Hmm, could some of our top order batting issues be related to a lack of variation?
Since the start of this millenium,
we've had just 8 left hand players bat in the top 7 positions, two of those players being Vettori and Franklin, so really 6 specialist left handers in the past 8 years.
On the other hand (
)
there have been about 20+ specialist right handers (a few all-rounders there), most of whom have been tried and failed.
Only 3 of the left-handers have played more than 10 Tests - those three being Stephen Fleming, Mark Richardson and Jacob Oram.
Comparitively there have been 14 right handed players to play more than 10 tests in the same period - Adam Parore, Matthew Horne, Craig Cumming, Matthew Bell, Jamie How, Ross Taylor, Hamish Marshall, Chris Cairns, Lou Vincent, Mathew Sinclair, Scott Styris, Brendon McCullum, Craig McMillan and Nathan Astle.
The overall totals for this period is
Right-handers:
30 players 68 matches, 16013 runs @ 30.50 30 centuries 75 fifties
Left-handers:
8 players 68 matches 9127 runs @ 40.20 16 hundreds 48 fifties
Broken down that's 1140.88 runs per lefty, 553.77 runs per righty.
Seam bowlers are generally more used to bowling to right handed batsman, so left-handers can create problems by adding variation to the batting line up.
It's possible that our batting could improve here on in, since two left-handers have debuted recently in Flynn and Ryder? Plus Oram when he's fit and Vettori with insane numbers at number 8, the left-hand right-hand variations and combinations could be a good thing for us.
Funnily enough, Tim McIntosh could figure into this. IIRC he's probably the only left-handed opener playing cricket in NZ currently? Or at least, the only established/experienced one.
He's been talked up, and equally, talked down here very recently, but reckon he could be worth a punt at home vs the WIndies? It'd mean we'd have a left-right opening combo, and exactly half of the batsmen in the top 8 would be lefties.
Edit: haha I fail at maths. 5 of the 8 would be lefties (forgot to count Oram).
Probably overly simplistic and we shouldn't give caps to players simply for being left-handed, but it may be just the thing to help our rather weak batting. Ryder certainly is a step forward in that department. There aren't a whole heap of other candidates (not including recent Under-19 guys) who average over 30 AFAIK, basically McIntosh, Todd and Dewayne Bowden.