Calamitous miss as Lucknow botch near certain run out with the game on the line
With Rajasthan needing 25 off 17, both batsmen ended up at the same end but the bowler dropped the throw from his teammate -…
Glenn Maxwell is a World Cup hero (again!), following his remarkable batting feats – including at least one batting feat that was accomplished without functioning batting feet – in the recently concluded tournament.
But with the men’s Big Bash League due to start later this week, we look back and celebrate the other end of the spectrum of Maxwell’s mad magnificence, in this excerpt from The Roar writer Dan Liebke’s new book, The 100 Funniest Moments in Australian Cricket, available now in all good bookstores and online.
Glenn Maxwell has more cricket shots in his arsenal than most. He can play all the standard textbook cricket strokes, but obviously finds them dull. (A cricket textbook? Boring. A bunch of rules. Down with skool!)
Maxwell also reverse-sweeps as a matter of course, of course, using the shot to manoeuvre the field into places where he wants them. Occasionally, he switch-hits, becoming a left-hander for just long enough to get under the ball and loft it for six to what is now his cow corner and was previously deep cover. There’s also a kind of sliced lofted drive-cut thing where even as he connects with the ball he’s rolling his wrists with the delivery so that the ball fades over the field and then swerves away from them at the last moment, like an obnoxious jet skier.
All in a day’s innings for Maxwell.
But Maxwell’s finest, funniest and famousest shot was not a shot at all. It was a leave during the Big Bash in 2014. After Cameron White had fallen to the Brisbane Heat’s Ryan Duffield, Maxwell strode to the crease. The Melbourne Stars were 1/5 in the first over, chasing 165 for victory.
Maxwell, as ever, looked to begin his innings aggressively. And then, as never, changed his mind. He shuffled down the pitch, slightly towards the leg side, raised his bat, left the ball and watched, as startled as the rest of us, as the ball smashed his stumps.
This wasn’t a standard misjudgement of a delivery. You know the kind, where a ball is well outside off stump and the batter leaves it, only for it to seam or swing further than expected and clip the off stump. No, Maxwell doesn’t do anything that run-of-the-mill. This was a muddle-headed decision to leave a ball that was pretty much always going to crash straight into middle and leg.
WATCH MAXI’S INCREDIBLE LEAVE HERE
The Maxwell leave stunned everybody who saw it. Channel Ten’s coverage cut straight to Damien Fleming and Adam Gilchrist in the commentary box, mouths agape and momentarily dumbstruck. The clip of the footage went viral, allowing dumbstruck agapedness to spread across the cricketing world.
Maxwell – the master cricket comedian, who has moulded funny cricket out of all manner of nonsense – had done it again. Like a jazz musician, sometimes it’s the shots you don’t play.
(* update: or was, at the time of writing. Since then, of course, he’s surpassed that T20 century with his somehow even more mad World Cup double ton against Afghanistan. As long as Maxwell is playing cricket, nonsense moments will flow…)
If you like Dan’s report cards, you’ll enjoy his latest book, The 100 Funniest Moments in Australian Cricket, available now in all good bookstores and online HERE. (If you don’t like Dan’s report cards, you still might like the book. Because you’re a complicated individual.)