da apostaganha: India’s visit to Australia in 2011-12 has ushered the return of the limited overs tri-series and the reinstatement of the Australia Day Test match at Adelaide Oval.
ESPNcricinfo staff14-Jun-2011
Australia and India will resume hostilities this summer•Associated Press
India’s visit to Australia in 2011-12 has ushered in the return of the limited overs tri-series and the reinstatement of the Australia Day Test match at Adelaide Oval.The summer from which Cricket Australia makes the lion’s share of its total income, via the sale of television rights for India matches, features two Tests against New Zealand in December, and four against the Indian tourists, starting on Boxing Day at the MCG.Sydney, Perth and Adelaide will round out the Test summer, before Sri Lanka arrive to be the third team in the revived triangular tournament.Other notable fixture choices include the Sydney Olympic Stadium’s elevation to international status for the first time, to host a Twenty20 international between Australia and India on February 1, while Bellerive Oval will welcome the New Zealand tourists for the second Test of the Trans-Tasman series.The tri-series, which was last seen in Australia in 2007-08, has been redeployed as a way of providing the requisite number of matches for subcontinental television rights, and pits the world’s top three limited overs sides – Australia, the World Cup champion India and the finalist Sri Lanka – against one another.”ICC Cricket World Cup winner India is also the number one-ranked Test team in the world at the moment,” said James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive. “Sri Lanka has also been in great form as we saw in the World Cup, while we know New Zealand is always a formidable opponent that thrives when playing Australia.”With the commencement of the ICC World Test Championship we know that every Test win is vital and the Australian team will be keen to start the home season positively against New Zealand.”Australia’s November series in South Africa and the late arrival of the Indian touring party means the international summer will stretch well into March, again leaving CA to battle with the onset of the football season and its various codes, for crowds and television ratings.As has become customary, India will have only one tour warm-up match before the first Test, while New Zealand have not been granted any.Test SeriesDecember 1 – 5: Australia v New Zealand, BrisbaneDecember 9 – 13: Australia v New Zealand, HobartDecember 26 – 30: Australia v India, MelbourneJanuary 3 – 7: Australia v India, SydneyJanuary 13 – 17: Australia v India, PerthJanuary 24 – 28: Australia v India, AdelaideTwenty20 InternationalsFebruary 1: Australia v India, 1st Twenty20, SydneyFebruary 3: Australia v India, MelbourneLimited Overs SeriesFebruary 5: Australia v India, MelbourneFebruary 8: India v Sri Lanka, PerthFebruary 10: Australia v Sri Lanka, PerthFebruary 12: Australia v India, AdelaideFebruary 14: India v Sri Lanka, AdelaideFebruary 17: Australia v Sri Lanka, SydneyFebruary 19: Australia v India, BrisbaneFebruary 21: India v Sri Lanka, BrisbaneFebruary 24: Australia v Sri Lanka, HobartFebruary 26: Australia v India, SydneyFebruary 28: India v Sri Lanka, HobartMarch 2: Australia v Sri Lanka, MelbourneMarch 4: 1st Final, BrisbaneMarch 6: 2nd Final, AdelaideMarch 8: 3rd Final, AdelaideTour matchesDecember 18 – 21, CA Chairman’s XI v India, Manuka OvalTBC, PM’s XI v Sri Lanka, Manuka Oval