Josh Brown’s BBL cameo is a reminder of the quality hiding in plain sight in Australian Premier Cricket

By Flea / Roar Rookie

The Big Bash League came under fire during the COVID-impacted 2020-21 and 2021-22 seasons, as the increased presence of non-state-contracted replacement players plucked from club cricket became a recurring point of criticism with fans (and a particular broadcaster).

Suddenly, the memories of players like Ricky Ponting, Shane Warne, AB de Villiers and Lasith Malinga in the BBL seemed distant, and our screens were filled with names that only the keenest of cricket observers could distinguish the local players from the imports.

Josh Brown’s instantly memorable 62 off just 23 balls at the Gabba on New Year’s Day was a fresh reminder of the quality lurking amongst the cricketers we’ve never heard of in local Premier Cricket.

The BBL has plenty of challenges – length of season and the effect this has on the quality of available international players chief among them – but the cream of the crop at the next level down are more than capable of making an impact in the BBL, as Brown showed us on Sunday night.

Brown’s innings, seemingly out of nowhere in just his second BBL start, should be a call to action for Cricket Australia to get more serious about its “next level” of talent, in T20 cricket in particular.

(Photo by Russell Freeman/Getty Images)

India’s leading domestic T20 competition, the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, actually predates the Indian Premier League by a full season and features an incredible 38 teams of professional and semi-professional players.

Without the presence of global superstars like the IPL, the international attention is limited, but the quality of cricket is high, and the competition has become a nursery for developing Indian talent. Every year, new heroes emerge in the IPL; they are already household names to many Indian fans based on past exploits in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy.

Australia doesn’t have the population or the financial backing of cricket in India, obviously, but the desire to close the gap between club cricket and the BBL should be on the radar. A league or tournament restricted to Australian players only, played in addition to the Big Bash, could become a driving force behind increasing the quality of the local talent in the BBL, and eventually the national side.

With a T20 World Cup scheduled every two years through 2030, and the obvious trend of cricketing investment towards the shortest format of the game, it’s a logical next step to support the golden goose that is the BBL.

Most cricket fans are aware of the Top End T20, a 10-day tournament held in Darwin each winter, that attracts a range of Australia’s future stars, many of whom already have some state cricket and BBL experience. An expansion on this format creates a unique opportunity for Australia to continue developing the next crop of players to a high standard, while keeping the focus in the school holiday window on the BBL.

While a 38-team, multi-division competition to mimic that of India’s is well out of reach, a World Cup-style T20 tournament for the existing state programs could give Australia a realistic chance at replicating the multi-tiered professional T20 structure.

For Cricket Australia, creating additional opportunities for players to experience the pressure of knockout games in a higher-stakes, televised environment also bodes well for our future stars when they find themselves in the hot seat in global tournaments in the years ahead. The best way to prepare for the pressure-cooker of a knockout game on the biggest stage is to have played a few on a slightly smaller stage on the way through.

State and Australian-capped players wanting additional time in the middle, or returning from injuries, could add star power to such a competition. Broadcasters get more (quality) cricket for our screens, and a high-quality product can still be produced for TV without the exorbitant costs of a Test match or T20 fixture as the BBL showed us when nearby storms knocked out the main cameras at a game in Launceston three seasons ago.

With only limited cameras at their disposal for much of the game, viewers were still treated to a high-quality production. Cutting down on the number of cameras, playing more games across fewer venues to reduce set-up and take-down costs and doing away with luxury extras like ball tracking would keep production costs at a more reasonable level, without sacrificing too much of the viewer experience.

Sure – the usual concerns for any new league or competition, most of which are financial, apply here as much as ever. But if the BBL is to continue to drive revenues and keep Cricket Australia afloat in the years to come, investing in it’s future (and the future success of the national team in the shortest format) seems like the perfect place to start.

The Crowd Says:

2023-01-03T03:51:33+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I haven't been involved in grade cricket in Brissy for a long while but that doesn't surprise me. Hopefully I can re-engage soon

2023-01-03T01:36:11+00:00

Chum

Roar Rookie


Bryant is a good example of this, played in Cricket Australia XI back in 2018 so they've persisted with him for yonks - heaps of Brisbane cricket fans are filthy with the Heat for their selection policy for years, they see them picking the same old bunch of hacks from interstate and overseas and not trying any of the talent hiding in plain sight. Heat's efforts have been garbage for last few years so surely a change of course couldn't do any harm.

2023-01-02T07:15:27+00:00

Cooper Cricket

Roar Rookie


Such a really great article, I like it very much for that kind of good information about the topic. I read your all the articles. Thanks for sharing :happy:

AUTHOR

2023-01-02T00:56:29+00:00

Flea

Roar Rookie


Great shout, well said and I agree. Tim David should be the poster boy for what we’re missing out on if we write off anyone not in “the system” from a young age.

2023-01-02T00:12:54+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Professional Cricket in this country is obsessed with their ability to identify future stars at 17 years and younger. If you are not then it is nearly impossible to break through the glass ceiling. Big congrats to Brown to forcing his way in. I hope he knows that he cannot fail. Every game from now will be an excuse to drop him. At least Wade was talking to him after he batted. That is a good sign he is not just a full in.

AUTHOR

2023-01-02T00:04:08+00:00

Flea

Roar Rookie


Thanks Greg - delicate balance as always but I agree. You can perhaps keep both TV execs & burnt out international players happy and continuing to play the Big Bash by opening up more opportunities elsewhere. Paddy Dooley & Pete Hatzoglou two other names that spring to mind that we should be seeing more of.

AUTHOR

2023-01-02T00:01:48+00:00

Flea

Roar Rookie


I like the influence of international players in the BBL but agree 100% there is more young local talent that should be getting opportunities in televised matches.

AUTHOR

2023-01-02T00:00:55+00:00

Flea

Roar Rookie


Bryant was showing a lot of potential in years past but it’s been a while between drinks for him - agree the Heat probably waited too long to make a change given what we saw last night. Bryant another player who would benefit from more high-level T20 cricket on the calendar because there is obviously talent there!

2023-01-01T22:02:45+00:00

MKUltra

Roar Rookie


Both McSweeney and Brown should have been picked before Max Bryant,unsure why the heat persisted with Bryant for so long.

2023-01-01T21:26:18+00:00

Ray

Roar Rookie


The BBL should limit the international players to 1 batsman + 1 other. I am interested in watching young local players like Brown and especially McSweeney, not Billings, Vince and Whitely. McSweeney was very, very impressive last night and should have been picked before Renshaw in BBL.

2023-01-01T20:56:38+00:00

Greg shipperd

Guest


Great article a flea spot on we should be increasing playing opportunities for our talent not thinking of reducing matches at the whim of tv executives or players burnt out playing all over the world.

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