harsh.ag
Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
Maxwell scores 41 off his last 13 balls (83* off 45 in total) to chase down 169 for the Melbourne Stars.
His form in Big Bash:
83(39)
2(3)
43(25)
0*(0)
1(2)
40*(32)
59*(37)
83*(45)
After the game, suggests the selectors were probably right to drop him from the ODI squad to India.
His form in Big Bash:
83(39)
2(3)
43(25)
0*(0)
1(2)
40*(32)
59*(37)
83*(45)
After the game, suggests the selectors were probably right to drop him from the ODI squad to India.
Speaking after the win over the Renegades, Maxwell said he wasn’t trying to make a statement to selectors.
“No, not really, this is T20 cricket, they’re playing one-day cricket,” Maxwell said.
“One-day cricket is completely different. They were probably right, my World Cup wasn't good enough and I'll just keep trying to do as well as I can for the Stars and keep leading them to wins.”
The Stars captain said he had benefited greatly from his layoff late last year, feeling he was now free to be himself.
“I’ve had no baggage coming in. I think back to the break I had and I’m so thankful that Cricket Australia and all the powers that be were able to grant me that break [to] get myself right, because I think I’m starting to see the benefits now. I’ve got no demons in my head. I’ve been able to sort of get everything off my chest,” he said.
“I might not train like everyone else. I go in the nets and try and hit my first five or six balls for six because that’s the way I warm up. Some people don’t like that, that’s not the way everyone goes about it.”
Maxwell was 42 not out from 32 balls against the Renegades before unleashing late in his innings. He said he had improved his ability to time a run chase.
“I think as a middle-order player you make a lot of mistakes and you're generally the brunt of, I suppose, criticism for not getting the team over the line or playing a silly shot at the wrong time. And I suppose I’ve just got better at choosing my moment, choosing my area a little bit better and staying a bit more calm," Maxwell said.
“It's almost a spider theory, [bowlers are] more scared of you than you are of them. I think in the past I've sort of gone, ‘oh what if they hit a bunch of yorkers and then I'm behind’, and that sort of internal panic sort of starts. So I feel like I've sort of taken that away a little bit and just sort of been able to keep calm and work with my partner.”