As the Champions Trophy 2025 edition commences from 19 February, England will take on Australia in Lahore on 22 February. Although after having a powerful batting line up, Australia lags behind in the bowling department. Australia, the defending ODI Champions will try to seal the 3rd Champions Trophy title for themselves.
Missing Stars
Australia begins the tournament with an ungainly bowling aura because their leading fast-bowling unit was reduced to minimal numbers. The team’s extraordinary pace bowling strength has dramatically diminished because all their leading quick bowlers Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc will miss the tournament. Their challenge grows stronger because Mitchell Marsh and Marcus Stoinis bring missing aspects of batting-all-round skills to the team.
New Bowling Lineup
The cricketing burden rests on Sean Abbott and two inexperienced fast bowlers Spencer Johnson and Nathan Ellis along with Ben Dwarshuis. The spin department will be under the leadership of Tanveer Sangha and Adam Zampa. The experienced unit which participated in Australia’s ODI World Cup victory has now been replaced by a completely different player composition.
Explosive Batting
The Australian team relies heavily on its experienced batting lineup because of current bowling limitations. At this critical juncture the cricket team needs the experienced batting skills of Steve Smith as captain alongside Travis Head and Marnus Labuschagne and Glenn Maxwell to succeed.

The talented Josh Inglis joins aside with the dynamic rise of Jake Fraser-McGurk in the Australian batting department which presents a fearless perspective through their play. With limited bowling experience Australia depends on their strong batting capability to deliver or pursue ample totals against opposing teams. The experienced and developing batting lineup at Australia’s disposal constitutes one of their fundamental strategies to handle their bowling deficiencies.
The success of Australia’s new bowling attack depends heavily on the pace bowlers who have little experience in international cricket to secure their chances in the tournament. The new players must show rapid adaptation skills to satisfy the large role that senior team members left behind.