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International cricket tour From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Australian cricket team toured India in the 1986–87 season to play a three-match Test series and a five-match one day international series against India.
Australian cricket team in India in 1986–87 | |||
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India | Australia | ||
Dates | 30 August – 19 October 1986 | ||
Captains | Kapil Dev | Allan Border | |
Test series | |||
Result | 3-match series drawn 0–0 | ||
Most runs | Ravi Shastri (231) | Dean Jones (371) | |
Most wickets | Shivlal Yadav (8) | Greg Matthews (14) | |
One Day International series | |||
Results | India won the 6-match series 3–2 | ||
Most runs | Raman Lamba (278) | Allan Border (239) | |
Most wickets | Ravi Shastri (8) | Bruce Reid (8) | |
Player of the series | Raman Lamba (Ind) |
The Test series was drawn 0-0, with one tie, and India won the one-day series 3–2. It is best remembered for the tied first Test – only the second time this result has occurred in Test cricket.[1]
Australia had just lost two-Test series against New Zealand and only narrowly held on to a 0–0 draw against India during the 1985–86 summer. The team was in a rebuilding phase, with Bob Simpson having newly been appointed as coach. However Australia were not unfamiliar with Indian conditions having recently toured in 1984.
The original squad was selected by Lawrie Sawle, Greg Chappell, Jim Higgs and Bobby Simpson. It was announced on 30 April 1986:[2]
A number of top-level Australian cricketers were unavailable for selection because they had signed to tour South Africa and were banned from playing international cricket.
Selection panel on tour: Border, Boon, Simpson
Wayne Phillips had been Australia's wicketkeeper over the 1985–86 summer, then replaced by Tim Zoehrer and tried as a batting specialist. However he was overlooked for selection – the only member of the New Zealand tour squad not picked to go to India. On the night of his non-selection Phillips told the media "I'm going to do what I want to do and not be at the beck and call of these idiots who pick the side." He was fined $2,000 by the Australian Cricket Board and never played cricket for Australia again.[3]
Allan Border returned early from county cricket with Essex on 19 August to prepare for the tour. The Australian squad attended a special six day training camp with Simpson, Greg Chappell and Ashley Mallett.[4]
See Tied Test for details.
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India won the Charminar Challenge Cup 3–2.
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24 September 1986 Scorecard |
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The tour established David Boon and Geoff Marsh as Australia's opening combination, and Dean Jones as a Test batsman. Greg Matthews appeared to establish his credentials as a top line spinner. Jones later argued the tied Test marked a turning point in Australian cricket, although Australia went on to lose the 1986–87 Ashes series 2–1.[14] By the end of that series, Boon, Ritchie, Matthews, McDermott, Davis, Gilbert and Bright had all been dropped from the Australian Test team.[citation needed]
The experience gained by the players did prove valuable for Australia in their campaign to win the 1987 World Cup in India.[citation needed]
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