RCB's Maxwell takes "mental and physical" break from IPL 2024
Maxwell's absence from RCB's match against Sunrisers Hyderabad in Bengaluru on Monday was initially attributed to a finger injury he suffered during the previous match against Mumbai Indians
PTI
Bengaluru, 16 April
Royal Challengers
Bengaluru all-rounder Glenn Maxwell has decided to take an indefinite
"mental and physical" break from the Indian Premier League, blaming
his wretched batting form for the decision.
Maxwell's absence
from RCB's match against Sunrisers Hyderabad here on Monday was initially
attributed to a finger injury he suffered during the previous match against
Mumbai Indians.
But he later
admitted to dropping himself from the squad. "It was a pretty easy
decision. I went to Faf and the coaches after the last game (vs Mumbai Indians)
and said it was probably time we tried someone else (in his place),"
Maxwell said in the post-match press meet.
"It's
actually a good time to give myself a bit of a mental and physical break, get
my body right. If I'm required to get in during the tournament, I can,
hopefully, get back into a solid mental and physical space where I can make an
impact," he added.
This is the second
time in his career that Maxwell has opted out of competitive cricket in order
to gather himself. He had taken a similar break in October 2019, stating that
he felt mentally and physically ruined at that time. The 35-year-old made his
comeback a couple of months later.
In the ongoing
IPL, Maxwell has been quite underwhelming with the bat in the six matches he
has played this season, contributing just 32 runs at an average of 5.33 and a
strike-rate of 94.
Twenty eight of
those 32 runs came against Kolkata Knight Riders alone, helped to a great
degree by two dropped catches. "I have been in this situation in the past
where you can keep playing and get yourself deeper into a hole. We have had a
pretty big deficiency after the power play, which has been my area of strength
over the last couple of seasons.
"I felt like
I wasn't contributing with the bat, and with the results and the position we
find ourselves on the table, I think it's a good time to give someone else an
opportunity to show their wares, and hopefully, someone can make that spot
their own," a candid Maxwell said.
The big-hitting
Australian, however, still hoped to return and make an impact in the later
stages of the tournament. "The management here has been outstanding. I
don't think I've had a better six months in cricket leading into this
tournament. "So, it's frustrating when it ends up like this. But if I can
get my body and my mind right, there's no reason I can't finish the tournament
well if I do get another opportunity," he said.
The sudden dip in
his form was surprising, considering the hot run he had in the run-up to the
IPL. Maxwell had made 552 runs from 17 T20Is from November onwards, averaging
42 and his strike-rate was an impressive 185.
But the Victorian
started the IPL with a first-ball duck against Chennai Super Kings in an away
match, and from that point his fortunes plummeted. "T20 cricket is a
pretty fickle game. Even if you look at the first game, I ran one off the
middle of the bat to the keeper. I picked up the length, saw a scoring
opportunity, but opened the face a little bit too much.
"When you are
going well, that goes wide of the (wicketkeeper's) gloves, you get a boundary.
You are 4 off 1, and you are away for the tournament," he noted.
Maxwell said luck
was not on his side in this tournament. "I probably just haven't got away.
In the first few games, I feel I made reasonably good decisions (for shot
selection). But I was finding ways to get out. "It can happen in T20
cricket and when it snowballs like that, you can go searching and try too hard
and forget the basics of the game," he said.
Maxwell
experienced a similar barren run in IPL 2020 while playing for Punjab Kings.
During that season, the Australian scored a mere 108 runs from 11 matches and
failed to hit a single six.
However, Maxwell
did not draw parallels between the two seasons. "I was
bowling really well back then. I was actually playing more as a spinner. We had
KL (Rahul) and Mayank (Agarwal) who were the two leading run-scorers at that
time. So, there
weren't a lot of balls left in the game (for him). I wasn't able to get any
match rhythm. So, I said the same thing to the Punjab management that we can
have an overseas bowler in my place. But we
didn't have an off-spinner, so, I sort of played as an overseas off-spinner who
could bat a little bit," he explained.
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