Left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner has a chance to return to the New Zealand team for the second Test against England but coach Gary Stead said he would be standing by his batters after the eight-wicket loss in the series opener on Sunday.
Santner, who took 13 wickets in his last test in India as the Blacks Caps won the second match on their way to a series sweep, was included in the squad only for the second and third tests in Wellington and Hamilton.
"That's a big decision to make," Stead told reporters on Monday. "I guess Mitch's selection is on the back of what happened in Wellington last (season) with it being very, very spin friendly. But we will monitor that when we get up there and have a look."
In March, Australia off spinner Nathan Lyon took 10 wickets at Basin Reserve as New Zealand, who did not play a specialist spinner, fell to a 172-run defeat. The Black Caps fielded four seamers in the first clash in Christchurch and Nathan Smith, who made his test debut, looks the most likely to make way if Santner comes into the side in Wellington, where the series resumes on Friday.
While a flurry of dropped catches were the most notable feature of New Zealand's performance in the first test, some of the home batters, including opener Devon Conway and wicketkeeper Tom Blundell, continued poor runs of form.
Stead said there would be no changes to the squad before the Wellington match and shrugged off the suggestion that Glenn Phillips, who is in fine form, might be moved above Blundell in the batting order. "We've got a lot of faith in Tom Blundell," he said. "Glenn Phillips has done an amazing job batting with the tail as well, and has become really adept at that. "Tom Blundell played some critical innings for us ... and we think he's our man to keep coming right, and we have a lot of faith that he will do so."
Conway has scored just 53 runs in his last five innings but Stead backed him to come good too. "Everyone wants more all the time," he said. "I think opening batsman in New Zealand conditions can be the some of the toughest conditions in the world to play.
"Devon's a class player, and you don't lose that class over a week, a month. He wants more, don't get me wrong, but we still have a lot of faith in the way that Dev plays." Reuters
Bradman's 'baggy green' cap fetches $260,000
A cap worn by Australia's greatest batsman Don Bradman will be auctioned in Sydney on Tuesday, with the tattered "baggy green" expected to fetch as much as US$260,000.
Bradman donned the woollen cap during India's 1947-48 tour of Australia, which marked the touring side's first Tests on foreign soil after gaining independence.
Auction house Bonhams said it was "the only known baggy green" worn by Bradman during one of his most prolific series.
Bradman scored 715 runs in six innings against the tourists at an average of 178.75, with three centuries and a double-hundred.
Australia's Test cricketers are awarded the dark green caps, which are revered by players and fans.
Despite considerable fading, signs of insect damage and a torn peak, Bonhams expect the cap to fetch between US$195,000 and US$260,000.
Bradman retired with an all-time high Test batting average of 99.94, and has been described by cricket authority Wisden as the greatest to "have ever graced the gentleman's game".
A different "baggy green" worn by Bradman during his Test debut in 1928 fetched US$290,000 in 2020 -- a then-record for one of the cricket legend's caps.
But that was far less than the US$650,000 paid for spin legend Shane Warne's baggy green when he put it up for sale to help Australian bushfire victims earlier that year.
Bradman died in 2001 aged 92 and Warne passed away in 2022 aged 52.
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