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Josh Hazlewood 'on track' for Australia's T20 World Cup campaign
Hazlewood's recovery timeline fits well with the T20 World Cup schedule (Image source: X/@cricketcomau)

Josh Hazlewood 'on track' for Australia's T20 World Cup campaign

Jan 14, 2026
10:57 am

What's the story

Veteran Australian fast bowler Josh Hazlewood is optimistic about his fitness ahead of the upcoming 2026 ICC T20 World Cup. The pacer missed out on the Ashes series due to a hamstring strain and an Achilles injury during rehabilitation. He won't play in the later stages of the Big Bash League (BBL) or against Pakistan in late January, but is eyeing a warm-up match ahead of the World Cup early next month.

Recovery progress

Hazlewood's recovery timeline aligns with World Cup schedule

Hazlewood's recovery timeline fits well with the T20 World Cup schedule, as Australia's first match against Ireland is on February 11. The chair of selectors George Bailey has hinted at possibly holding back Pat Cummins if needed, but Australia can't afford to carry more than one player who wasn't able to feature from the start. "Everything's going to plan," Hazlewood told ESPNcricinfo about his recovery process.

Injury management

Hazlewood's injury history and future training approach

Hazlewood has struggled with injuries since the 2020-21 season, missing all but one home summer. He was in top form during white-ball matches against India in October before suffering a hamstring injury after bowling three consecutive days of a Sheffield Shield match against Victoria at SCG. "We took a few extra weeks once we couldn't make the Test matches (Ashes). I had a couple of bowls off the half-run last week. Running's going well, all the strength stuff's going well."

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Test strategy

Hazlewood's future plans and workload management

While the T20 World Cup is Hazlewood's next focus, he will also play in the IPL for Royal Challengers Bengaluru. Later this year, Australia will play up to 21 Tests in 11 months, including major away series in India and England. The five Tests in India next January could be a good chance to rest and rotate fast bowlers if conditions favor spin-heavy attacks.

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