But you were saying Taylor should move up to 3... And also saying that the reason Williamson could handle opening because batting 3 is largely the same as facing first nut.
So on the one hand you're saying Williamson would be a good opener because he's got the skills that make him a world class 3, and on the other you're saying Taylor couldn't open because he doesn't have a resolute technique - yet you think he should bat 3, which, according to your logic, is pretty much the same as opening.
That makes no sense whatsoever.
You're still expecting Blocky posts to actually make sense?
He's assuming that Latham and Williamson will average 35 by making exactly 35 (70) every innings and will never ever ever fail because batsmen who average 35 always make 35. Which is fine if you play the game on a spreadsheet, but for a guy who has apparently played at a very high level he seems to have little grasp of how the game actually works. If Latham gets a good nut early -- as I'm sure Blocky has in his opening experiences -- in walks Ross Taylor to be a nervy starter against a swinging ball. Carnage.
Not to mention, if you debut a specialist opener, I'd argue knowing Kane is there at 3 to bail the innings out if you cop one that's way too good for a debutant makes life a hell of a lot easier for them, rather than batting them out of position (Latham at 4 vs. India, compared to Latham at 1 vs. WI anyone?)
His plan seems like an attempt to shoehorn another all-rounder into the side (because what the NZ side needs is totally a fifth or sixth seam bowling option, rather than a batting line-up that isn't reliant upon Watling to bail it out half the time) and does nothing but weaken the batting massively. It's basically what New South Wales has done over the past few years -- force extra bowling options into the side because talent -- and, unsurprisingly, when they tended to pick a proper team this year they won the Shield.
If you're going to pick Anderson and Neesham together, it has to be because they're the fifth and sixth best batsmen in New Zealand, because their bowling becomes a complete non-issue when the other is in the side. Spoiler alert, they aren't the fifth and sixth best batsmen in New Zealand.
Coming up with all of this random crap ends up with a really wanky, bull**** New Zealand side that undoes all of the hard work they've done to create middle order stability, and instead goes back to the days of one brilliant performance when everything clicks being followed by mediocrity and lol-lapses galore.
You cannot honestly tell me, with a straight face, that this batting line-up:
1. Latham
2. Williamson
3. Taylor
4. McCullum *
5. Anderson
6. Neesham
7. Watling +
is more likely to score consistent runs than:
1. Latham
2. Guptill/Brownlie/Raval/Flynn/Bracewell/Literally Anyone Not Named KW Who Has Opened Before
3. Williamson
4. Taylor
5. McCullum
6. Neesham
7. Watling +
The first is an incredible example of 'too much icing, not enough cake'. McCullum, Anderson and Neesham are all inconsistent. If they click at once, look out. But Anderson isn't a Test #5s arsehole at present, McCullum isn't consistently good enough to bat at #4, and Taylor being pushed to #3 accentuates his weaknesses and diminishes his strengths. Not to mention that you're tinkering around with the best thing to happen to New Zealand cricket in the past 10 years, just after he's proven himself as a world class #3. There is no logical reason whatsoever to take that risk.
Honestly though, that isn't surprising from Blocky. Because I assure you, if KW and Latham open and go to lunch at 0/60, playing conservatively because they know if Taylor is exposed in the first session, 80 all out is on the cards, he'll be complaining about how they need to score quicker and just lost NZ the game. He doesn't care about the cake; he just wants the icing.
It's an absolutely terrible idea.