Match 3 | AUS T20I Series 2026 | Matiur Rahman Stadium, Chattogram | June 21, 2026
Australia has already won this T20I series, and neither side has anything riding on Sunday’s result at Chattogram. But a dead rubber is rarely meaningless for the individuals in it. Four players, two from each camp, arrive at this match with a point to make. Some need a score to justify a place, some need a wicket to make a case, and the final game of a completed series is exactly the moment those personal battles come into sharpest focus.
Tanzid’s Starts Going Nowhere

Tanzid Hasan has done the hard part twice and got nothing for it. In the first T20I, he made 10 before being bowled by Spencer Johnson at 26/1 in the third over. In the second, he hit 30 off 15 balls, four fours and a six, and was caught-and-bowled by Matt Renshaw at 48/1, again inside the first four overs.
Bangladesh’s powerplay in the second T20I reached 72, their highest ever against Australia in the format, and Tanzid was central to that. Converting one of those starts into a full innings is the challenge that follows him into Sunday.
Bangladesh Australia 3rd T20I 2026
The series is settled, but the form built in a dead rubber still carries weight. Australia’s next assignment is a Test series on home soil against Bangladesh, starting in Darwin on August 13 and Mackay on August 22, followed by Zimbabwe ODIs in September. What happens in Chattogram matters to the players even when the points don’t.
| Player | Team | Series Returns | Why This Match Matters |
| Josh Inglis | Australia | 69 runs, 4 innings (no score >34) | Hasn’t posted a defining score anywhere on tour |
| Mitchell Marsh | Australia | 33 runs, 2 T20I innings (13, 20) | Captain quiet with the bat across both T20Is |
| Nikhil Chaudhary | Australia | 8 runs; 1 wicket (T20I1) | Limited returns across both matches as a newcomer |
| Tanzid Hasan | Bangladesh | 40 runs; out inside 3 overs both times | Needs to turn a fast start into a complete innings |
For Bangladesh, the series loss is done, but the same logic applies. The selectors are watching who responds in a match that carries no pressure, and sometimes that tells you more than the games that do.
Josh Inglis Can’t Find a Score

Josh Inglis has not posted a significant innings at any point on this tour. He made 19 in the first ODI, caught Litton Das off Nahid Rana at 51/3, then 34 off 38 in the second, his best return. In the third ODI, he hit four boundaries before departing at 40/1; his run total from that innings is unconfirmed.
The T20Is brought 5 and 11. He missed a scoop and was bowled by Shoriful Islam in the first match, then hit a four and a six before being trapped lbw by Nasum Ahmed for 11 in the second. Four confirmed innings, 69 runs, nothing above 34. Sunday is his last chance to change that.
Marsh’s Bat Has Been Quiet

Mitchell Marsh sat out all three ODIs, with Inglis captaining the side in his absence, so his series output with the bat is limited to two T20I innings. He scored 13 off 14 in the first T20I, caught at short third-man off Mustafizur Rahman, then 20 in the second, skying a slog to deep midwicket off the same bowler.
ESPNcricinfo’s preview characterised Marsh as overdue for a substantial knock, and the framing is fair. He’s a captain who leads from the front and hasn’t on this tour. A score in Chattogram doesn’t change the result but changes the tone.
Chaudhary’s Window Is Closing

Nikhil Chaudhary’s two matches have produced limited returns. His batting in the second T20I brought 8 before he was given out lbw off Nasum Ahmed, his review failing on ball-tracking with the umpire’s call upheld. His only confirmed bowling wicket of the series came in the first T20I, dismissing Rishad Hossain. No bowling figures were recorded for him in the second match.
A single series was never going to define a newcomer’s international future, but two matches of single-figure scores and one wicket leave little to build on. Sunday is a low-pressure environment, exactly the condition in which the Bangladesh Australia 3rd T20I 2026 can give a new player the space to produce something that registers.
Who has the most to gain on Sunday: an Australian finding form or Tanzid finally going big? Drop your take in the comments.
FAQs
Who won the Bangladesh vs Australia T20I series 2026?
Australia won the Bangladesh vs Australia T20I series 2026, taking an unassailable 2-0 lead after the first two matches. The third T20I on June 21 is a dead rubber with no impact on the series result.
How many runs did Josh Inglis score on the Bangladesh tour 2026?
Josh Inglis scored 69 confirmed runs across four innings on the Bangladesh tour, with a highest score of 34 in the second ODI. His T20I returns were 5 and 11, and his ODI3 run total was not officially confirmed.
What happened to Nikhil Chaudhary in the 2nd T20I vs Bangladesh?
Nikhil Chaudhary was given out lbw for 8 off Nasum Ahmed, with his review failing on ball-tracking as the umpire’s call was upheld. His only series wicket came in the first T20I when he dismissed Rishad Hossain.
What are Australia’s next fixtures after the Bangladesh T20I series?
Australia hosts Bangladesh for two Tests, in Darwin from August 13 and Mackay from August 22, before Zimbabwe ODIs in September. There is no Ireland series in their schedule between this tour and the Test assignments.
Disclaimer: This Exclusive News is based on the author’s understanding, analysis, and instinct. As you review this information, consider the points mentioned and form your own conclusions.
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