Want to watch Shaheen Afridi bowl? Peer through the fence

It’s Saturday two days out for Christmas, and it’s easy to miss the cricket at the Junction Oval

Danyal Rasool23-Dec-2023″So how do we get in?”An avid reader of this website, out on a stroll with his parents on a sleepy Saturday afternoon, appears to recognise the ESPNcricinfo journalist peering through the chain-link fence at the game of cricket going on at the ground.He’s informed that he can’t get in; this two-day tour game put on for Pakistan at the Junction Oval against a Victorian XI cobbled together out of players not part of the Big Bash League was a fairly last-minute arrangement.The family seems thoroughly unimpressed by this answer, which feels thinner every time you say it out loud. It is an explanation I’ll have to repeat several times during the day, with pockets of spectators showing up throughout the afternoon and wondering why they’re being shut out.Related

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The official explanation is the venue hasn’t had enough notice to get sufficient staff in to open up to fans or even media. Cost is also understood to be a factor, and as such, the game – the only real match practice the visiting side will have between the first two Tests – is essentially unconsumable: no entry, no live stream, no highlights. If you want to watch Shaheen Shah Afridi bowl, you show up to St Kilda and peer through the fence.

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It isn’t so much that the Junction Oval creeps up on you, but for a ground that has an international side partaking in an ongoing match, it is fairly easy to miss. It’s a Saturday two days out from Christmas, and the holiday season has fully kicked in now. It’s an idyllic day in Melbourne, warm and sunny with an invigorating sea breeze to freshen up the late morning air. Most people who board one of the trams heading that way are off to St Kilda beach, the pier and the surrounding market street a much bigger tourist draw than a nondescript cricket game. Get off at the right stop, and the signs all tell you how to get to the beach, none pointing you towards the Junction Oval.It feels like a well-to-do, trendy neighbourhood; the hustle of the city centre is all but non-existent. Leafy green spaces abound, with parks and football fields dotted around walking paths and cycling trails. A group of teenage boys kick an AFL ball around; this very much feels more like AFL-country than cricket county. A young girl, wearing a Matildas replica jersey, kicks a football around with her dad. A pair of retrievers struggle to break free from their leashes, and all hell briefly breaks loose when one of them does, galloping happily around the field.And then you stumble upon it, almost by accident. It could easily be just another quaint ground putting on a casual Saturday game. But then you see a tall left-arm fast bowler building up steam, the unmistakable action, the high release point. It’s Shaheen Shah Afridi.