Australia and England’s longstanding rivalry is one of the sport’s most revered contests, dating all the way back to 1877 and featuring first Test matches that produced legendary international-splendor stars. Since then, this contest has given us some truly memorable matches and players.
Joe Root’s performances dominated the 2013 series in the England Cricket Team Vs Australian Men’s Cricket Team Timeline, as he showcased exceptional batting skills against Australia.
He amassed three centuries in two Test matches, helping England secure an early 2–0 advantage and becoming one of the standout performers in this historic Ashes rivalry.
| Rank | Year & Match | Venue | Format/Series | Winner | Key Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1981 – 3rd Ashes Test | Headingley, Leeds | Test – Ashes | England | Ian Botham’s legendary all-round performance and Bob Willis’ 8 wickets helped England complete a historic comeback after following on. |
| 2 | 2005 – 2nd Ashes Test | Edgbaston | Test – Ashes | England | One of the closest Tests ever; England won by just 2 runs after Australia’s last-wicket pair nearly chased the target. |
| 3 | 2005 – 4th Ashes Test | Trent Bridge, Nottingham | Test – Ashes | England | England defeated Australia by 3 wickets in a tense contest to move closer to regaining the Ashes. |
| 4 | 1882 – The Original Ashes Test | The Oval, London | Test | Australia | Australia’s 7-run win led to the famous “Ashes” legend after England’s home defeat. |
| 5 | 1932–33 – Bodyline Series Test | Australia | Test – Ashes | England | A controversial series remembered for England’s Bodyline tactics against Don Bradman. |
| 6 | 1948 – The Invincibles Tour Finale | The Oval, London | Test – Ashes | Australia | Don Bradman’s final Test series; Australia completed an unbeaten tour under the famous “Invincibles” team. |
| 7 | 2010–11 – 4th Ashes Test | Melbourne Cricket Ground | Test – Ashes | England | England’s dominant victory in Australia helped secure their first Ashes series win Down Under since 1986–87. |
| 8 | 2019 – 4th Ashes Test | Old Trafford, Manchester | Test – Ashes | Australia | Steve Smith’s huge batting impact and Australia’s win kept the series alive. |
| 9 | 2023 – 5th Ashes Test | The Oval, London | Test – Ashes | England | England won the final Test to draw the series 2–2 in a dramatic Bazball-era contest. |
| 10 | 2025–26 Ashes Test Series Moments | Australia | Test – Ashes | Australia | Modern Ashes battles continued with Australia winning the series, while England produced a notable MCG victory. |
1877
Cricket has a rich and long history, but modern-day England vs Australia competition really began in March 1877 with the inaugural Test match between these nations. Since then, this rivalry has inspired generations of cricket fans around the globe, produced legendary gamers, and produced unforgettable moments that continue today. This timeline explores important matches, historical victories, and famous personalities who have contributed to shaping this storied rivalry.
James Lillywhite, a professional cricketer from Nottingham, organised an England side which included all three Grace siblings for its tour of Australia in 1876/7. Comprised of both amateur and professional players alike, it became one of the first truly representative teams ever.
Charles Bannerman’s 165 was one of the highest percentage shares ever scored by any Test player, while Fred Spofforth’s seven for 44 put England in difficulty, and only Ned Gregory’s 77 saved England from victory. This victory set off an extended series of matches between England and Australia until 1885 when umpiring disputes and betting scandals had compromised competition significantly.
1882
Australia-England rivalry is one of the most exciting chapters in cricket’s long and storied history, boasting legendary players and iconic matches throughout its long existence.
From 1877’s initial Test match up until recent clashes featuring international-splendor stars like Aaron Finch – Australia-England remains a captivating rivalry that keeps bringing delight to cricket enthusiasts around the world.
Ivo Bligh led an England side that visited Australia from 1882-83 under Ivo Bligh, promising to regain “those Ashes”. While no Test cricket existed at this time, the match still proved an enormously significant event – and media in Australia quickly picked up on Bligh’s promise as it became commonly known as The Ashes competition.
Kennington Oval hosted an intense, nail-biting match which attracted a large crowd. Billy Bates led Australia’s bowling attack by taking four wickets to help secure victory by seven runs;
Jack Blackham made his wicket-keeping debut during this match; further Australian team members included Tom Horan, George Bonnor, Edwin Evans, Fred Spofforth, WG Grace Alick Bannerman and Tom Garrett were present as well as Tom Garrett for this 122 minute encounter.
1953
England and Australia’s centuries-old rivalry is one of the longest running in cricket. Both nations have produced some of its greatest players, while each series provides unforgettable moments.
One especially cherished competition between these sides is The Ashes; an historic trophy that stands as an embodiment of lifestyle, opposition and unforgettable memories that has cemented itself into sports history.
Bradman’s initial series as captain of Australia wasn’t an overwhelming success, yet they managed to come back and win the final Test at The Oval. Ian Botham became only Englishman ever to score six fifties in a Test match while Denis Compton and Peter May both scored centuries.
The first Test at Lord’s was a high-scoring draw; however, both of the subsequent matches were beset with rain-delayed play. In the fourth, though, rain interrupted play again and altered its course dramatically; had half the day’s play not been washed out due to rain, it might have gone completely differently.
England captain Gubby Allen employed tactics developed for use during Bodyline series four years prior; instructing his bowlers to deliver bowling directly at Australian batsmen’s bodies thus forcing them to defend them using bat and making easy catches for leg-side field fielders; hence this tactic came to be known by its name “Bodyline”.
| Year / Match | England Cricket Team Key Players | Australia Men’s Cricket Team Key Players | Match Impact / Timeline Highlight |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1882 – The Oval Test (Birth of The Ashes) | Billy Murdoch, Ted Peate, Dick Barlow | Fred Spofforth, Harry Boyle, Billy Murdoch | Australia’s famous 7-run win at The Oval created the legendary Ashes rivalry. Fred Spofforth took 14 wickets in the match. |
| 1932–33 – Bodyline Series | Douglas Jardine (Captain), Harold Larwood, Bill Voce, Wally Hammond | Don Bradman, Bill Woodfull, Bert Oldfield | England’s Bodyline tactics targeted Bradman and became one of cricket’s most controversial series. |
| 1948 – The Invincibles Ashes Series | Len Hutton, Denis Compton, Alec Bedser | Don Bradman (Captain), Keith Miller, Ray Lindwall | Australia remained unbeaten under Bradman’s leadership during their famous “Invincibles” tour. |
| 1981 – Headingley Ashes Test | Ian Botham, Bob Willis, Geoff Boycott, David Gower | Rod Marsh, Dennis Lillee, Greg Chappell, Kim Hughes | England produced one of cricket’s greatest comebacks after following on; Botham and Willis were match heroes. |
| 2005 – Edgbaston Ashes Test | Andrew Flintoff, Michael Vaughan, Andrew Strauss, Matthew Hoggard | Ricky Ponting, Adam Gilchrist, Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath | England won by only 2 runs in a thrilling Test that became an Ashes classic. |
| 2005 – Trent Bridge Ashes Test | Kevin Pietersen, Andrew Flintoff, Simon Jones, Steve Harmison | Michael Clarke, Ricky Ponting, Shane Warne, Brett Lee | England’s 3-wicket victory helped them regain the Ashes after 16 years. |
| 2010–11 – Melbourne Ashes Test | Alastair Cook, Andrew Strauss (Captain), James Anderson, Graeme Swann | Michael Clarke, Ricky Ponting, Mitchell Johnson, Brad Haddin | England dominated Australia at the MCG and secured a historic Ashes series win in Australia. |
| 2019 – Old Trafford Ashes Test | Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Jofra Archer, Stuart Broad | Steve Smith, Pat Cummins, Nathan Lyon, David Warner | Australia won the match as Steve Smith continued his outstanding Ashes batting form. |
| 2023 – The Oval Ashes Test | Ben Stokes (Captain), Joe Root, Harry Brook, Mark Wood | Pat Cummins (Captain), Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Usman Khawaja | England won the final Test and drew the Ashes series 2–2 in the Bazball era. |
| 2025–26 Ashes Era | Ben Stokes, Harry Brook, Joe Root, Jofra Archer / England bowling attack | Pat Cummins, Steve Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Mitchell Starc | Modern Ashes rivalry continued with Australia’s strong home performances and England’s aggressive approach. |
1956
From its inaugural Test match played between Australia and England in 1877 through modern-day clashes featuring international-splendor stars, Australia-England cricket rivalry has long been one of the sport’s greatest rivalries.
Packed with excitement, passion, and an intense competitive spirit – this rivalry has produced some of cricket’s greatest players as well as legendary matches and unforgettable memories that live long in memory – not forgetting The Ashes trophy which remains one of its prestigious trophies today.
This match marked an important event in Australia as two Indigenous Australians made their debuts simultaneously – Brendan Doggett and Scott Boland became the first Indigenous players since 1877 to represent Australia in a Test match.
The match was also notable for the high-level performances from both sides. Australia’s fast bowlers, led by Starc and Boland, were outstanding; England’s batsmen, however, proved unreliable; eventually succumbing to Australia after starting strongly in their first innings. Both teams made crucial mistakes during this match — several dropped catches being just one example — yet nonetheless it proved thrilling and entertaining viewing; Australia defeated England for only the second time since 2009. Nonetheless, England still showed promising signs of improvement as evidenced by some promising signs.
1961
England and Australia have historically been two of the dominant national sides in world cricket, having played four Ashes series since 1980 – all won or drawn by England or tied at home (never drawn) since 1980. But during South Africa’s apartheid era and West Indies’ first successes they challenged England-Australia dominance for the first time.
After drawing both Tests at SWALEC Stadium in Cardiff and Lord’s due to rain-affected draws, Australia took control of the series during the third Test at Headingley with Fred Trueman leading his side to victory.
England would win at Old Trafford but Australia prevailed overall by winning The Oval’s Fifth Test; marking their first Ashes victory since 13 years.
Richie Benaud led his side to victory in the final Test at The Oval thanks to his match-winning bowling. England needed 256 runs to win and Benaud took 6-70 wickets as the English ran chase began on that final morning of play, thus reinstating Ashes as an iconic series between two nations.
1985
At first glance, England seemed doomed in their fifth Test at The Oval but made a remarkable comeback led by batsmen James Anderson and Monty Panesar to defeat Australia and secure an Ashes series that will go down as one of Test cricket’s great encounters.
The series began with an exciting tense draw at SWALEC Stadium in Cardiff, with England’s last-wicket pair surviving 69 balls to save the game and secure an eventual draw.
Australia won the second Test at Lord’s to take an early lead of 136 runs before England rallied back and won Edgbaston by an innings and 80 runs – marking the first time an Australian team had been bowled out for less than 100 since 1934!
At Headingley, England’s batting once more struggled. To its relief, however, Jack Hobbs and Herbert Sutcliffe contributed an innings and 178 runs between them to level the series.
At The Oval however, the pitch turned into a traditionally sticky wicket which looked set to hand Australia victory; until England bowlers such as Gubby Allen and Bill Voce decided to up their game instead of refusing leg-theory field on Bodyline tour.
2013
The series between England and Australia has been one of the most dramatic in cricket history, from accusations of ball tampering to artificial light being used to reduce pitch shadows.
England were ultimately defeated on their tour to Australia since 1882; so significant was it that MCC took control of future tours after winning 1903-04’s tour and winning its inaugural tour versus Australia 1903-04, known as The Ashes after Plum Warner wrote his book about it and now all England-Australia Test matches are customarily known by this name.
After losing its first two Tests, England rallied to win the third at Headingley despite being 227 runs behind in their second innings performance – Ian Botham scored 149 and made history that day by leading England back from an innings deficit to victory! His batsmanship earned botham immortality and led The Sporting Times to publish an amusing mock obituary that read, “ENGLISH CRICKET passed away at The Oval on 29 August 1882”.
England achieved their most dominant Ashes series win ever in the England Cricket Team Vs Australian Men’s Cricket Team Timeline, as their strong performances highlighted one of the most memorable chapters in Ashes history. It also marked the first time since 1977 that Australia had failed to secure a win at Trent Bridge, making the series a significant milestone in this legendary cricket rivalry.
| Match Date | Match | Venue | Format | England Team Performance | Australia Team Performance | Result | Key Players / Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 July – 4 August 2025 | England vs Australia – 5th Ashes Test 2025 | The Oval, London | Test Match | England competed strongly with contributions from Ben Stokes, Joe Root, Harry Brook, and Chris Woakes. Their bowlers kept pressure on Australia throughout the match. | Australia’s batting featured Steve Smith, Usman Khawaja, Travis Head, while bowlers Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, and Josh Hazlewood led the attack. | England won by 5 wickets | England chased the target successfully to level the Ashes series 2–2. Harry Brook and Joe Root played key roles, while Australia’s bowlers created a tense finish. |
| Series: | 2025 Ashes Series | England & Australia | Test Series | England showed an aggressive Bazball approach under Ben Stokes’ captaincy. | Australia relied on experienced players and a strong pace attack. | Series drawn 2–2 | A highly competitive Ashes contest with both teams winning key matches. |
