Top talent to get Shield warm-up before India Tests

Australia's Test cricket squad will get more domestic games this season before taking on India. (AP PHOTO)

Australia's multi-format stars have been handed their best red-ball preparation for a summer in five years, with players to have up to four Sheffield Shield matches to fine tune for the Test series against India.

Cricket Australia announced the schedule for the domestic summer on Thursday, which includes the new women's Twenty20 series before the WBBL.

As has been the case in recent seasons, the Sheffield Shield will remain at 10 rounds, while the men's one-day cup sits at seven matches each.

But for the first time in a long time, multi-format players will have a long stretch of Shield games to prepare for the Test team's bid to win back the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

Australia's last overseas white-ball commitment this year is on September 29, giving players a week before the beginning of the Shield season on October 8.

Matt Renshaw
Matt Renshaw is among a group of players with extra chances this summer to press for Test selection.

Even if the quicks are rested from the first round, each state will play another three fixtures before players enter camp for the first Test against India starting November 22.

While Mitchell Starc played matches for NSW during the 2020-21 bubble, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood have not played Shield before the first Test since November 2019.

The glut of Shield matches will also provide an opportunity for the likes of Matt Renshaw, Marcus Harris and Cameron Bancroft a chance to push their selection causes.

While Australia's Test team is largely set for now, Australia will want to take a reserve batsman into the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

Chief selector George Bailey said in March there was no longer a front-runner to one day replace Steve Smith or Usman Khawaja at the top of the order, after each of Renshaw, Harris and Bancroft missed out on national contracts.

Bailey has indicated that a specialist opener will be the one to eventually replace Smith or Khawaja in the long-term future, after the former was moved into the role to replace David Warner last summer.

In total six Shield rounds will be played before the BBL break, before each state plays four more matches in February and March.

Shield fixtures will again be interwoven with the one-day cup, with NSW to host defending-champions Western Australia in the first match of the summer on September 22.

The 50-over WNCL tournament again has 12 matches per team, while the newly introduced T20 series for women includes four games each as a result of the shortened WBBL.

Each of the eight WBBL teams will feature as well as the ACT Meteors, with the tournament to run while Australia's big-name players and overseas stars are in Bangladesh for the T20 World Cup.

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