  • DD National(live) – India
  • Geo Super – (live) Pakistan

References

  1. ^ "Australia in India ODI Series - Cricket Schedules, Updates, Results". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Dravid dropped for Australia ODIs". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  3. ^ "India retain squad for next two ODIs". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  4. ^ "Rookie Holland spins into one-day squad". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  5. ^ "Injured Lee and Hopes miss second ODI". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  6. ^ "Manou gloves up to replace hurt Paine". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  7. ^ "Brett Lee ruled out of India series". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  8. ^ "James Hopes to return home, Clint McKay called up". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  9. ^ "Henriques injured and will fly home early". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  10. ^ "Siddle joins Australia's casualty list". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2 August 2022.
  11. ^ "Dananjaya earns India's respect". The Tribune. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  12. ^ "Tendulkar scales another peak". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 27 August 2017.

External links

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