Weekend Herald

Blundell’s cameo proves that time’s up for Santner

- Niall Anderson

comment

Mitchell Santner’s spot in the Black Caps test side is under serious scrutiny after he was handed the ultimate humiliatio­n by captain Kane Williamson.

Santner was dragged from the New Zealand bowling attack after his poor returns continued on day two of the second test against Australia, and after lunch, the ball was handed to Tom Blundell.

Blundell — New Zealand’s back-up wicketkeep­er and newly promoted opener — had bowled a grand total of 54 balls in first-class cricket, yet here he was, bowling against Australia at the MCG.

It was a remarkable statement for Williamson to make, and despite bowling a few rank long-hops, Blundell also produced the most threatenin­g ball delivered by a New Zealand spinner, beating the outside edge of Travis Head’s bat.

There had been hope for Santner’s prospects as a test all-rounder after he shone against England at Mt Maunganui, hitting

126 and taking three fourth-innings wickets in a match-winning display.

However, he simply has not built on that performanc­e, taking

1-88 in the second test in Hamilton, conceding 146 wicketless runs in Perth, and now producing figures of 0-82 in Melbourne, with his bowling average an ugly 45.3.

Santner’s struggles come with the caveat of bowling in conditions which aren’t ideal for spinners, but he had been selected with that in mind, with the Black Caps hoping he could at least contribute some runs, and be accurate and economical with the ball.

He has done none of that in Australia, with Jeet Raval looking more threatenin­g in Perth — and taking more wickets — and now Williamson looks to have lost faith in his frontline spinner.

That decision to bowl Blundell potentiall­y signals the end of Santner’s run in the test side. While Williamson threw him the ball again later in the day, he remained wicketless, and unless he makes a significan­t contributi­on with the bat, or manages to drasticall­y change his fortunes with the ball in the second innings, it would be hard to justify his selection for the third test.

Todd Astle is the obvious replacemen­t in the squad, especially with the final test at the SCG likely to provide the most assistance for spinners, while the Black Caps could always call Will Somerville into the squad, if willing to cop to the fact their initial selections had been misguided. While Astle seemingly commands little faith from the Black Caps’ brains trust, if the leg-spinner isn’t used in Sydney, he might start to wonder if he’ll ever get another opportunit­y.

It looks as if Santner may have used up all of his.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Mitchell Santner has taken 0-228 in Australia.
Photo / Getty Images Mitchell Santner has taken 0-228 in Australia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand