Who: England v Australia, second T20I
When: Saturday, September 14. Coin toss at 3am AEST, first ball at 3.30am AEST (Friday, September 12, 6.30pm local time)
Where: Sophia Gardens, Cardiff
How to watch: Foxtel and Kayo Sports
Officials: Mike Burns and Alex Wharf (standing), Russell Warren (third), Martin Saggers (fourth), Andy Pycroft (match referee)
Live scores: England v Australia match centre
To be announced at the toss.
Australia: Mitchell Marsh (c), Sean Abbott, Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Cameron Green, Aaron Hardie, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matt Short, Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa
Plenty of injury concerns for the Aussie squad as they head to Cardiff for the second T20I. Xavier Bartlett is awaiting results on the extent of a side injury suffered in the series opener while speedster Riley Meredith has been ruled out after failing to recover from the side soreness he experienced in Scotland. Sydney Sixers left-armer Ben Dwarshuis has been added as a reserve should the visitors need another pace option.
England: Phil Salt (c), Jofra Archer, Jacob Bethell, Brydon Carse, Jordan Cox, Sam Curran, Josh Hull, Will Jacks, Liam Livingstone, Saqib Mahmood, Dan Mousley, Jamie Overton, Adil Rashid, Reece Topley, John Turner
England blooded three debutants in the series opener – Jacob Bethell, Jordan Cox and Jamie Overton. They still have recent 20-year-old Test debutant Josh Hull, Dan Mousley and John Turner (both 23) as uncapped players in their squad who they’ll be eager to give an opportunity to in next two matches.
September 11: Australia beat England by 28 runs
September 13: Second T20 v England, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, 3.30am Sept 14 AEST
September 15: Third T20 v England, Old Trafford Manchester, 11.30pm AEST
Everything you could need will be right here on cricket.com.au and the CA Live app.
We’ll have interviews, highlights and wicket replays in our match centre, while the Unplayable Podcast will keep you informed on the latest developments from Australia’s UK tour.
Matt Short grabbed his first chance as opener in the post-David Warner era with 41 off 26 in the first T20I. The race is wide open to replace the retired great after Jake Fraser-McGurk missed out in Scotland.
With three wickets and a team-high score of 37, Liam Livingstone was one of the few shining lights for the hosts in the series opener. After spending the T20 World Cup batting at numbers six and seven, the allrounder is back up at his favoured No.4 spot where he’s enjoyed success at international and domestic level.
Past 10 T20 matches, most recent first. W: win, L: loss, N: no result
Australia: WWWWLLWWWW
Australia made it two straight wins against their Ashes rivals in the first T20, the first time they’ve managed back-to-back wins against them since 2018. With 14 victories from 17 matches in 2024, the tourists are one of the form international sides in this format despite bombing out of the World Cup in June at the Super Eight stage.
England: LLWLWWWLNW
It’s very much a transition phase for this England side, with three debutants picked in the series opener. Regardless, they’ll still be hoping to avoid their first bilateral men’s T20 series loss to Australia since 2014 by pushing the contest to a decider in Manchester on Sunday.
Travis Head (59 off 23) and Matt Short (41 off 26) set the tone for Australia in the first T20 as they put on 86 in the Powerplay after being sent in. England pulled them back through the middle overs to bowl the visitors out for 179, but it still proved too much for their young side as they fell 28 runs short.
Overall: England (11 wins), Australia (12 wins), no result (2)
At Sophia Gardens: England (1 win), Australia (0 wins)
Most runs: Aaron Finch (619), Jos Buttler (584), Glenn Maxwell (343), David Warner (334), Alex Hales (311)
Most wickets: Adil Rashid (14), Chris Jordan (13), Mitchell Johnson (11), Josh Hazlewood (11), Adam Zampa (10)
The two sides head Manchester where Australia retained the Ashes last year for the series finale on Sunday afternoon (11.30pm AEST) at Old Trafford.
Watch all the action from Australia’s white-ball tour of the UK live and exclusive on Foxtel and Kayo Sports. Click here to subscribe.
Australia T20 squad: Mitchell Marsh (c), Sean Abbott, Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Cameron Green, Aaron Hardie, Josh Hazlewood (England games only), Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Riley Meredith, Matt Short (England games only), Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa
September 4: Australia beat Scotland by seven wickets
September 6: Australia beat Scotland by 70 runs
September 7: Australia beat Scotland by six wickets
September 11: Australia beat England by 28 runs
September 13: Second T20 v England, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, 3.30am Sept 14 AEST
September 15: Third T20 v England, Old Trafford Manchester, 11.30pm AEST
Australia ODI squad: Mitch Marsh (c), Sean Abbott, Alex Carey, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Cameron Green, Aaron Hardie, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Glenn Maxwell, Matthew Short, Steve Smith, Mitchell Starc, Adam Zampa
September 19: First ODI v England, Trent Bridge, Nottingham, 10pm AEST
September 21: Second ODI v England, Headingley, Leeds, 10pm AEST
September 24: Third ODI v England, Riverside, Chester-le-Street, 10pm AEST
September 27: Fourth ODI v England, Lord’s, London, 10pm AEST
September 29: Fifth ODI v England, County Ground, Bristol, 8pm AEST
Sign up to our free sport newsletter for all the latest news on everything from cycling to boxingSign up to our free sport email for all the latest newsSign up
CRICKET legend David 'Bumble' Lloyd's son has become the first British winner of a drug free bodybuilding event.Ben Lloyd was crowned champion of Natural Olympi
Explaining why he chose “natural” bodybuilding, Lloyd said: “It is for health reasons. It is a bit risky going down the o
In 2021, a planning application to turn Aire Valley House, a vacant office building in Crossflatts, into 139 flats was approved by Bradford Council. How