Another reason why is because of what’s just happened in the lines above: resorting to a statistic to capture a sense of the six. This is increasingly how we think about sixes now. It’s one of the by-products of the two T20 world titles West Indies won, this metricising of the six, the treating of it as a cold, hard numerical tool of strategy. Hit more sixes than the other side and forget finding gaps or running doubles and being efficient by minimising dot balls.It has been paralleled to basketball’s shift in emphasis to the three-pointer: like the six, the riskier option, but with the greater payoff. Hitting a six, like the three-pointer, is riskier because it requires superior skill. It’s more difficult to get right. And the more people have started getting it right, the more that sense of risk has been diluted. Batters practice hitting sixes like never before, working their bodies into the best shape possible to hit more: these days, a six comes across less like a cut-throat choice and more like a data point in big science.To be clear, it’s not. Data hasn’t killed the six, it has just led to it becoming normalised. Which is fine, because to no format is data more intrinsic than to T20. Each six that is hit remains every bit a product of all that is wondrous about athletes, in the skills they possess and the risks they are willing to take. It’s just that it sometimes needs the circumstances in which Asif and Miller hit their sixes, or the showstopping skill of Buttler, to be reminded of it.

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