Australian Men’s Cricket Team vs South Africa National Cricket Team Timeline
Table of Contents
The Australia vs South Africa cricket rivalry is one of the sport’s most electrifying sagas, spanning over a century from dusty 1902 Tests to the 2025 WTC triumph at Lord’s. Born in colonial clashes, reborn after apartheid isolation, it exploded with the 1999 World Cup semi-final tie, the record-shattering 438 Game, Sandpapergate drama, and endless high-stakes battles. Aggression, heartbreak, records, and raw emotion define every encounter—making this timeline a must-read for any cricket fan.
Latest Matches
Australian Men’s Cricket Team Vs South Africa National Cricket Team Timeline
| Tournament | Venue | Date | Toss / Batted First | Australia Score | South Africa Score | Result | Series / Event | Player of the Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral ODI | Great Barrier Reef Arena, Mackay | 24 Aug 2025 | Australia batted first | 431/2 (50 overs) | 155 (24.5/50 ov, target 432) | Australia won by 276 runs | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Travis Head (Aus) |
| Bilateral ODI | Great Barrier Reef Arena, Mackay | 22 Aug 2025 | South Africa batted first | 193 (37.4/50 ov, target 278) | 277 (49.1 overs) | South Africa won by 84 runs | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Lungi Ngidi (SA) |
| Bilateral ODI | Cazalys Stadium, Cairns | 19 Aug 2025 | South Africa batted first | 198 (40.5/50 ov, target 297) | 296/8 (50 overs) | South Africa won by 98 runs | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Keshav Maharaj (SA) |
| Bilateral T20I | Cazalys Stadium, Cairns | 16 Aug 2025 | South Africa batted first | 173/8 (19.5/20 ov, target 173) | 172/7 (20 overs) | Australia won by 2 wickets | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Glenn Maxwell (Aus) |
| Bilateral T20I | Marrara Oval, Darwin | 12 Aug 2025 | South Africa batted first | 165 (17.4/20 ov, target 219) | 218/7 (20 overs) | South Africa won by 53 runs | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Dewald Brevis (SA) |
| Bilateral T20I | Marrara Oval, Darwin | 10 Aug 2025 | Australia batted first | 178 (20 overs) | 161/9 (20 ov, target 179) | Australia won by 17 runs | South Africa in Australia 2025 | Tim David (Aus) |
| ICC World Test Championship Final | Lord’s, London | 11-14 Jun 2025 | South Africa elected to field | 212 & 207 | 138 & 282/5 (target 282) | South Africa won by 5 wickets | WTC 2023-2025 | Aiden Markram (SA) |
Series Insights:
- In the August 2025 tour, South Africa dominated the ODIs (winning 2-1 overall) with strong bowling displays, but Australia fought back in the T20Is (winning 2-1) thanks to explosive batting.
- The highlight was South Africa’s maiden WTC title in 2025, clinched dramatically at Lord’s with Aiden Markram’s match-winning century.
Forged in the Dust: The First Clashes on Veldt and Gabba (1902–1914)
Picture this: dusty veldt grounds in Johannesburg and Cape Town, matting pitches that gripped spinners and tested stamina. In 1902–03, Australia’s weary tourists—fresh from England—stopped over for South Africa’s first-ever Test series. The Proteas, raw but fierce, debuted six players in the opener and pushed the Aussies to the brink. Warwick Armstrong’s grit and Jack Saunders’ wickets sealed Australia’s edge, but South Africa’s defiance lit the fuse. By 1910–11, the rivalry flipped to Australian soil:
Clem Hill and Victor Trumper dominated, while South Africa’s googly kings like Schwarz and Faulkner fought back with venomous spin. Aggression simmered in hostile bowling spells and sharp stares across the pitch—no sledging yet, but the body language screamed “we’re here to stay.” Fans packed grounds, roaring for every boundary and wicket, sensing a new empire-versus-underdog fire. These early battles weren’t just matches; they were the birth of a grudge match that would define cricket’s toughest rivalries.
| Date/Series | Format/Venue | Result/Margin | Top Performer (Batting/Bowling) | Scorecard Snapshot | Rivalry Spark/Aggression Moment | Fan Pulse |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 11-14, 1902 (1st Test) | Test / Old Wanderers, Johannesburg | Drawn | SA: E.A. Halliwell 142; AUS: Follow-on fight | SA 454 & 101/4; AUS 296 & 372/7d | Debut tension; SA push Aussies to follow-on | Crowds thrilled by SA’s bold start |
| Oct 18-21, 1902 (2nd Test) | Test / Old Wanderers, Johannesburg | AUS won by 159 runs | AUS: Warwick Armstrong 159 & 7 wickets total | AUS 175 & 309; SA 240 & 85 | Saunders’ devastating spell crushes SA chase | Aussie fans erupt; SA stunned |
| Nov 8-11, 1902 (3rd Test) | Test / Newlands, Cape Town | AUS won by 10 wickets | AUS: Trumble & Noble dominate | AUS 252 & 59/0; SA 85 & 225 f/o | Quick finish; AUS ruthless in run-chase | Cape Town roars for SA fightback |
| Dec 1910–Mar 1911 (Full Series) | Tests / Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide | AUS won 4-1 | AUS: Clem Hill & Trumper centuries; SA: Faulkner 204* | Multiple high scores (e.g., AUS 528 in 1st) | Googly duels; bouncer wars on hard pitches | Packed stands; fans sense rising fire |
| 1912 Triangular (select) | Test / England venues | AUS strong vs SA (innings wins) | AUS: Armstrong & Macartney | AUS 448; SA 265 & 95 f/o (one match) | Hat-trick drama (Matthews twice vs SA) | British crowds divided; rivalry grows |
Power Shifts and Epic Duels: Pre-Apartheid Glory Days (1921–1970)
The interwar years saw Australia flex muscle on South African soil—Don Bradman’s tourists in 1931-32 delivered a ruthless 5-0 whitewash, with towering totals and unplayable spin leaving crowds stunned. South Africa fought back valiantly in the 1940s-50s, but Australia’s post-war machine—led by Hassett and Lindwall—crushed hopes in series like 1949-50 (4-0) and 1952-53. Then came the seismic shift: by the late 1960s, South Africa’s golden generation arrived.
Graeme Pollock’s silken drives, Peter Pollock’s fiery pace, Mike Procter’s all-round thunder, and Barry Richards’ debut brilliance flipped the script. The 1966-67 drawn series hinted at danger; the 1969-70 annihilation (4-0 whitewash of Australia) was pure dominance—Procter ripping through with venomous seam, Pollock amassing runs at will. Aggression peaked in bouncer wars and relentless fielding; fans erupted in jubilation at Newlands and Wanderers, chanting for every wicket as underdogs became kings. These duels weren’t just cricket—they forged unbreakable pride on both sides, setting a template for future fireworks.
| Series/Year | Tests Played/Result | Standout Knock/Ball | Scorecard Highlight (Key Match) | Field Aggression/Rivalry Edge | Crowd Emotion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1921-22 (AUS in SA) | 3 Tests: AUS 1-0 (2 drawn) | AUS: Herbie Taylor 200 runs series; AUS dominance | 3rd Test, Cape Town: AUS 396 & 1/0 beat SA 180 & 216 | Early pace duels; AUS quick finishes | Cape Town thrilled by SA fight; AUS fans roar |
| 1931-32 (SA in AUS) | 5 Tests: AUS 5-0 whitewash | AUS: Bradman centuries; Grimmett spin masterclass | 1st Test, Brisbane: AUS 450 beat SA 170 & 117 f/o | Innings thrashings; bouncer barrages on hard pitches | Packed stands stunned by Bradman magic |
| 1949-50 (AUS in SA) | 5 Tests: AUS 4-0 (1 drawn) | AUS: Hassett & Morris big hundreds | 2nd Test, Cape Town: AUS 526/7d & 87/2 beat SA 278 & 333 f/o | Relentless AUS batting; SA defiance crumbles | Fans divided—pride in SA grit, awe at AUS |
| 1952-53 (SA in AUS) | 5 Tests: AUS 2-1 (2 drawn) | SA: Cheetham fightback; AUS: Lindwall pace | 2nd Test, Melbourne: SA 227 & 388 beat AUS 243 & 290 | Tense chases; emerging fast-bowling wars | Sydney crowds electric; SA fans hopeful |
| 1966-67 (AUS in SA) | 5 Tests: Drawn 1-1 (3 drawn) | SA: Pollock brothers shine; AUS: Chappell debut | Multiple draws with high scores (e.g., SA 620 in one) | Rising tension; pace vs spin battles | Wanderers packed; fans sense SA rise |
| 1969-70 (AUS in SA) | 5 Tests: SA 4-0 whitewash | SA: Procter 26 wkts @13.37; Pollock/Richards 500+ runs @70+ | 1st Test, Cape Town: SA 382 & 232 beat AUS 164 & 280 (170 runs) | Procter’s venomous spells; bouncer duels; stare-downs | Jubilant SA crowds; humiliation for AUS visitors |
The Tie That Still Haunts: 1999 World Cup Semi-Final and the Choke Label (1999–2000)
Edgbaston, June 17, 1999: cricket’s greatest heartbreaker. Australia needed 213; South Africa chased with fire—Klusener smashing 31 off 16, Gibbs dropping Warne. Then the moment: last over, 9 needed off 6. Klusener drilled Damien Fleming straight—Donald sprinted, collided with Klusener, run out by a yard. Tie. Australia advanced on countback. Edgbaston fell silent; South African dressing room was devastation. The “choker” label stuck forever—fans worldwide replayed it endlessly, some in triumph, others in pain.
Aggression boiled: Warne’s mind games, McGrath’s icy stare-downs, SA’s desperate fielding. Follow-up bilateral clashes in 1999-2000 felt loaded—Australia won Tests convincingly, but the ghost lingered. What if Gibbs held? What if Donald stayed? That one ball changed perceptions, fueled endless bar debates, and turned rivalry personal. South Africa carried the scar; Australia wore the scar-maker’s crown. No match has haunted cricket quite like it.
| Date/Event | Key Moment / Scorecard Snapshot | Player Battle (Hero vs Villain) | Aggression Peak / Pressure Cooker Moment | Fan Reaction Worldwide | Lasting Rivalry Scar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 17, 1999 (WC Semi-Final) | AUS 213 (49.2 ov); SA 213 (all out, 49.4 ov) – Tie | Klusener 31* (16) vs Fleming/Warne; Gibbs drop | Final over chaos: run-out collision, Donald stranded | Edgbaston stunned; global TV millions gasp | Birth of “chokers” tag; eternal SA pain |
| Jun 17, 1999 (Final Ball Drama) | 9 needed off 6; Klusener straight drive → run-out | Klusener vs Donald communication fail; McGrath stare | Collision at crease; Gibbs earlier drop off Warne | SA fans heartbroken; AUS celebrate wildly | Most replayed moment in cricket history |
| 1999-2000 AUS in SA (Tests) | AUS won 2-0 (3 Tests, 1 drawn) | Warne 18 wkts; Langer/Meuleman centuries | Tense draws turn decisive; Warne mind games dominate | SA crowds quiet; lingering semi-final shadow | AUS dominance reinforces choker narrative |
| Oct-Nov 1999 (Tri-Series incl. SA) | Mixed; AUS strong in finals | Ponting emerging; Pollock fightback | High-pressure chases; sledging intensifies | Fans relive Edgbaston in every close finish | Label sticks; SA motivation turns to revenge |
| Overall 1999 WC Impact | SA unbeaten until semi; AUS champions | Gibbs 274 runs; Warne Player of Tournament | Pressure moments define legacy—drops, run-outs, nerves | Worldwide debates rage; SA fans still hurt | Defining rivalry scar; “what if” forever |
Scandal, Revenge, and Shifting Sands: Sandpaper to World Cup Semis (2008–2023)
The era opened with fireworks: South Africa’s epic 414/4 chase in Perth 2008-09, the second-highest successful fourth-innings total ever, dethroning Australia as No.1. Tension escalated—series seesawed with Rabada’s pace terrorizing Aussies, Smith’s grit clashing head-on. Then came March 2018, Cape Town’s third Test: “Sandpapergate.” Cameron Bancroft caught on camera using sandpaper on the ball; Steve Smith and David Warner implicated in the plot.
Australia collapsed to 107 chasing 430, SA won by 322 runs, but victory felt hollow amid global fury. Bans followed—Smith and Warner out for a year, crowds booed mercilessly. Revenge brewed: Rabada’s fiery stare-downs at Smith, Warner’s tearful return. By 2023, the ODI World Cup semi-final in Kolkata delivered another gut-punch—SA posted 212, Australia chased 215/7 in 47.2 overs (Travis Head’s 62 pivotal), winning by 3 wickets. SA’s knockout curse continued; aggression lingered in every review, every dropped catch. These years scarred and reshaped the rivalry—cheating’s stain met redemption’s fire.
| Year/Match | Format/Venue | Result / Margin | Infamous Moment / Standout Performance | Scorecard Highlight | Player Rivalry Peak / Aggression Edge | Fan Emotion Storm |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 2008–Jan 2009 (AUS in SA Tests wait—no, SA in AUS) | Tests / Perth, Melbourne, Sydney | SA won series 2-1 (historic Perth chase) | 414/4 chase (second-highest 4th inns); Prince 150* | Perth: AUS 375 & 319; SA 281 & 414/4 | Steyn/Rabada precursors vs Ponting; bouncer wars | SA fans euphoric—dethroning AUS No.1 |
| Mar 2018 (3rd Test, Sandpapergate) | Test / Newlands, Cape Town | SA won by 322 runs | Bancroft sandpaper tampering caught on camera | AUS 100 & 107; SA 332 & 43/1 (target 43) | Smith/ Warner plot exposed; global outrage, bans | Boos rain down; SA triumph overshadowed by scandal |
| 2018 Series Overall | Tests / SA venues | SA won 2-1 (after scandal) | Rabada contact with Smith; de Kock-Warner stairwell clash | Tense battles; Rabada 11 wkts series | Rabada stare-downs; sledging peaks | Worldwide fury; AUS fans humiliated |
| 2022-23 (AUS hosted Tests) | Tests / Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth | AUS won 2-0 (1 drawn) | Warner double ton in 100th Test; SA collapse | Melbourne: AUS 575/8d beat SA 189 & 204 | Cummins leadership; SA fightback crumbles | Aussie crowds roar redemption |
| Nov 2023 (WC Semi-Final) | ODI / Eden Gardens, Kolkata | AUS won by 3 wkts (16 balls rem) | SA 212; AUS chase thriller; Head 62 & wickets | SA 212; AUS 215/7 (47.2 ov) | Pressure cooker—reviews, drops; choke narrative revives | SA heartbreak; AUS fans celebrate path to title |
| Overall Era Impact | Mixed formats | AUS edge knockouts; SA moral highs/lows | Sandpapergate scar; 2023 semi revenge | Multiple chases, collapses, controversies | Warner/Rabada feud; Smith redemption arc | Fans polarized—scandal lingers, glory bittersweet |
The Latest Chapter: 2025 Fireworks, WTC Glory, and Unfinished Business (2024–2025 & Beyond)
2025 delivered the payoff South Africa craved. At Lord’s in June, the WTC Final saw Kagiso Rabada rip through Australia (5-51 first innings), then Aiden Markram’s masterful 136 guided a tense 282 chase—South Africa won by 5 wickets, claiming their first major men’s ICC title since 1998. Temba Bavuma battled pain for 66; tears flowed as the mace was lifted. No more choker whispers—this was redemption. Months later, August’s white-ball tour to Australia exploded:
Dewald Brevis smashed a record 125* (youngest/fastest SA T20I ton vs AUS), but Australia countered with ruthless power—431/2 in one ODI thriller. T20Is went AUS 2-1 (Maxwell heroics); ODIs saw SA fight hard with Maharaj’s five-fors and Ngidi hauls, yet AUS sealed big wins. Aggression peaked—Rabada’s glare, Green’s promotion to No.3 fireworks, diving stops, crowd chants in northern venues. New stars like Brevis clash with veterans; unfinished business lingers. The rivalry roars on—stronger, fiercer, eternal.
| Date/Match | Format/Venue | Result / Margin | Standout Performance | Scorecard Highlight | Aggression / Field Moment | Fan Celebration or Heartbreak |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 11-14, 2025 (WTC Final) | Test / Lord’s, London | SA won by 5 wkts (chased 282) | Aiden Markram 136; Rabada 5-51 & 4-59 | AUS 212 & 207; SA 138 & 282/5 | Rabada venom; tense reviews, Bavuma edge; stare-downs | SA fans erupt—27-year drought ends; Lord’s roars |
| Jun 11-14, 2025 (Key Chase) | Test / Lord’s (Day 4) | SA chased 282/5 | Markram 136; Bavuma 66 despite injury | Target 282; winning runs by Verreynne | Pressure cooker—runs hard-won; Cummins lift; no collapse | Tears of joy; SA pride swells worldwide |
| Aug 10-16, 2025 (T20I Series) | T20Is / Darwin, etc. | AUS won 2-1 | Brevis 125* (record vs AUS); Maxwell 62 | e.g., 3rd T20I: AUS 173/8 beat SA 172/7 | Brevis blitz; last-ball thrillers; diving stops | Mixed—SA youth excites; AUS edge thrills fans |
| Aug 19-24, 2025 (ODI Series) | ODIs / Cairns, Mackay | Mixed; AUS big win in finale (e.g., 276-run margin one match) | Green rapid 100; Maharaj 5-33; Ngidi 5-42 | e.g., AUS 431/2; SA collapses in finale | Spin trials; bouncer wars; high-octane chases | Northern crowds electric; rivalry renewed |
| Aug 2025 Tour Overall | White-ball / AUS venues | Split drama—T20Is AUS, ODIs competitive | Emerging stars (Brevis, Maphaka); veterans shine | Monster totals (431/2); tight finishes | Field aggression peaks; new gen vs old guard stares | Fans hooked—future clashes loom large |
| Beyond 2025 | Ongoing rivalry | Unfinished—next tours loom | Markram leadership; Rabada fire; AUS power | Records keep falling; chases intensify | Eternal edge—sledging, pride, redemption arcs | Global obsession—next chapter awaits |
Conclusion
From the first veldt battles in 1902 to South Africa’s glorious 2025 WTC Final win at Lord’s—where Aiden Markram’s 136 sealed redemption after decades of near-misses—this rivalry remains unfinished business. Recent fireworks in Australia’s 2025 white-ball series, with monster totals and Brevis brilliance, prove the fire still burns. Australia and South Africa keep delivering drama, intensity, and unforgettable moments. The story continues—eternal, fierce, and utterly compelling.
FAQs: Australia vs South Africa Cricket Rivalry
What is the most famous match in AUS vs SA history?
The 1999 World Cup semi-final at Edgbaston—a tie decided by Australia’s superior run rate after Lance Klusener’s heroics turned to run-out heartbreak, birthing SA’s infamous “choker” label.
What happened in the 438 Game?
On March 12, 2006, in Johannesburg, South Africa posted a record 438/9 (Gibbs 175), only for Australia to chase 434/4 (Ponting 164). It remains the highest-scoring ODI ever played.
How did Sandpapergate affect the rivalry?
In 2018 at Newlands, Australia’s ball-tampering scandal (Bancroft’s sandpaper) led to bans for Smith and Warner, SA’s 322-run win, and massive fan outrage—deepening bitterness and fueling revenge arcs.
Did South Africa finally win a major ICC title in 2025?
Yes—in the 2025 WTC Final at Lord’s, SA beat Australia by 5 wickets (chasing 282), with Markram’s 136 and Rabada’s 9 wickets ending a 27-year drought for a major men’s ICC trophy.
Who leads the overall head-to-head record?
Australia holds the edge in Tests and T20Is, but South Africa often pushes hard in ODIs. The rivalry is closely contested across formats, with iconic moments on both sides keeping it balanced and intense.



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