Manawatu Standard

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Black Caps v India

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three formats, we need to find a role for him,’’ Hesson said.

‘‘We can’t have Devon [Conway] and Kane batting together in the power play for five overs and expect us to be on 50, we just can’t. That’s not the role they play.’’

Hesson said Williamson’s strike rate in the power play had been less than 100 over the last two years and it was holding New Zealand back at the top.

At the T20 World Cup, Williamson’s overall strike rate for the tournament was 116.33 with Conway almost identical at 116.93.

Hesson supported shifting Williamson from three to four, where he thrived in the Indian Premier League for his former Sunrisers Hyderabad side in 2018.

He believed the Black Caps had

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been ‘‘repeat offenders’’ keeping Williamson at three in T20s and expecting him to drasticall­y change the way he batted in the power play.

‘‘It could well free Kane up to go ‘I love T20 cricket. I love playing, but hey I’m actually going to be reinvigora­ted by having a new role’.’’

Both Hesson and former New Zealand wicketkeep­er, turned commentato­r, Ian Smith argued it was unrealisti­c for Williamson to keep captaining the Black Caps in all three forms.

Players captaining sides in every form at the elite level had become rare because it was so draining in a packed cricket schedule.

Smith touched on the example of England’s Kiwi-born star Ben Stokes, who remained the side’s test skipper, but wasn’t burdened by that responsibi­lity in T20s.

Stokes had embraced his role as a closer with the bat for England, and Williamson could serve similarly for New Zealand.

‘‘That’s the kind of role I think Kane Williamson could do for us. I really do and use his background, and his nous and his leadership and all those years of experience to sum up situations a little bit deeper in the innings and that’s not saying he’s a bad player,’’ Smith said.

‘‘It’s just saying we’re changing things. We’re having a go, we’re changing things.’’

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