Weekend Herald

NZC extend Kookaburra ball contract

Bowlers can benefit from using the existing ball, writes David Leggat

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New Zealand will use Kookaburra balls for at least the next three years, after re-signing with the Australian manufactur­ers.

There had been questions over whether Kookaburra’s time was up and that the interloper from England, Duke, would be preferred. This was on the back of repeated problems with the balls frequently going out of shape, often after just a handful of overs, during the past two seasons.

The contract is an extension of the arrangemen­t under which Kookaburra have been New Zealand’s major ball providers for at least the past two decades.

New Zealand Cricket has decided to stick with the ball they know, which might not impress the country’s fastmedium bowlers, who relish the Duke’s hard, more pronounced seam. Batsmen prefer the Kookaburra, which tends to lose its bowler-friendly properties earlier than its English counterpar­t.

NZC high performanc­e boss Bryan Stronach said the decision on the ball was part of an overall position taken around a range of elements including pitch quality and what it wants for its leading cricketers.

“It’s how we best develop our players and, at the very highest level, how we win games of cricket. That’s the two things we look at,” Stronach said.

“It’s about how we prepare our pitches, how much the ball does from both a bowling and batting point of view and the skills we need to develop around that.”

It’s how we best develop our players and, at the very highest level, how we win games of cricket. That’s the two things we look at. NZC high performanc­e boss Bryan Stronach

Stronach acknowledg­ed it’s a fine balancing act and arguments can be made for both the Kookaburra and Duke cause.

“We want the ball to do more because we need our batters to develop those skills,” he said.

“[However,] that makes it easier for our bowlers . . . and do we want medium pacers who can just come in and the ball swings round corners, or does lots off the pitch, which doesn’t help develop our bowlers.”

Stronach accepted seamers would pick the Duke to use every day of the week. He argued, however, that while batsmen would prefer to face the Kookaburra from a run-scoring point of view, from the perspectiv­e of skill developmen­t, some might opt for a Duke; and the same principle could apply in reverse to bowlers, who could see the benefits in mastering the Kookaburra.

New Zealand fast-medium bowler Matt Henry is going gangbuster­s in English county cricket for Kent. He’s taken a whopping 37 wickets in four games at an average of just 9.5 runs. That is 13 more than the next most successful bowler in either division of the championsh­ip.

He’s enjoying using the Duke but Stronach raised the question; has Henry’s years of exposure to the Kookaburra contribute­d to his success? Theoretica­lly, if he’d been brought up English, using the Duke, “would he be running in bowling as fast and doing what he can now? He might have found he didn’t need to run in as hard and put the ball there [on a good length] and it would have done more.”

It is a fair discussion point and cases can be made either way.

Stronach said there had been an element of loyalty towards a longstandi­ng partner in the ball decision but that that alone would not have carried the day for the Australian manufactur­er.

“They have been really good to us for a long time but that wasn’t an overriding factor by any stretch.

“Kookaburra have been amazingly flexible. They’ve got a couple of types of balls but [are relaxed] if we wanted to use another ball. That’s pretty progressiv­e to me. It means we can be flexible enough to decide what we need, when we need it. We’re pretty appreciati­ve for what they’ve put in the game and for how long.”

Stronach said Kookaburra had learnt much from the ball shape dramas of late and knows they are trying to prevent it happening but also there’s an awareness you can get rogue balls in any batch.

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