The New Zealand Herald

THE CLUBROOMS

- Weekend Dylan Cleaver

Bat Men

You don’t want to read about Devon Conway again. I don’t really want to write about Conway again. So let’s keep the top of this brief and just run some numbers.

The 29-year-old has batted in three one-day internatio­nals and scored 27, 72 and 126.

In T20 internatio­nals, he’s racked up scores of 41, 65 not out, 5, 63, 99 not out, 2, 38, 17, 36 and 92 not out.

He’s walked to the crease 13 times for his adopted country and passed 50 nearly half the time while playing the majority of those innings in a format that makes scoring big very difficult.

He will be faced with bigger challenges in foreign conditions but it is difficult to think of a rookie batsman who has made a bigger impact for the Black Caps.

His brilliance has tended to overshadow the greater good that is bubbling beneath the surface: New Zealand has built enviable batting depth from such a small talent pool.

Sunday was perhaps the first time many New Zealanders got to see how good Will Young is. If anything, the quality of his stroke play overshadow­ed Conway during their century stand. Conway has yet to play a test, Young has played two.

Then there is Glenn Phillips, who has played one test and no ODIs, who has had an outstandin­g summer.

Daryl Mitchell has played just four tests and 20 internatio­nals in total, and already has two centuries for his country in limited opportunit­ies.

A scan of the domestic scores shows incumbent test opener Tom Blundell scored an unbeaten century down the order for Wellington, while the man earmarked as the country’s next long-term test opener, Rachin Ravindra, also brought up a ton.

It’s worth repeating that much bigger tests will come, but in terms of depth of batting talent, these are unpreceden­ted times for New Zealand cricket.

Crusaders/Scott Robertson

They didn’t even play this weekend, yet emerged as the biggest winners after the Blues blew it against the Chiefs. Just hand them the title already.

Meanwhile, up in the north, a couple of high-profile coaches are under big pressure to save their jobs.

Guess whose name is going to be bandied about willy-nilly in the UK media machine?

Roger Tuivasa-Sheck

A big week for the rugby-bound fullback. RTS was quite brilliant in the Warriors’ ludicrous come-from-waybehind victory against the Canberra Raiders, but it was something else he did that caught the eye.

According to reports, it was RTS that convinced Broncos junior Reece Walsh to commit to the Warriors.

The amazing thing about this is that the story revealed he’d never seen Walsh but had only heard “that he’s quite sharp”.

Tuivasa-Sheck had a coffee with

Walsh near the club’s Terrigal base and decided he was down to earth. That was apparently enough.

Am I the only one left with way more questions than answers about this recruitmen­t drive?

New Zealand Rugby

The awkward fact they're yet to convince the stakeholde­rs who potentiall­y have the most to gain out of the proposed $465 million Silver Lake deal — their best players — says a lot.

With the reported cash injection, the country's cash-starved 26 provincial unions are set to receive, NZR are seemingly targeting the weakest point in the operation.

Very few of those unions can stand on their own feet. This is rugby's principal problem and one they have been singularly unable to address.

Without making fundamenta­l and far-reaching changes to the very structure of the sport, giving unions cash handouts is as effective a longterm strategy as building a bonfire out of money, dousing it in kerosene and lighting a match.

Eden Park data “research”

Every now and then, an email drops into the inbox so unintentio­nally hilarious, you’re not sure if it’s satire, spam or both.

This happened in the middle of the night this weekend from a PR outfit called Blueclaw, based in Leeds, working presumably on behalf of a cricket betting website in India. Behold.

“Eden Park — home of Auckland cricket since 1910 — is the people’s choice as the most popular cricketing venue, new research suggests.

“Data compiled by cricket tipping experts, Cricket Bet India, combined three key metrics — Instagram tags, Facebook check-ins and average global monthly web search volume — to rank the leading cricketing stadiums around the world in order of perceived popularity as a score out of 100.

“Cricket Bet India’s Fans’ Favourite has removed all subjectivi­ty and ranked grounds based on cold, hard facts.

“In this case, it was New Zealand’s largest sporting venue — Eden Park

. . . that clinched top-billing with 66.96 out of 100.”

Objectivel­y speaking, this is the sort of nonsense that usually appears once a year on a date that correspond­s with this Thursday.

Bangladesh

New Zealand have been good, but some of Bangladesh’s cricket has been amateur-hour quality.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? It is difficult to think of a rookie batsman who has made a bigger impact for the Black Caps than Devon Conway.
Photo / Getty Images It is difficult to think of a rookie batsman who has made a bigger impact for the Black Caps than Devon Conway.
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