The 37-year-old veteran batsman made 55 in each innings of the second Test in Brisbane where the hosts won by four wickets to take a 2-0 lead in the four-match series.
"To go out and play in a second Boxing Day Test, that's something you dream of and can't take away. Hopefully, I can get a score because I do like playing here. A hundred in a Boxing Day Test, as it was last year, would be as good as it gets," said Rogers.
At the Gabba last week, Rogers struck 10 boundaries in each knocks, and his second-innings 55 came off just 57 balls as Australia posted an easy win.
Australia lost six wickets in the chase of 128 but Rogers said the team's attacking approach was a deliberate ploy.
"Those short chases are always a little bit tricky and I think you've got to try and get them done quickly," he said.
The fourth-innings specialist has scored two centuries and two fifties in nine innings while batting the second time in a match at an average of just under 50, compared to his overall mark of 35.94.
His best last-day performance in Test cricket came against South Africa in Port Elizabeth in February, when he fought tooth and nail against a rampaging Dale Steyn and Co to score 107 out of Australia's total of 216.
"The new ball tends to do more at the beginning of the game and then it settles down. I think also it helps when I have a target in mind. I know exactly what I need to do and I can kind of tailor the way I play to what needs to happen.
