As much as Hesson likes the idea of not disturbing an order too much when injuries occur, he shouldn't be using Munro as a placeholder is all Steve is saying.
281 against Bracewell and Wheeler at No. 4, but if it was rugby, you wouldn't exactly call Munro a utility back, would you. He's more of a prop; highly one-dimensional in what he can add to your team, and the complete opposite of versatile.
Too much vehemence - even if it was slight. It isn't the worst selection decision I have seen nor will it be the worst one ever made.
Candidates for some of the worst decisions I have seen:
Playing Manu on the wing against us when he is a slow but powerful runner (wrong sport but this wrankles me to this day). What were England thinking.
Dan Vettori opening in the match where bond took 6fer and we couldn't chase it in a world cup. What were we thinking.
Kyle Mills at 3? No really? Seriously? Come Again? No show me the scorecard. What were we thinking,
Daylight
Luke Ronchi opening.
James Neesham opening
Rob Nicol batting anywhere in a test match for us. What exactly were his qualifications for a selection.
Peter - don't look at my technique just look at the scorecard - Ingram in tests.
Colin Munro in tests. He gave Village cricketer a new meaning in the solitary test he played. Was a national disgrace.
Jeetan Patel batting at the heady heights of number 8 in a test and having no ****ing clue how to bat. Why did we think we could play 5 bowlers in that match. Why did we ever think we could play 5 bowlers in any match. I know I know...because Dan was a selector at the time and thought it would be a good idea, as part of his meglomaniacal ambitions to captain the side and be the selector.
Daylight
Selecting Brent Arnel (this is excusable so I have listed it in the 3rd tier of this pantheon of bad selection and batting order decisions)
Re-selecting James Franklin on the basis that some bloke called Athlai on a message board called CW incessantly lobbied for it.