🏏ICC Champions Trophy 2025: India vs Australia, SF 1 at Dubai on 04/03/2025 at 2:30PM IST🏏
Favourites India enter Australia's territory in semi-final
India have marched ahead of Australia since the World Cup final in 2023, but the gap matters less with a spot in the final on the line
"[T]here's nothing more satisfying than hearing a big crowd go silent."
Pat Cummins won't be in Dubai on Tuesday, but the words he spoke on November 18, 2023, will be. The players may not themselves be thinking about them, but viewers around the world quite likely will - if not about the words themselves, certainly about the broader theme they represent.
Since winning their quarter-final game at the 2011 World Cup, India have met Australia four times in ICC ODI tournaments, winning twice and losing twice. The two wins came in round-robin matches at the 2019 and 2023 World Cups, and the defeats in the 2015 semi-finals and the 2023 final.
Many months have passed since November 19, 2023, and Tuesday's Champions Trophy semi-final will pit a different India against a vastly different Australia, but the truth of that momentous day will hold just as good. In that World Cup, India assembled a team for the ages and plowed through opposition after opposition like a battering ram; then they ran into an Australia side that was very, very good, though perhaps not as good as India, but certainly good enough to beat them in a one-off contest. If ever there was a cricketing parallel to Maracana 1950, this was it.
The gap between the two teams in this tournament is wider, with Australia missing their entire first-choice pace attack, and the conditions in Dubai only widen this gap. These gaps, however, matter less in one-off contests than over a series or a league, and there is enough quality in Australia's line-up to make light of them, particularly in the game-changing potential of Travis Head at the top of the order (do India ever need reminding of what he can do?), the quality running through their middle order, and the legspin of Adam Zampa.
For India, meanwhile, questions that simmered unnoticed during the group stage now gain greater urgency. Virat Kohli has just played his 300th ODI; how many more will there be? And what of Rohit Sharma? And Ravindra Jadeja? These three retired from the shortest format after India's T20 World Cup victory last year; how much longer will they go on in ODIs? Do they still have 2027 in their sights, or could this Champions Trophy be it?
Whenever they go, they would desperately want another ODI trophy to take with them. All three won the 2013 Champions Trophy, and Kohli has a World Cup medal from 2011, but the current generation that they've done so much to nurture may well be India's best-ever in ODIs. As of now, they don't have the silverware to show for it.
Australia have denied them before. Australia stand in their way once again.
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