Honestly, I wasn't expecting this series to sneak up so fast. One minute you're tracking the frantic business end of the IPL, and suddenly Australia are packing their bags for Dhaka. Six matches, two cities, and a history between these two sides that's about as one-sided as it gets. But that's exactly what makes it worth watching.
Let me break down everything you need to know before the first ball drops on June 9: where to watch it, how much it'll cost you, and why this tour is a little more special than just another casual bilateral series on the calendar.
The Full Schedule at a Glance
The action is split cleanly down the middle. Three ODIs kick things off in Dhaka at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium, followed by three T20Is down in Chattogram at the Bir Sreshtho Flight Lieutenant Matiur Rahman Stadium.
| Match | Date | Venue | IST Timing | Local Time (BST) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st ODI | Tue, June 9 | Dhaka | 10:30 AM | 11:00 AM |
| 2nd ODI | Thu, June 11 | Dhaka | 10:30 AM | 11:00 AM |
| 3rd ODI | Sun, June 14 | Dhaka | 10:30 AM | 11:00 AM |
| 1st T20I | Wed, June 17 | Chattogram | 1:30 PM | 2:00 PM |
| 2nd T20I | Fri, June 19 | Chattogram | 1:30 PM | 2:00 PM |
| 3rd T20I | Sun, June 21 | Chattogram | 1:30 PM | 2:00 PM |
The ODI timings work out wonderfully for Indian fans who want to catch the morning session before their daily routine gets too chaotic. The T20Is are afternoon affairs, which is great if you work from home or can manage to sneak in a quick stream during a lunch break.
Watching in Bangladesh: Completely Free
Cricket fans living in Bangladesh easily scored the best arrangement of the lot, which feels incredibly right given it is their home turf. T Sports and Nagarik TV are broadcasting every ball on free-to-air television. No app downloads, no recurring monthly fees, and no technological hurdles. Just switch on the TV and flip to the channel.
There is a unique charm to a host country keeping its cricket accessible to everyone instead of hiding it behind expensive digital paywalls. I still remember when broadcast reshuffles left local supporters completely in the dark, so it is wonderful to see the rights handled properly this time around.
Quick Broadcaster Reference Guide
| Your Location | TV Station | Online App / Site |
|---|---|---|
| India | No TV Broadcast | FanCode App |
| Australia | Fox Cricket | Kayo Sports |
| Bangladesh | T Sports / Nagarik TV | Free Local Digital Platform |
| Rest of the World | Check Local Networks | FanCode (Select Regions) |
Watching in India: FanCode Is Your Only Option
Do not bother scanning your TV remote in India because there is zero television broadcast for this series. No Star Sports, no Sony, nothing on standard cable. FanCode secured the exclusive digital rights, and that is your singular path to the action. To be fair, FanCode's app performance has improved significantly: the stream quality holds up well and the commentary teams are usually solid.
The best part about their platform is that you don't have to lock yourself into a massive, costly annual subscription just to watch one specific tour.
| Pass Type | Price (approx.) | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Single Match Pass | From ₹19 | Casual viewers looking for a quick fix |
| Tour Pass | Bundled Rate | Catching all six games from start to finish |
A helpful tip if you're new to FanCode: individual pass prices can fluctuate slightly depending on the match tier, so make sure to check the final cost at checkout. First-time buyers often land a sweet introductory discount. If you hate watching on a tiny screen, their Chromecast and Fire TV casting features work seamlessly, saving you the hassle of connecting a laptop to the television with an HDMI cable.
Watching in Australia: Kayo Sports and Fox Cricket
For everyone tuning in from Australia, the setup is straightforward but strictly premium. Fox Cricket holds the television rights, and Kayo Sports is managing the digital streaming side. There is absolutely no free-to-air coverage for this one: don't get caught out by old online guides claiming it will stream on 7plus, because that is simply not true for this away series.
The nice thing about using Kayo is the complete lack of lock-in contracts. Since the whole tour wraps up within a fortnight, you can comfortably subscribe for the month of June and hit cancel as soon as the final T20I wraps up.
| Kayo Plan | Price (AUD) | Streams / Quality |
|---|---|---|
| Weekend Pass | $15 | Full access from Friday through Monday |
| Standard HD | $29.99/month | 1 active stream in crisp High Definition |
| Premium 4K | $45.99/month | 2 simultaneous streams in Ultra HD 4K |
New accounts are eligible for a 7-day free trial. If you time the activation perfectly right around the opening ODI, you can easily catch a solid chunk of the initial matches before the billing cycle kicks in. It's a handy little strategy worth remembering.
Why This Tour Belongs on Your Radar
Australia haven't toured Bangladesh for a 50-over ODI series in 15 years. Let that sink in for a second. A lot has changed in Bangladeshi cricket since that last visit: the pitches have evolved, the local spinners have grown deadlier, and the team's self-belief at home is at an all-time high. Playing in front of those massive, loud crowds in Dhaka and Chattogram gives Bangladesh a genuine chance to make life uncomfortable for the visitors.
The historical head-to-head record in ODIs is admittedly brutal. Australia have won roughly 20 out of 22 meetings. Bangladesh's only victory came way back in 2005 during that famous match at Cardiff. So yes, the cold, hard numbers aren't kind. But Bangladesh on home turf, manipulating their own conditions with a fanatical crowd roaring them on? That's a completely different equation.
blockquote>"Home conditions in Bangladesh can neutralise even the most aggressive batting lineups in the world. Deep spin, heavy humidity, and incredibly slow pitches make it a pure test of survival."Six white-ball games crammed into less than two weeks also means physical fatigue will become a major factor, especially for the Australians who aren't fully acclimated to the dense Asian heat. This is precisely the kind of series where a surprise result can catch everyone off guard.
What Kind of Cricket Are We About to See?
On paper, Australia will naturally walk into the stadiums as the overwhelming favourites. They possess the world titles, the depth, and the explosive power that makes them a nightmare to bowl to. But writing off Bangladesh on their own patch is always a dangerous mistake. Their slow, turning pitches have embarrassed powerhouse sides like England and Pakistan in the past.
The three ODIs will probably offer the most intriguing cricket. Those matches demand a tactical, patient style of play that plays beautifully into Bangladesh's hands. Once the series transitions into the high-octane T20Is, Australia's raw power might give them the edge as the games pick up speed.
Regardless of who walks away with the trophies, six matches in under two weeks means our screens are about to be flooded with high-stakes cricket. Sort out your streaming passwords, configure your smart TV apps, and get ready for a memorable series. This trip to Bangladesh could easily deliver some massive surprises.
