Posted: 2023-02-08 17:56:23

It remains one of — if not the toughest — challenge in Test cricket. 

Winning away on the subcontinent is something akin to the holy grail for touring teams.

So many have tried and, especially of late, so many teams have failed.

Australia may have brushed aside South Africa and West Indies in home conditions this summer, but face a vastly different test in India this month if they are to win back the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

India's stunning record at home

Virat Kohli leans back and laughs
India are happy at home — and for good reason.(Getty Images: Surjeet Yadav)

India is, it goes without saying, very good at home.

In the past decade, India has lost just two Tests on home soil from a total of 42 matches: when Australia won by 333 runs in Pune after Nathan Lyon and Steve O'Keefe spun India out for just 107 in the fourth innings in 2017; and when Joe Root's 218 helped England to a 227-run victory in Chennai in 2021.

When the six draws are taken into account, India has an unbeaten record of a whopping 95.24 per cent at home in the past 10 years.

To put that into perspective, Australia is the next best, going unbeaten in 88.24 per cent of their home Tests during the same time period, with New Zealand following at 87.80.

With stats like that, it follows that India has not lost a series in the past decade on home soil.

The last time India did lose a series was against England in 2012, 2-1.

The time before that? Australia by the same 2-1 scoreline in 2004.

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