Australian cricket team in India in 2004–05
The Australia national cricket team toured India in the 2004–05 season and played a four-match Test series, during October and November 2004, against India, Australia winning the series 2–1 with one match drawn, their first series win on Indian soil since their 1969-70 tour. The future Australian Test captain, Michael Clarke, made his Test debut in the first match, scoring 151 in the first innings. In the fourth match of the series, Clarke took 6 wickets for 9 runs in the second innings.
Australia in India in 2004-05 | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
| ||
India | Australia | ||
Dates | October – November 2004 | ||
Captains |
Sourav Ganguly (1st and 2nd Tests) Rahul Dravid (3rd and 4th Tests) |
Adam Gilchrist (1st-3rd Tests) Ricky Ponting (4th Test) | |
Test series | |||
Result | Australia won the 4-match series 2–1 | ||
Most runs | Virender Sehwag (299) | Damien Martyn (444) | |
Most wickets | Anil Kumble (27) | Jason Gillespie (20) | |
Player of the series | Damien Martyn (Aus) |
Tour match
First class: Mumbai v Australians
30 September-2 October Scorecard |
v |
||
- Australians won the toss and elected to bat
- Rain on Day 4 prevented play until 13:40
- First class debut for VA Indulkar (Ind)
Test series
1st Test
6 October 2004 Scorecard |
v |
||
- Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
- Michael Clarke (Aus) made his Test debut and scored his first century in Tests.
2nd Test
14 October 2004 Scorecard |
v |
||
- Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
- No play was possible on day 5.
3rd Test
4th Test
3 November 2004 Scorecard |
v |
||
- India won the toss and elected to bat.
- Nathan Hauritz (Aus), Dinesh Karthik (Ind) and Gautam Gambhir (Ind) made their Test debuts.
gollark: Yes, all hail Supreme Overlord Daelvn.,
gollark: lmgtfy.com, I hereby pronounce <@116952546664382473> your lawful wedded... I don't know, person.
gollark: ```To keep with the tradition, our first program in Lua just prints "Hello World": print("Hello World")If you are using the stand-alone Lua interpreter, all you have to do to run your first program is to call the interpreter (usually named lua) with the name of the text file that contains your program. For instance, if you write the above program in a file hello.lua, the following command should run it: prompt> lua hello.lua```What's the problem here?
gollark: Start at Getting Started, it seems to make sense.
gollark: You realise that telling people to shut up does not in fact improve your argument?
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.