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Australian fans don’t care about a second-string one-day team. Who can blame them?

Australian fans don’t care about a second-string one-day team. Who can blame them?

To have this team go by the name of “Australia” was at best misleading and at worst an insult. That would have been so even if they had won. The public knew it well enough. The crowds for the series constituted no more than a smattering by the standards of this once wildly popular but now much diminished form of the game. The vast empty bleachers told their own tale.

It was as if these three one-dayers were being played to meet a contractual obligation. Which they were. They were part of no meaningful competition or championship, had no longer-term implications, furthered no tradition. At least one of the teams should have come with a disclaimer: contents are not necessarily as described on the label.

Glenn Maxwell after beating Afghanistan single-handedly in the 2023 World Cup.Credit: AP

This highlights a fundamental and intractable problem in cricket, particularly evident in this shoulder part of the season. Matches, series, formats, teams, tours come and go. There’s no shape to the fixture, no consistency, no organising principle.

Now an equally pointless three-match Twenty20 series trips over the heels of the one-day matches. Pakistan might be Pakistan, but “Australia” will be an approximation. Josh Inglis, also in the Test squad, will be captain until suddenly he’s required elsewhere. The identity of “Australia” will become more blurred still.

It’s not exclusively Australia’s issue. There are at least two Indias in or about to begin action, and several Englands, too. And it won’t change. It can’t. Too many interests are competing, too many needs must be propitiated. Some are even concerned with cricket.

Pakistan’s Muhammad Rizwan celebrates another win over Australia.

Pakistan’s Muhammad Rizwan celebrates another win over Australia.Credit: Getty Images

Into this vortex, whole careers disappear. A year ago this week, Glenn Maxwell played perhaps the most astonishing innings in 50-over history, making 201 not out on one leg to deliver Australia to victory over Afghanistan from a hopelessly lost position. It was unforgettable.

Since, Maxwell has played eight ODI innings and reached double figures twice. In three innings against Pakistan, he made two ducks. He’s put out as many books as he’s won games.

He’s made useful contributions in various Twenty20 affairs, international and domestic, but endured a wretchedly barren IPL season.

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Extraordinarily for a man still touted as a possibility for subcontinental Test tours next year, Maxwell has played two first-class matches in five years and no Test matches since 2017. This record is mitigated by a couple of nasty injuries, but nonetheless tells of a cricketer who has done well from the game, yet somehow has not been well served by it.

Maxwell appears here not as a scapegoat, but as an example. As long as the start of each new summer continues to be used as a clearing house for oddments of tours and other sundry commitments, some players will continue to find themselves lost between stools, many matches will disappear into the ether, never to be remarked upon again, and lots of fans will wonder why they are being asked to accept second best. Who could blame them?

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