Series Name: | Australian cricket team in England in 2018 |
Team1 Image: | Flag of England.svg |
Team1 Name: | England |
Team2 Image: | Flag of Australia.svg |
Team2 Name: | Australia |
From Date: | 7 |
To Date: | 27 June 2018 |
Team1 Captain: | Eoin Morgan |
Team2 Captain: | Tim Paine (ODIs) Aaron Finch (T20Is) |
No Of Odis: | 5 |
Team1 Odis Won: | 5 |
Team2 Odis Won: | 0 |
Team1 Odis Most Runs: | Jason Roy (304) |
Team2 Odis Most Runs: | Shaun Marsh (288) |
Team1 Odis Most Wickets: | Moeen Ali Adil Rashid (12) |
Team2 Odis Most Wickets: | Kane Richardson Billy Stanlake (6) |
Player Of Odi Series: | Jos Buttler (Eng) |
No Of Twenty20s: | 1 |
Team1 Twenty20s Won: | 1 |
Team2 Twenty20s Won: | 0 |
Team1 Twenty20s Most Runs: | Jos Buttler (61) |
Team2 Twenty20s Most Runs: | Aaron Finch (84) |
Team1 Twenty20s Most Wickets: | Chris Jordan Adil Rashid (3) |
Team2 Twenty20s Most Wickets: | Mitchell Swepson (2) |
The Australian cricket team toured England in June 2018 to play five One Day International (ODIs) and one Twenty20 International (T20I) matches.[1] [2] [3] Ahead of the ODIs, Australia played List A matches against Sussex and Middlesex.[4] This was Australia's first international tour following the Australian ball tampering scandal as well as Tim Paine's first series as captain in ODIs.
Australia lost the first two ODI matches and, as a result, slipped to sixth place in the ICC ODI Championship.[5] Australia had lost thirteen of their last fifteen completed ODIs, falling to a 34-year low in the ICC rankings.[5] [6] In the next match, England scored the highest innings total in ODIs, scoring 481 runs for the loss of six wickets and, in the process, won the series with two games to play.[7] England won the ODI series 5–0, the first time that Australia had been whitewashed in a five-match ODI series against England.[8] Twelve wickets taken by Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid each are the most for England spinners in a bilateral ODI series.[9] [10] England also won the one-off T20I match, by 28 runs.[11]
Ahead of the tour, Josh Hazlewood was ruled out of Australia's ODI squad, and he was replaced by Michael Neser.[15] Ben Stokes was unavailable for the first three ODIs of the series due to injury, with Sam Billings added to England's squad as cover.[16] Stokes joined the squad for the last two ODIs. However, he did not play and continued his rehabilitation from injury. Jake Ball was added to England's squad as cover for Chris Woakes.[17] Woakes was eventually ruled out of the tour with an ongoing knee injury.[18] Sam Curran and Craig Overton were added to England's ODI squad for the last two ODIs.[19]
An Australian docu-series - The Test was produced, following the Australian national cricket team in the aftermath of the Australian ball tampering scandal.[20] The first episode of Season 1 featured the team play the ODIs against England.