The New Zealand Herald

Williamson’s rush to get home a blow to Black Caps

Tom Latham to skipper side as Captain Kane returns to be with pregnant partner

- Dylan Cleaver in Wellington

In the spirit of next-man-up, others will now be responsibl­e for replacing the 251 runs left behind as Kane Williamson’s impending fatherhood has ruled him out of the second test against the West Indies.

Williamson had himself a day yesterday, attending a midwife appointmen­t with pregnant partner Sarah Raheem in the morning, returning to the squad in the afternoon with the intention of leading the side, only to return to Mt Maunganui later in the evening as things presumably advanced on the family front.

Tom Latham will captain the side, something he did in Williamson’s illness-enforced absence in Sydney earlier this year.

“It’s a decision we’ve come to around the best interest for him and Sarah. It’s important long term for him to be in a good place,” said coach Gary Stead of Williamson’s absence. “He’s not the first person to have a baby and miss a test match.”

Which is true but he is the first person to miss a test match on paternity leave following a matchwinni­ng double-and-a-half century. This New Zealand side takes pride in their ability to adjust on the fly and that will be the case as Will Young — “a natural replacemen­t” — drops down the order for Williamson.

Cursed seemingly by endless bad luck, the wheel has turned for Young. He owed his place in this series to first BJ Watling’s 11th-hour hamstring injury in Hamilton, and now by the wonders of procreatio­n.

He did it tough opening on a greentop against an in-form Shannon Gabriel but will hope to cash in over the next couple of days to put pressure on Stead to keep picking him if others fail.

Among the hubbub, there remains a test to win.

It has been 1363 days since New Zealand walked off a cricket field at home with the taste of defeat as bitter as the beer at the bottom of their postmatch bottles.

“It’s something we’re proud of, the way we play at home,” Stead said. “Every time we play here we want to be very, very hard to beat.”

Likewise, the West Indies must make themselves much harder to beat after capitulati­ng somewhat.

“This group has done some outstandin­g things in the last couple of years,” skipper Jason Holder said, predicting a big turnaround.

“A lot of discussion­s over the past couple of days and hopefully they come to fruition. We let ourselves down in that last test match and we’re all disappoint­ed in our performanc­e but we have to keep going. There’s so much to play for: personal pride, to level the series and points in the World Test Championsh­ip.

“I can’t fault the preparatio­n. We just have to start delivering.”

It all starts with the batting, he re-emphasised, somewhat curiously considerin­g they also conceded 519-7 on a green pitch in the first test.

In other matters: Watling is also fit again to take up residence behind the stumps and at No 6 in the order.

The West Indies are not so fortunate. Kemar Roach has returned to the Caribbean following the death of his father, and Shane Dowrich has not recovered from the finger injury he suffered in the first test, although one report listed his absence as being for “personal reasons”.

Watling’s presence will see Tom

Blundell back up to open with

Latham.

The only intrigue will be whether surname Mitchell gets the nod ahead of Christian name Mitchell for the allrounder’s slot.

Trying to get a read on the inscrutabl­e Stead is probably futile but perhaps the tea leaves are starting to spell Santner.

“It’s still unusual to go into test matches and not consider a spin option. We didn’t have one last game and Daryl Mitchell only bowled the two overs,” Stead said.

Spin was not missed in Hamilton and it will probably be secondary here, too. But with the wind forecast to blow hard there will be a temptation to have Santner as an option to rest the four-pronged seam attack while lifting the over rate and giving the West Indies something different to look at. On the flip side, Mitchell’s superior batting might be more important in Williamson’s absence.

The West Indies are likely to play Chemar Holder as a replacemen­t for Roach and will definitely hand a debut to keeper Joshua Da Silva who was described by his captain as a “vibrant” presence.

They could use some of that.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Kane Williamson will miss the Black Caps’ second test against West Indies.
Photo / Photosport Kane Williamson will miss the Black Caps’ second test against West Indies.

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