Trent Boult, left, and Matt Henry return to the Black Caps ODI squad to face Australia after missing the Indian one-dayers through injury.

The Black Caps will unleash a full-strength fast bowling unit on Australia in next week's Chappell-Hadlee Trophy one-day series.

Pace bowling spearheads Trent Boult, Matt Henry, and Lockie Ferguson return after missing the 3-0 ODI clean sweep of India through injury.

New Zealand have a chance to heal the wounds from their last visit to Australia in December-January, where they were outclassed 3-0 in the tests.

Boult (broken bone in right hand), Henry (broken thumb) and Ferguson (calf strain) were injured during the Australian test series, but have since returned to action.

READ MORE:

*Through fair and foul, Virat Kohli remains a must-watch cricketer

*Tim Southee labels Indian series win among most clinical of career

*Cricket superstar Virat Kohli fires back at swearing allegations

*Black Caps seamers bounce back after horrible tour of Australia

PAUL KANE/GETTY IMAGES Lockie Ferguson, playing beach cricket at Rottnest Island in Perth in December, returns from injury to boost the Black Caps ODI side to play Australia.

Left-arm swing king Boult was a standout in the Indian tests, getting better with each spell and captured 11 wickets at 19. Henry and Ferguson have both been playing domestic cricket.

Right-arm seamer Kyle Jamieson is retained after impressing in the Indian ODIs, then starring in New Zealand's 2-0 test series triumph over India.

New Zealand have named five frontline quicks for the three match series, starting next Friday in Sydney, with senior paceman Tim Southee also featuring.

Fast bowlers Hamish Bennett and Scott Kuggeleijn drop out from the squad that was selected to play India.

HANNAH PETERS/GETTY IMAGES Kyle Jamieson has been retained in New Zealand's ODI squad after making the most of his opportunities against India.

"It's great to welcome back the class of Trent, Matt, and Lockie, who spearheaded our run to the Cricket World Cup final last year," New Zealand coach Gary Stead said.

"Kyle's made every post a winner since his international debut this season and he'll be a handy asset to have in Australia."

The 15-man squad largely picked itself and includes 14 of the 15 players, who went to the 2019 Cricket World Cup.

Only opener Colin Munro, who wasn't named for the Indian ODIs is missing. Munro's ODI career appears over with Henry Nicholls preferred as Martin Guptill's opening batting partner and Tom Blundell offering batting cover.

Ish Sodhi remains as the legspinner over Todd Astle, who quit red ball cricket last month to push his New Zealand limited overs selection claims.

Left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner, dropped for the Indian test series, is the first-choice white ball spinner.

New Zealand are the holders of the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy, beating Australia 2-0 when the ODI series was last contested in 2017.

"Playing Australia in Australia is one of the great challenges in world cricket and you know you will be severely tested in all aspects of the game," Stead added.

"Our one-day unit is a pretty settled one with plenty of experience and I think that showed in the recent series against India.

"It's an honour to compete for the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy and I know it means a lot to the players to have the trophy in our cabinet."

Following the ODIs, the trans-Tasman rivals travel to New Zealand for a three match T20 series in Dunedin (March 24), Auckland (March 27) and Christchurch (March 29).

The Black Caps leave for Australia on Monday.

AT A GLANCE:

New Zealand ODI squad: Kane Williamson (c), Tom Blundell, Trent Boult, Colin de Grandhomme, Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Matt Henry, Kyle Jamieson, Tom Latham, Jimmy Neesham, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor.

Schedule: Friday March 13: at Sydney Cricket Ground.

Sunday March 15: at Sydney Cricket Ground.

Friday March 20: at Blundstone Arena, Hobart.