Cricket: NZ must shine without stars

Mike Hesson
Mike Hesson
A clutch of the hotshots won't be there, but there will be no excuses for poor performance by New Zealand on their limited-overs cricket tour to Africa next month.

The squad of 15 - including half a tour each for legspinner Ish Sodhi and seamer Doug Bracewell - does not include the names McCullum, (captain Brendon that is), Southee, Boult and Anderson. By no measure could it be called a full-strength team for the nine games in Zimbabwe and South Africa.

But quite rightly, coach Mike Hesson has high expectations of those players chosen. Coming back with tails between legs and mumbling about the missing star quartet won't wash.

Hesson cites two recent overseas trips - a 1-1 draw in Sri Lanka late in 2013 and a meritorious 3-2 win over Pakistan in the UAE late last year - when similarly undermanned teams performed creditably.

"There's a few different players, but we're still representing New Zealand, regardless of who is turning out," Hesson said.

"Whether players are missing through injury [Corey Anderson and Trent Boult] or workload management [McCullum and Tim Southee], those selected are still expected to do a good job. We have expectations of them to put in good performances."

Two 23-year-olds, Northern Districts allrounder Mitchell Santner and Central Districts left-arm seamer Ben Wheeler, made their starts on the recent tour to England and both caught the eye.

Hesson liked what he saw from both and is keen to get more cricket into them to further what for now is just high promise.

Santner played all five ODIs in England, batting between No 5 and No7 and taking seven wickets with his left-arm spin at a respectable rate, especially in a series which was all bat and no balls, so to speak.

Wheeler played three games in that series and with his ability to swing the new ball, reverse swing the old, allied to a lively bouncer, he displayed his potential.

His issue had been staying fit, given a catalogue of injury breaks. This trip shapes up as a big opportunity to push his case in a crowded fast-medium department.

Speedster Adam Milne, out since midway through the World Cup with a foot injury, and allrounder Jimmy Neesham, missing for just over five months with a stress fracture, are welcome returns while there is merit in splitting the tour between legspinner Ish Sodhi (for the Zimbabwean leg) and seamer Doug Bracewell (for South Africa only).

The tour will certainly be a test of New Zealand's depth. McCullum is coming to the end of his international days and the amount of cricket dictates the need to broaden the base.

"With the amount of cricket in three forms of the game you can't keep reeling out the same players. We need to find out about players and they still have to perform. That'll be another challenge for this group," Hesson said.

Stand-in captain Kane Williamson gets another chance to work on his leadership skills. That temporary tag is likely to disappear in around a year's time.

New Zealand squad to tour Zimbabwe and South Africa next month: Kane Williamson (c), Martin Guptill, Tom Latham, Ross Taylor, Grant Elliott, Colin Munro, Luke Ronchi, Jimmy Neesham, Mitchell Santner, Nathan McCullum, Ish Sodhi (Zimbabwe only), Doug Bracewell (South Africa only), Mitch McClenaghan, Matt Henry, Ben Wheeler, Adam Milne.

NZ tour schedule: Aug 2: 1st ODI v Zimbabwe, Harare; Aug 4: 2nd ODI v Zimbabwe, Harare; Aug 7: 3rd ODI v Zimbabwe, Harare; Aug 9: Only T20 v Zimbabwe, Harare; Aug 14: 1st T20 v South Africa, Durban; Aug 16: 2nd T20 v South Africa, Centurion; Aug 19: 1st ODI v South Africa, Centurion; Aug 23: 2nd ODI v South Africa, Potchefstroom; Aug 26: 3rd ODI v South Africa, Durban

By David Leggat of the New Zealand Herald

Add a Comment

OUTSTREAM