'Less than ideal': Maxwell apologises for bender after mauling Windies with monster ton as Aussies clinch series

By Paul Suttor / Expert

The last time Glenn Maxwell made headlines for a big night out in Adelaide it was because he ended up in hospital after a Six and Out concert.

This time around the only people in danger of ending up needing medical treatment were the fans and the West Indies’ only hope of stopping him would have been a successful request for a law change to make it Six and Out for every time Maxwell cleared the boundary.

The Victorian veteran put on a power hitting masterclass at the Adelaide Oval on Sunday night to vanquish the Windies and clinch the three-match T20 series for Australia heading into Tuesday night’s finale in Perth. 

Australia broke the record for highest T20 score in Adelaide in racking up a mammoth 3-241 before the Windies tried hard but never seriously threatened the target in finishing on 9-207.

The match ended in bizarre fashion when Alzarri Joseph was run out by Spencer Johnson but umpire Gerard Abood didn’t call for a video review because no one appealed.

The Australians then tried to convince him that they had appealed after the big screen showed he was caught short – “I promise you, I appealed” claimed Tim David – but he refused to give him out even though the video evidence was conclusive for all to see.

Maxwell earlier monstered the touring bowlers to blast 120 runs from just 55 deliveries to become just the second player in T20 history after Rohit Sharma to register five international tons.

While the Indian skipper has accomplished the feat as an opener in 143 matches, Maxwell has primarily batted in the middle order and this was just his 94th appearance for Australia. 

He added he was thankful for the outstanding support he had received from Australian cricket heirarchy after the January 19 incident when he ended up in hospital after drinking heavily at an exhibition golf day then the Six and Out concert.

“I think probably it affected my family a little bit more than it affected me,” he said, describing the incident as “less than ideal”.

“I had that week off, I knew I had that week off away from the game. And I came back and got back into my running, my gym program and it felt really good and refreshed once I got back.

“And it’s all been focused on getting myself ready for this (T20) series and what’s to come. We know we have got four international games until the (T20) World Cup and how it comes around pretty quick. And I just try to make sure I’m in as good a space that I can be for that tournament.”

His blazing innings featured 12 fours and eight sixes, including some of the more improbable shots you could hope to see on a cricket field.

A switch-hit for six in the direction of what was cover and then became mid-wicket travelled 89 metres, which would be a great shot for any natural left-hander let alone someone who switched positions midway through the delivery. 

He actually took a while to get going, scoring just four runs from his first five balls but after launching a sweetly timed six over midwicket off the spin of Akeal Hosein, “The Big Show” was thrilling the spectators and putting them in danger of being hit by a small white projectile travelling at great speed.

Maxwell twice peppered the upper deck of the Adelaide Oval grandstands as he sprinted to triple figures – he needed 25 for his first 50 runs and the same amount of deliveries to ton up. 

The Aussies were in a spot of bother at 3-64 before Maxwell clicked into top gear.

Josh Inglis went early after flicking a pull shot to the deep on four, captain Mitch Marsh scorched his way to 29 off 12 deliveries before top-edging to mid-on and David Warner threatened to go big after reverse-hitting his third ball for six but skied a heave on 22. 

Maxwell first found an ally in Marcus Stoinis, who was content to rotate the strike in contributing 16 in a 78-run partnership, before Tim David joined in the late fireworks with 31 from 14 in a 95-run partnership in a little more than six overs.

With his powerful forearms working overtime as he flicked decent deliveries into the boundary and beyond, Maxwell looked exhausted after his flurry of fantastic shots, although not quite to the point where he couldn’t walk due to cramps like his epic World Cup double-hundred against Afghanistan.

“It was good fun, that’s for sure,” he said in an interview with Fox Cricket immediately after walking off. “I just gave myself a chance – it’s a really nice wicket, it’s always good batting here at Adelaide Oval. 

“It was nice to cash in and spend most of the time out there. When it’s not doing too much you’re thinking in your brain you’ve got to make the most of this opportunity. You don’t get too many of them in T20 cricket when you’ve got a couple of short square boundaries and the wicket is really nice and true, and you’ve given yourself a good platform.

“I’ve always relied on my hand speed to get me out of trouble if my footwork’s a little bit slow. I just wanted to give myself the best chance to use my hands to guide it into the gaps or over the infield. It really seemed to work for me today.”

He brought up his ton by smashing a drive through cover in the 19th over and in concert with David, they plundered 25 from the final over of the innings from Andre Russell.

“Magnificent innings,” said Mike Hussey on Fox Cricket commentary. “He started to find pretty much every corner of this Adelaide Oval, the boundary of it.

“He’s just ridiculously hard to bowl to. They pitched it up and he hit them over mid-wicket. They bowled wide and he hit them over point. He batted left-handed, he played scoops, he showed power, he showed touch. He showed timing, he showed poise, he showed technique at times.”

Faced with the near-impossible task of needing to score at more than two runs per ball, the Windies did not worry about getting in a few sighters with opener Johnson Charles sending Jason Behrendorff the distance from the first ball he faced.

Opening partner Brandon King perished on four to Josh Hazlewood when he found David just inside the rope and Nicholas Pooran (18) fell in Spencer Johnson’s first over when sub fielder Aaron Hardie nearly made a meal of a straightforward catch.

Charles (24) and Shai Hope (duck) departed in the sixth over, Stoinis’ first trundle for the night, and when Johnson nicked off Sherfane Rutherford with a peach of a leg-cutter without scoring, the Windies’ minute chances had been extinguished at 5-63.

Russell slammed 37 off 16 before he became Stoinis’ third victim from a mistimed shot to midwicket before skipper Rovman Powell continued the counter-attack with a rousing 63 off 36.

Powell looked in great touch as he smacked five fours and four sixes but hit possibly the worst ball he faced, a full toss from Adam Zampa, to Inglis at long on.

Hosein went first ball to a Hazlewood yorker before Jason Holder capitalised on the run out that wasn’t to hook Stoinis for six in the final over. Stoinis then tried to make up for the earlier missed opportunity by running him out from the last ball after he defended down the wicket but the throw was too late and the ball ricocheted away for four overthrows.

Maxwell’s memorable knock

* Reached ton from 50 balls, the fastest T20 international scored in Australia
* Previous fastest in Australia was from 52 balls, by South African Rilee Rossouw against Bangladesh in Sydney during 2022 World Cup
* Maxwell (102 T20Is) joins India’s Rohit Sharma (151 T20Is) with the most centuries – five – in T20I history
* All of Maxwell’s T201 tons are unbeaten: 145no v Sri Lanka, Pallakele, September 2016
120no v West Indies, Adelaide, February 2024
113no v India, Bengaluru, February 2019
104no v India, Guwahati, November 2023
103no v England, Hobart, February 2018

* Maxwell, Aaron Finch and Josh Inglis hold the Australian record for fastest T20 century, 47 balls
* Maxwell’s other T20 centuries have come from 49 balls, 50 balls (twice) and 58 balls
* The fastest T20I century ever is from 34 balls, by Kushal Malla for Nepal against Mongolia in September 2023.
* The next quickest is from 35 balls, by David Miller (South Africa), Sharma (India) and Sudesh Wickramasekara (Czech Republic) with AAP

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-15T01:35:52+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Hmm That Chris Lynn six doesn't get to second tier with a bat from 20 years ago. And yes, Brett Lee hit one out of the Gabba 20 years ago, but it was with a bat now banned. No traditional bat could hit a ball that far

2024-02-15T01:34:34+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Of course it makes a ball go further. That is basic maths. The only reason why it doesn't practically go further is because they've traded down 33% weight but the ball still travels the same distance. If these less dense bats weighed the same as one in the 30's (but had modern day density) then the hits would be routinely going 550ft and the stadiums would be too small. I accept they've allowed the cricket bats to become too thick, but baseball bats were allowed to become thick so they could be lighter. Swinging a 1.5kg bat instead of a 1kg bat is like driving without power steering. What happened in baseball was that you could still use the same stadiums, so it was a neutral outcome. In cricket it's definitely become ridiculous. I don't disagree with your point, just calling out the fact that baseball bats have changed. What cricket needs to do is make a call that baseball made. Either you trade weight for thickness or vice versa. If the bats were half a pound lighter this should be a fairer contest between bat and ball. A well hit ball would still be a six, and a top edge should be caught at third man.

2024-02-15T01:12:11+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


True, they are lighter but it doesn’t make the ball go further. It changed due to a preference for bat speed over weight, it’s simply not easy just to make contact. They hit more home runs these days but they make contact less often than even 20 years ago, but they don’t hit home runs any further than Ruth or Mantle did. In cricket they’ve allowed the bats to become way too thick.

2024-02-15T01:01:39+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Of course there is some great hitting but a lot of mishits are going for six. I repeat what I said above about Wade’s shot and others. If you look at replays ODIs from the 80s and 90s you’ll see players hitting the ball with the same power and timing and it goes about 3/4 of the distance, if that.

2024-02-14T01:51:08+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


#DaveJ What we see in T20 is a lot of shots that wouldn't normally be paid. They are high risk but also high reward. They are often leveraging the bowlers pace. Look at Chris Lynn's monster of Shaun Tait a few years back - - it was accentuated by helping it on its way, and getting under it. re Maxwell - - so many of the shots he plays are just exceptional regarding his wrists and the flicking of the bat like a baton is just exceptional strength and versatility (just a shame we'll never see him in a test on home soil........).

2024-02-13T22:18:29+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Yep, scored a century in India, then two poor tests and gone. Never played a test at home. Made to play every position from opener to 8 in his first seven tests.

2024-02-13T05:20:39+00:00

Frodo

Roar Rookie


Reckon the hat full wins.

2024-02-13T01:51:22+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


It’s the same problem in so many sports. The governing bodies just let manufacturers run rampant. Golf is now finally making changes.

2024-02-13T01:49:20+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


Reckon Maxy would be entrenched in every other Test eleven in the world. We don’t appreciate just how good he is.

2024-02-13T01:45:32+00:00

Nathan Tee

Roar Rookie


You are as funny as a hat full of A holes :sick:

2024-02-13T01:41:28+00:00

Nathan Tee

Roar Rookie


You are as funny as a hat full of A holes

2024-02-13T01:38:46+00:00

Nathan Tee

Roar Rookie


Why is Australia's best Batsman by far not in the Test Team? All our batters apart from Head are strugglers atm.

2024-02-13T01:30:46+00:00

Tufanooo

Roar Rookie


Hmm, not really. Baseball bat dimensions have remained the same, but baseball bats are now about a third lighter than they were 70-80 years ago. The same technology that's gone into a cricket bat has happened for baseball bat. A cricket bat is the same weight but bigger. A baseball bat is the same size but lighter. Same outcome. Both baseball and cricket bats are now less dense.

2024-02-13T00:20:06+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You've spent almost a day thinking about me, and can only come up with that? Haunting, isn't it?

2024-02-13T00:05:45+00:00

Frodo

Roar Rookie


Head. Sand. When it suits. Bravo.

2024-02-12T23:59:10+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You were the one who asked. If you don't like the answer, blame those Vics.

2024-02-12T22:52:02+00:00

Frodo

Roar Rookie


The most hilarious of your diatribes are typed with a straight face I'm sure. Someone so full of themselves like you has no sense of humour, that'd get in the way of your smug, righteousness.

2024-02-12T22:48:43+00:00

Frodo

Roar Rookie


Same tired ol' schtick, Donsy. You have nothing else and are too old to change. Are you talking about WA? The bestest, greatest state side ever who could easily miss the finals of both Marsh Cup and Sheffield Shield? Or the Scorchers? Who got rolled despite home ground advantage with a full house of feral fans and missed the BBL Final! Your cherry picking doesn't fool anyone, Donsy! Looking forward to your excuse. Did Stevic umpire that game the Scorchers lost?

2024-02-12T07:57:44+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Agreed. Especially some of the sixes. Wade hit one in the first match that came off the bottom of his bat. Would have been caught 20 metres or more in from the boundary before 2000. Hate to sound like a crusty old timer but it’s become silly. The one Maxwell hit left handed going for 89 metres didn’t seem to have much batspeed on it. Baseball is much better at keeping things comparable over time - bats have to made in same dimensions from the same wood as 120 years ago.

2024-02-12T07:29:54+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Are you talking about the Vics that lost by an innings and 53 runs to WA in the Shield, the Vics who lost their 50 over Marsh Cup game to WA in only 23 overs or is it the 2 Vic BBL sides that finished 6th and 7th of 8 teams?

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