True, though my feeling was always why it didn't claim to be nationally representative. The Australian team was, and the MCC team was virtually full strength - I've not ever really understood why the team which played in Australia in 1877 was considered to be representative of England, but the MCC side of 1878 wasn't. I'm sure there was a reason (beyond getting rolled in a single day
) but I've just never discovered what it was.
The early visiting teams to England inherited from Clarke's and Parr's dying professional itinerants the title "All-England Eleven," which is about as representative as one can claim to be.
MCC, in contast, put out dozens of teams, of vastly varying quality, all season and every season, none of which claimed to represent England. CricketArchive lists 72 in 1878 alone.
It's really as trivial as that. There was no hypocrisy or conspiracy afoot.
In fact, we vastly overstate the representative quality of the team that played at Lord's in May 1878. It was powerful, but it wasn't the best English team available. Just compare it with the elevens of 1877 and 1880, and see how many names it has in common.
WG is the only member in the top ten batting averages for 1878. There's no John Selby, who headed that list; no Edward Lyttelton, who finished second; no Frank Penn, who finished third both in 1878 and 1877; and no Bunny Lucas, second in 1877.
Nor do we find Allan Steel, the best bowler in the country (and indeed, in 1878, one of the very last to achieve the feat of taking more than 100 FC wickets in a season at less than ten runs a pop). No George Ulyett either: probably the best all-rounder in the country.
As to the players we
do find in that side, how many of us have honestly heard of Clement Booth? Remove WG, and despite an median age in the mid-twenties, you get an average Test career of just 2.5 matches. A strong team, but not, I stress, a representative one.
Apart from anything else, this retrospective exaggeration of what the Australians faced in 1878 only belittles what they achieved in 1882.
(Sorry to be such a bore about this. My excuse is that I'm composing a book on the subject.)