| Personnel | |
|---|---|
| Captain | |
| Team information | |
| Established | 1951 |
| Home ground | Manuka Oval,Canberra |
| Capacity | 13,550[1] |
ThePrime Minister's XI orPM's XI (formerlyAustralian Prime Minister's Invitation XI) is an invitationalcricket team picked by thePrime Minister of Australia (assisted by theAustralian national selectors[2]) for an annual warm up match before the official test match. The match is held at theManuka Oval inCanberra against an overseas touring team. The Australian team usually consists of up-and-cominggrade cricketers from theCanberra region and state players.
In 1962–63, SirDonald Bradman came out of retirement to play for the Prime Minister's XI against theMarylebone Cricket Club. It was the last time Bradman ever played competitive cricket, and he was freakishly bowled byBrian Statham for just four runs. When Bradman returned to the pavilion, he told then-Prime MinisterRobert Menzies, "It wouldn't happen in a thousand years. Anyway, that's my final appearance at the wicket."[3]
In 2003, there was a match between the PM's XI and anATSIC Chairperson's XI held atAdelaide Oval.[4]
The match on 2 December 2005 had to end early due to the Canberra storms, with Australia getting 4/316, and West Indies finishing in the 31st over at 3/174. The PM's XI won by six runs using theDuckworth-Lewis method, the first time in the fixture's history to be decided using the method.
In 2014, the Prime Minister's XI suffered the biggest defeat in the history of the match against England after being bowled out for just 92.[5]
| Date(s) | Prime Minister | Opposition team | Format | Result/winner | Result/margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27 Oct 1951 | Robert Menzies | One day match | Match drawn | ||
| 8 Dec 1954 | Robert Menzies | One day match | 31 runs | ||
| 10 Feb 1959 | Robert Menzies | One day match | 4 wickets[6] | ||
| 18 Feb 1961 | Robert Menzies | One day match | Match tied | ||
| 6 Feb 1963 | Robert Menzies | One day match | 4 runs | ||
| 3 Feb 1964 | Robert Menzies | One day match | 1 wicket | ||
| 17 Dec 1965 | Robert Menzies | One day match | 2 wickets | ||
| 24 Jan 1984 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 52 runs | ||
| 22 Jan 1985 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 15 runs | ||
| 22 Jan 1986 | Bob Hawke | One day match | No result[a] | ||
| 23 Dec 1986 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 23 Dec 1987 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 37 runs | ||
| 13 Jan 1988 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 7 wickets | ||
| 8 Dec 1988 | Bob Hawke | One day match | Match abandoned[a] | ||
| 9 Jan 1989 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 3 wickets | ||
| 31 Jan 1990 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 81 runs | ||
| 4 Dec 1990 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 31 runs | ||
| 17 Dec 1991 | Bob Hawke | One day match | 75 runs | ||
| 12 Nov 1992 | Paul Keating | One day match | Prime Minister's XI | 3 runs | |
| 2 Dec 1993 | Paul Keating | One day match | 4 runs | ||
| 9 Nov 1994 | Paul Keating | One day match | 2 wickets | ||
| 5 Dec 1995 | Paul Keating | One day match | Match abandoned[a] | ||
| 10 Dec 1996 | John Howard | One day match | 58 runs | ||
| 2 Dec 1997 | John Howard | One day match | 11 runs | ||
| 17 Dec 1998 | John Howard | One day match | 16 runs | ||
| 7 Dec 1999 | John Howard | One day match | 164 runs | ||
| 7 Dec 2000 | John Howard | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 19 Apr 2001 | John Howard | One day match | 7 wickets | ||
| 6 Dec 2001 | John Howard | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 8 Mar 2002 | John Howard | One day match | 8 wickets | ||
| 10 Dec 2002 | John Howard | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 21 Mar 2003 | John Howard | One day match | 8 wickets | ||
| 28 Jan 2004 | John Howard | One day match | 1 run | ||
| 25 Jan 2005 | John Howard | One day match | 5 wickets | ||
| 2 Dec 2005 | John Howard | One day match | 6 runs (DLS)[a] | ||
| 10 Nov 2006 | John Howard | One day match | 166 runs | ||
| 30 Jan 2008 | Kevin Rudd | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 29 Jan 2009 | Kevin Rudd | One day match | 6 wickets | ||
| 4 Feb 2010 | Kevin Rudd | One day match | 90 runs (DLS)[a] | ||
| 10 Jan 2011 | Julia Gillard | One day match | 7 wickets (DLS)[a] | ||
| 3 Feb 2012 | Julia Gillard | One day match | Match abandoned[a] | ||
| 29 Jan 2013 | Julia Gillard | One day match | 23 runs | ||
| 14 Jan 2014 | Tony Abbott | One day match | 172 runs | ||
| 14 Jan 2015 | Tony Abbott | One day match | 60 runs | ||
| 23 Oct 2015 | Malcolm Turnbull | One day match | 102 runs | ||
| 15 Feb 2017 | Malcolm Turnbull | One day match | 5 wickets | ||
| 31 Oct 2018 | Scott Morrison | One day match | 4 wickets | ||
| 24 Oct 2019 | Scott Morrison | One day match | 1 wicket | ||
| 23–26 Nov 2022 | Anthony Albanese | Four day match | Match drawn | ||
| 6–9 Dec 2023 | Anthony Albanese | Four day match | Match drawn | ||
| 1 Dec 2024 | Anthony Albanese | One day match | 6 wickets | ||
| Party | Played | Won | Lost | Drawn | Abandoned | Win percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labor | 23 | 9 | 9 | 2 | 4 | 39.1 |
| Liberal | 27 | 11 | 14 | 1 | 0 | 40.7 |
| Prime Minister | Played | Won | Lost | Drawn | Win percentage | In Office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Menzies | 7 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 14.3 | 1939-41,1949-66 |
| Bob Hawke | 11 | 4 | 4 | 0 | 36.4 | 1983-91 |
| Paul Keating | 4 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 75 | 1991-96 |
| John Howard | 14 | 8 | 6 | 0 | 57.1 | 1996-07 |
| Kevin Rudd | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 33.3 | 2007-2010,2013 |
| Julia Gillard | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 33.3 | 2010-2013 |
| Tony Abbott | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2013-15 |
| Malcolm Turnbull | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2015-2018 |
| Scott Morrison | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 100 | 2018-2022 |
| Anthony Albanese | 3 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2022-present |
In theMCC tour of Australia in 1954–55 the cricket loving Prime Minister of AustraliaRobert Menzies invited the MCC to a reception on the evening before the match and the ex-Australian captainLindsay Hassett recited a ditty about facing"Typhoon" Tyson.
They say that this bloke Tyson is fast!
Faster thanLarwood so they say!
They also say that he takes a run-up of a hundred yards!
Fast - psshaw! I'm not scared of him and his long run.
Tomorrow when I bat, I'll hook him out of sight!

When he finished there was a thunder-clap from the storm outside "Listen, he's just started his run-up!" joked Hassett. The match was a game played in one day with each side playing one innings rather thanLimited overs cricket in the modern sense of the term. Hutton won the toss and opened withBill Edrich, but both were out for 25/2, butPeter May made 101 and added 98 withVic Wilson (29) and 76 withTom Graveney (56).Johnny Wardle scooped and swatted 37 not out and the MCC declared on 278/7 after 40 eight-ball overs. The match had a party atmosphere and Hassett gave 9 of his players a bowl, six of them took a wicket and himself 2/34 with his medium pacers. TailenderIan Johnson opened the Australian batting and was out for 4, but his partner was the big hittingRichie Benaud who smashed the ball all over the ground in his 113 as the Prime Minister's XI made 247 off 30.3 overs at over a run a ball. One of his sixes was caught by theGovernor GeneralField Marshal SirWilliam Slim and a businessman donated £35 and 10shillings to local charities, 30shillings for each six and 10shillings for each four. Veteran batsmanSam Loxton hit 47 andKeith Miller 38 asBill Edrich's fast bowling cost him 40 runs off 5 overs, though he did take 2 wickets.Johnny Wardle (4/73) produced a middle order collapse from 195/2 to 234/7 withVic Wilson helping him with three catches. When Hassett came in to bat Tyson was brought on and took an outrageously long run up before bowling a slowdonkey drop. He then bowled a real bouncer that hit Hassett on the hand before catching him offLen Hutton's leg spin (3/15) for a 31 run victory.[7]
On theMCC tour of Australia in 1958–59 Prime MinisterRobert Menzies had five Australian captains in his team;Lindsay Hassett,Ian Johnson,Arthur Morris,Ian Craig andRay Lindwall, the all-rounderSam Loxton and aVictorian wicket-keeper called Les Botham. They batted first and the opener Morris hit 14 boundaries in his 79 and Brian James, a New South Wales Country player hit 5 sixes in his 88 before retiring hurt.Tom Graveney took 2/38 with his leg-spin andJim Laker 2/61. They declared on 288/7 off 38 eight-ball overs in two hours and thirty-five minutes, leaving the MCC roughly the same number of overs in slightly less time.Peter Richardson was out for a duck to Lindwall,Ted Dexter thrashed 76 before hitting his wicket andColin Cowdrey struck 101 runs in 84 minutes with 10 boundaries to win the match by four wickets. After the victory the MCC batted on to entertain the crowd and Cowdrey reached his century before he was caught by Hassett off Morris (4/46), who ran through the lower order with his part-time leg-spin and they were all out for 332.
6 February 1963 scorecard |
v | ||
MCC win by 3 runs Manuka Oval,Canberra,Australia Umpires: G.F. Connelly (AUS) and J.G. Humphries (AUS) |

In theMCC tour of Australia in 1962–63 there was intense anticipation for the match against the Prime Minister's XI as the 54-year-oldSir Donald Bradman agreed to captain the team after 14 years without playing cricket. The thorough man that he was Bradman started practicing for the big day and 10,000 men, women and children came to see him bat for the last time. His old foe the MCC assistant-managerAlec Bedser agreed to play and the Bradman Pavilion was unveiled at theManuka Oval. TheAustralian Prime MinisterRobert Menzies was a keen cricket fan who initiated these matches in 1951 and the money raised was donated toLegacy, a charity for the dependents of deceased Australian servicemen.Ted Dexter won the toss and elected to bat with Bradman fielding at first slip they rattled the fence with 36 fours and birthday-boyFred Trueman hit a six.David Sheppard top-scored with 72 andColin Cowdrey made 42.Richie Benaud took 2/62 off 8 overs, but the bowling honours went to the Canberra leg-spinner G. Brown, who took 3/61. Dexter nicked a ball off Brown toWally Grout, but was called back by Bradman when he walked as the umpire gave him not out. "Lord Ted" lofted the next ball to Cowper at extra-cover and walked off for 22. Dexter declared the innings at 253/7, leaving the Prime Minister's XI 254 to win andBob Cowper (47) andRay Flockton (45) got the home team off to a good start with 7 boundaries apiece. They had both departed and the score was 108/3 when the name of Bradman came up on the board and the great man in abaggy green cap walked out to the crease to a standing ovation, surrounded by photographers and greeted by the England team.Tom Graveney's leg-spin got him off the mark with a straight-drive and in the next over fromBrian Statham the Australian politicianDon Chipp hit a single to put Bradman on strike. Although it was the intention of the MCC to let Bradman get some runs, and to bat against Bedser, Statham bowled a leg-cutter that came off the inside edge, brushed the pads and bounced onto the stumps with just enough force to dislodge a bail and the Don was out. Statham threw up his hands in anguish and the crowd was stunned, but "the little man, after one brief look back at his broken wicket, walked quickly away, the step firm, the head erect, but the shoulders, one thought, now slightly stooped. He had made one scoring stroke, for four. The crowd watched him go and sighed. How much they wanted just a half-hour, at least, of him—as the Englishmen had."[8] In his last Test 14 years before he had been bowled byEric Hollies for a duck, four runs short of a Test average of 100.00. He reached the pavilion to the commiserations of the Prime Minister and theDuke of Norfolk and told them "It wouldn't happen in a thousand years. Anyway that's my final appearance at the wicket."[3] After this the rest of the match was an anticlimax.Neil Harvey was out for 3 and the PM's XI were 123/6 beforeRichie Benaud (63) andKen Mackay (49) restored the situation, butDavid Allen (5/68) took three quick wickets, G. Brown was unable to bat so the PM's XI were out for 250 and the MCC won by 3 runs.Robert Menzies invited both teams to dinner and at the end of his speech presented a delightedFred Trueman with a silver tankard as a birthday present from the Australian people. The Duke joked to the Prime Minister "I suppose you know you've just destroyed the disciplinary labours of several months?"[9][10][11]
On theMCC tour of Australia in 1965–66 thePrime Minister of AustraliaRobert Menzies had ateam that consisted of Australian Test players such asWally Grout,Alan Connolly andBob Cowper, retired veteransNeil Harvey,Richie Benaud andJim Burke, young talent likeKeith Stackpole and the teenagedPaul Sheahan as well as the famous West Indian fast bowlerWes Hall. Benaud captained the team and fulfilled 90% of his duties by winning the toss and choosing to bat. Thanks to Burke (79), Sheahan (60), Benaud (45) and Stackpole (32 not out) the Prime Minister's XI hit 288/7 in 35 overs, with the wickets shared amongst the touring bowlers withJeff Jones taking 2/21,David Larter 2/43 andBob Barber 2/72. The declaration came halfway through the day and the MCC's 289/8 also took 35 overs, though they passed 200 for the loss of two wickets asGeoff Boycott made 95 before he was run out,Colin Cowdrey 52 andM.J.K. Smith 51 not out. Eight bowlers were used, but the best was Jim Burke who took 2/5, dismissingJohn Murray and Jones for ducks in the closing minutes of the match.
In 2016 an annual Governor-General's XI was introduced for women cricketers, inspired by the prime-minister's XI. It was first instigated bygovernor-generalPeter Cosgrove, who offered to support such a match after hearing that no prime minister's XI existed for female cricket. The first match was a Twenty20 match held atDrummoyne Oval against India.[12][13]
35°19′05″S149°08′06″E / 35.318°S 149.135°E /-35.318; 149.135