Manawatu Standard

Crowe’s record looms for Taylor

‘Please explain’

- MARK GEENTY

Someone had to say it.

Ross Taylor rose from his seat, cast an eye to the centre of the Basin Reserve and remarked with a grin: ‘‘Which one is it?’’

The emerald green test pitch stared back from the centre of the block, barely discernibl­e from the outfield, as has become customary in recent Wellington tests when visiting batsmen almost take fright.

Bangladesh fast bowler Taskin Ahmed, a likely debutant in the first test, liked it from his vantage point, too. ‘‘The bowlers are pretty happy; it’s greenish and hard, good to bowl on. We’re going to enjoy it,’’ he said.

Should New Zealand be sent in to bat on Thursday by Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim, Taylor will have to toil hard against the visiting pacemen to draw level with his late mentor, Martin Crowe.

In his 79th test, Taylor sits on 16 centuries after his 102 not out against Pakistan in his previous internatio­nal innings in Hamilton in November. Crowe’s tally of 17 stood for more than two decades; and with five home tests upcoming against Bangladesh and South Africa there’s every chance Taylor will be sit atop the tree at the end of March.

‘‘A lot of other people have probably brought it up. Even people in the supermarke­t come up and mention it,’’ Taylor said in the Norwood Room of the Basin Reserve.

‘‘When Hogan [Crowe] gave me some of the records he wanted me to break, it was more of a motivation in the background. Sometimes you play cricket and just meander along. That’s when the goals come into it.

‘‘At the moment I’m pretty happy with where my game’s at and if I can get myself in and play well, if the hundred comes it comes Miffed. Annoyed. Angry.

One or more of those adjectives could have described Ross Taylor this past fortnight over his treatment by New Zealand Cricket, in particular the chief executive, David White. Sound familiar? This time, though, Taylor settled for ‘‘disappoint­ed’’ when discussing his omission from the Black Caps Twenty20 side, before NZC blocked his path into the Australian Twenty20 Big Bash League Melbourne derby on January 1.

It prompted Taylor to have conversati­ons with coach Mike Hesson, then White, in search of an explanatio­n before he rejoined the New Zealand squad for the first test against Bangladesh starting

and if not I’ll continue to try and be as consistent as possible.’’

Taylor’s career numbers are stellar, shaded by captain Kane Williamson’s run gorge of the past two years. He’s just 162 short of 6000 test runs at an average of 46.7, and arrives in Wellington with clear vision after surgery to remove a growth on his eye in December. ‘‘I’m confident in it. It’s getting better each week and it will continue to get better the next couple of months.’’

He declared the Basin one of his favourite grounds, and in nine tests there Taylor averages 55.9 including centuries against India (2009) and West Indies (2013). It hasn’t always been a field of dreams, though.

In 2012 he retired hurt for 18 after having his hand broken by a Morne Morkel bouncer, and last February he missed the Australia test due to a side strain. Taylor also missed the Brendon Mccullum triple century test against India in 2014 due to the birth of his second in Wellington on Thursday.

‘‘When I missed out Gav [Larsen, national selector] gave me a call and I had a chat with Hess. They gave their reasons,’’ Taylor said.

‘‘In the BBL, Hess was all for me going but David [White] had other reasons. He didn’t want me to go with the play-travel rule, and he didn’t think it was a good idea with such a big summer ahead.

‘‘I had a chat with him. He had his reasons. As it worked out I probably wouldn’t have played anyway with the side strain. It is what it is.

‘‘It would have been nice to play in front of 70-odd thousand in the Melbourne derby but New Zealand Cricket have got their protocols on play-travel and you’ve got to respect that.’’

child, son Jonty.

The Basin will be a bowl first for whichever captain wins the toss but the Black Caps know it will flatten out in a hurry after a spicy opening session or two, as happened against Australia. The bounce should also cause Bangladesh headaches when they bat, after they struggled to post any competitiv­e scores in six limited overs defeats.

‘‘Over the last few years they haven’t played a lot of test cricket away from home so it’s going to be difficult on that wicket. We can’t take them lightly and I’m sure their fast bowlers will be licking their lips. When there is a bit of green grass it brings the teams a bit closer together,’’ Taylor said.

Bangladesh management confirmed they had a full squad to choose from, with Mushfiqur cleared to keep wicket after a hamstring injury, and opener Imrul Kayes given a clean bill of health after whacking his knee on an advertisin­g hoarding in Tauranga.

 ?? PHOTO: FAIRFAX NZ ?? Ross Taylor sits poised just one behind Martin Crowe’s New Zealand record of 17 test centuries.
PHOTO: FAIRFAX NZ Ross Taylor sits poised just one behind Martin Crowe’s New Zealand record of 17 test centuries.

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