The Post

No easy ride for Black Caps

- Brendon Egan brendon.egan@stuff.co.nz

The omission of Black Caps veterans Martin Guptill and Trent Boult casts an intriguing backdrop over the side’s white ball series against India.

Just five days after the T20 World Cup final, New Zealand and India, who were both eliminated in the semifinals, are straight back into action.

The series opens with three T20s, starting at Wellington’s Sky Stadium tonight, followed by three ODIs, beginning on November 25 at Eden Park.

Guptill’s axing from both the T20I and ODI sides and the non-selection of Boult, who opted out of his national contract in August, have dominated the headlines on the eve of the series.

With 11 months until the ODI World Cup in India, the Black Caps are clearly looking to the future.

Hard-hitting 23-year-old Finn Allen, who opened in the T20 World Cup, has a huge opportunit­y to impress at the top of the order alongside Devon Conway.

Allen and Conway are New Zealand’s first-choice opening combinatio­n in both white ball formats and the frontrunne­rs to open at the 50-over World Cup.

The absences of Guptill and Boult takes away a combined 297 ODI and 177 T20I appearance­s with both players having been staples of New Zealand’s white ball side.

‘‘We’ve seen in the last few months a lot of those decisions are being made and trying to be balanced,’’ skipper Kane Williamson said when quizzed on whether dumping Guptill and Boult was the right call.

‘‘It’s just a process to work through over the next period of time. It’s hard to know exactly what it looks like. I know everybody

is eager to see it try and be nicely balanced [with selection and looking ahead to future pinnacle events].’’

Without Guptill, there will be much anticipati­on on how Allen fares at the top of the order and approaches his innings – especially in the ODIs.

Quick Adam Milne has been named for both formats and is poised to play his first ODI since October 2017 after an injuryplag­ued past few years.

Allrounder Michael Bracewell didn’t

play a match at the T20 World Cup, but showed his quality, especially with the ball, in the T20 tri-series warmup tournament in Christchur­ch. He will get his chance to impress again and stake a claim for the ODI World Cup, where he could be a threat in Indian conditions with his offspin.

India, still stinging from a 10-wicket thumping against eventual champions England in the semifinals, are also missing household names.

Batting maestro Virat Kohli has been

rested, along with fellow batting dangermen Rohit Sharma (India’s captain in all formats) and KL Rahul.

Seam bowler Mohammed Shami and star offspinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin will also be absent, while fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah and spinning all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja both missed the T20 World Cup with injuries and won’t feature.

Depth is never an issue for India in white ball cricket and they still boast plenty of difference makers, who have shone in the IPL and internatio­nally.

‘‘I’ve certainly seen all the talent these players possess,’’ Williamson said.

Williamson has had an interestin­g week, being released by his Sunrisers Hyderabad IPL team, amid calls whether he belongs in New Zealand’s top T20 XI.

Williamson indicated he would put his name in the IPL auction and was keen to return for another season with a new team.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Indian T20 skipper Hardik Pandy, left, and Black Caps captain Kane Williamson share a trip around the Wellington waterfront yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES Indian T20 skipper Hardik Pandy, left, and Black Caps captain Kane Williamson share a trip around the Wellington waterfront yesterday.
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