BAN vs AUS – T20I 2026 3rd Match Report | Statz
21st June 2026
Australia won by 7 wickets (with 54 balls remaining) to complete a ruthless 3-0 series sweep over Bangladesh in the third T20I. Spencer Johnson’s extraordinary 2/6 from four overs strangled the hosts, before Mitchell Marsh blasted 60 off 28 balls to chase down 110 in just 11 overs.
First Innings – Bangladesh 109/8 (20 overs)
Bangladesh’s innings was a disaster from ball one. Tanzid Hasan fell for 5 off 2 balls, run out in the second over, and Saif Hassan followed immediately – caught for 1 off 9 deliveries at 7/2. Parvez Hossain Emon’s painful 1 off 13 balls ended when he was caught in the fifth over, leaving Bangladesh reeling at 11/3.
Spencer Johnson was virtually unplayable. His four overs yielded figures of 2/6 at an economy of 1.50 – the kind of spell that wins matches on its own. Nathan Ellis chipped in with 2/21 from his four, while Adam Zampa’s 2/22 from four overs, including a maiden, kept the pressure relentless from both ends.
Towhid Hridoy fought a lone battle, carrying his bat for 61 not out off 51 balls with three fours and three sixes. It was a defiant knock, but with wickets tumbling around him – Nurul Hasan bowled for 6, Shamim Hossain caught for a duck, and the lower order offering scraps – Hridoy ran out of partners. Bangladesh limped to 109/8, well below par on any surface.
Second Innings – Australia 112/3 (11 overs)
Mitchell Marsh made the chase look like a training drill. The Australian skipper smashed 60 off just 28 balls – seven fours and four sixes – treating the Bangladesh attack with barely disguised contempt. His strike rate of 214 told the story: this was a demolition job.
Josh Inglis contributed 17 off 16 at the top before being caught, and Cooper Connolly added 15 off 13 with two boundaries. When Marsh finally fell at 88/1 in the ninth over, there was nothing left to chase. Tim David arrived and hammered 12 not out off just three balls, clearing the rope twice to seal the deal. Australia reached 112/3 in 11 overs with 54 balls to spare.
Nasum Ahmed was Bangladesh’s only bowler to emerge with any credit, his three overs costing just 10 runs for one wicket at an economy of 3.33. The rest were expensive – Nahid Rana conceded 20 off a single over, while Taskin Ahmed and Shoriful Islam both went at over 13 an over.
Statz MVP – Spencer Johnson (mi_rating: 117.51)
The official Man of the Match went to Matt Renshaw, but Statz disagrees. Spencer Johnson tops the Statz ratings with an mi_rating of 117.51, and it is not close. His 2/6 from four overs at an economy of 1.50 was the performance that defined this match. Johnson’s spell broke the back of the Bangladesh innings, reducing them from competitive to hopeless inside the powerplay. Renshaw’s contribution – 6 not out off 6 balls and 0/4 from one over (mi_rating 10.50) – was solid but hardly match-defining.
Top 5 Statz Ratings
- Spencer Johnson (AUS) – mi_rating 117.51 (2/6 from 4 overs, Econ 1.50)
- Mitchell Marsh (AUS) – mi_rating 98.53 (60 off 28, SR 214)
- Towhid Hridoy (BAN) – mi_rating 74.88 (61* off 51, lone hand in defeat)
- Nasum Ahmed (BAN) – mi_rating 67.84 (0 bat + 1/10 from 3 overs, Econ 3.33)
- Rishad Hossain (BAN) – mi_rating 54.07 (16 off 14 bat + 1/22 bowl)
Turning Point
The match was effectively over inside five overs. Bangladesh’s collapse from 6/0 to 11/3 killed any momentum before it could build. The key wicket was Saif Hassan, caught at 7/2 in the second over, which set the tone. Parvez Hossain Emon’s tortured 1 off 13 balls before being caught at 11/3 confirmed Bangladesh were in survival mode, not scoring mode. Johnson and Ellis shared the early wickets and ensured the contest was done before it started.
Match Context
This was the third and final T20I of the series, with Australia completing a comprehensive 3-0 sweep over Bangladesh. The head-to-head record between the two sides in T20Is now stands level at 4-4. Australia sit 3rd in the ICC T20I rankings with a rating of 258, while Bangladesh are 8th on 225.
Full scorecard available on Statz. View more T20 Internationals coverage.