England has given international debuts to Jacob Bethell and Jordan Cox as discussions of the Ashes linger in the background.
Are you ready for more action between England and Australia? Regardless of your answer, this month promises plenty, with eight matches set to take place over 18 days, beginning with the first of three T20 internationals in Southampton. Fans are excited, as evidenced by five sold-out games following a Sri Lanka Test series where attendance was sometimes sparse.
The intensity of England's schedule is again under scrutiny, with this series commencing the day after what would have been the final day of the Oval Test had it stretched to its full duration. This situation necessitates an almost entirely different squad for the T20 matches, with only Josh Hull remaining from the Test team. This series marks England's first engagement after a lacklustre T20 World Cup campaign that resulted in the departure of coach Matthew Mott.
Brendon McCullum will eventually unify the England Men’s coaching roles starting in January; meanwhile, Marcus Trescothick will lead the team through this series and the upcoming West Indies tour in November, which is sandwiched between Test series against Pakistan and New Zealand. For now, with Jos Buttler sidelined due to injury, Phil Salt will step in as captain.
Despite a disappointing ODI World Cup and an underwhelming T20 campaign, England boasts considerable white-ball talent. There is a sense that the golden generation may have held onto their places too long before allowing the next wave of players to emerge.
Ahead of their matches against Scotland, Mitchell Marsh played down suggestions that it was a T20 "reset" for Australia following their World Cup exit, where they were eliminated even before England. The evolution of Australia's squad looking toward 2026 seems more understated than that of their rivals, although some members of England's Test team would have participated had the logistics permitted.
Australia performed effectively in their three matches against Scotland, with Josh Inglis and Cameron Green delivering strong performances, having been overlooked during the T20 World Cup, especially after Travis Head's explosive start in the opening game.
Injuries are testing Australia's pace-bowling depth, notably with Nathan Ellis ruled out of the tour. Fortunately, Josh Hazlewood has rejoined the squad following a minor calf injury that kept him out of the Scotland series. It’s likely we’ll see Australia continue to experiment with their lineup and batting order throughout this series.