Allen (wk)so, what are your first 11's lookin like for the t20 wc
for me its
Allen (wk)
ravindra
mitchell
philips
chapman
neesham
bracewell
santner (c)
henry
ferguson
boult
with a restraining order filed by the t20 format against kane and southee
Think he was about 5 years ahead of his time (10 years given NZC’s attitude to selection). Tended to be very rocks and diamonds when turning out for NZ, but would have been an asset in the last few years seeing how NZ have been indexing on T20s. Can feel justifiably miffed at the difference in treatment from Boult or Neesham, when it comes to national selection while being a T20 mercenary. And yeah, too bad we’ll never find out how his FC 50 average would have translated to tests (Phillips is providing some hints).Munro has officially called it quits on his international career. Looks like he was waiting for the WC squad announcement.
That being said, you can compare him to others and make a strong case that he was treated poorly. The guy averaged more than 50 in first-class cricket, but got just one test on a horror tour to South Africa (it was the all-out-for-45 tour, though he didn’t play that test), nicked out first ball in the first dig, got 15 in the second, both batting at No 7, and was never tried again. Tough gig.
Knowing he was always on the periphery, Munro made the decision to be a T20 gun for hire and has done that, for the most part, exceedingly well. Certainly well enough to have played for his country in the past four years. His last seven T20I scores were 30, 46, 59, 26, 14, 64 and 15. That’s 254 runs at a strike rate of 143.
Even at 37, he’s a better T20 player than some who are going to the Caribbean.
From late 2013 to early 2016 he may have been eyeing the spot for which Anderson and Neesham were battling it out. Both started so well in test cricket he was probably an afterthought for the selectors. I guess they ‘looked the part’ more than he did too, and were better bowlers.A question: who would've had to make way for Munro to get a run in the Test side?
Post 8888 which just follows page 444 @SillyCowCorner1From late 2013 to early 2016 he may have been eyeing the spot for which Anderson and Neesham were battling it out. Both started so well in test cricket he was probably an afterthought for the selectors. I guess they ‘looked the part’ more than he did too, and were better bowlers.
In theory McCullum retiring in 2016 would have been the perfect time to bring him in as a similar sort of player but they went for Nicholls, which did pay off at least till 2020 or so. Can remember Ronchi playing as a specialist batsman in India in 2016 (and doing well), that was also another opportunity missed.
Great post this. Succinct and provides a pretty reasonable answer without me even having to think about bothering with any fact checking. Nice one, Moss.From late 2013 to early 2016 he may have been eyeing the spot for which Anderson and Neesham were battling it out. Both started so well in test cricket he was probably an afterthought for the selectors. I guess they ‘looked the part’ more than he did too, and were better bowlers.
In theory McCullum retiring in 2016 would have been the perfect time to bring him in as a similar sort of player but they went for Nicholls, which did pay off at least till 2020 or so. Can remember Ronchi playing as a specialist batsman in India in 2016 (and doing well), that was also another opportunity missed.
Well, if Steve "Munro" NZ says this, then I guess that's the line drawn under the argument that Munro would have been a success. I'm happy to run with this.Yeah...I'm about as big a fan of Colin as there is, and I can't exactly remember - there might have been squads he should have been in. But 'he averaged 50 in FC cricket, should have played more' ignores the fact our Test side was at immense strength through the period he dominated FC, and there wasn't a spot. He started his FC career as a No.11 who bowled seam up, and dropped the bowling to become the batsman he became...unfortunately for him, that meant he was never a long form all-rounder, which was his only chance at a spot.
Again, I love the guy but I'm not sure he would have made a winning run of it. He certainly wouldn't have batted higher than 6. His technique wasn't that of a CdG, Nicholls, Neesham etc. His eye was unreal, and he absolutely butchered 120-130km bowling, but I never saw enough evidence he could play quality spin or pace for long periods of time. To be fair, he never really had the chance to in whites.
Yep, and what really stinks about that for me is that Munro's been such a monstrous performer for Trinidad & Tobago in the Caribbean Premier League since 2016. And where are three of our four Group C games in the T20 World Cup? Trinidad!Munro has effectively been replaced by Allen in the BOSH role. He is well within his rights to be pissed off at being like-for-like replaced by someone who is pretty much less accomplished in every way.
The thing with the NZ contracts is that they don't value T20 specialists. The way it's weighted, if you want to be a one-format specialist, you choose Tests, & the T20 side is still treated as a feeder for the ODI side, sort of. Once you get pigeonholed as a T20 specialist, you're on your way out.In terms of his T20 career, I don't know all of the ins and outs of whether he genuinely wasn't picked because of NZC rigorously sticking to a policy of not picking guys who weren't playing in NZ. What I do know is it was a harsh decision to not give him a central contract in 2020. This isn't comparable to the guys who declined a central contract - Munro was an incumbent T20I player who was only offered a domestic contract. Even if the intent wasn't to force him out, it was pretty inevitable in those circumstances. I also think that not offering him a central contract could easily be seen as hinting to him that he was no longer first choice in T20I.
I think he was always one of our better T20I batsman and dropping him was absolutely not warranted on performance grounds. Not that I want to turn this into a whinge about one of my favourite whipping boys, but Munro has effectively been replaced by Allen in the BOSH role. He is well within his rights to be pissed off at being like-for-like replaced by someone who is pretty much less accomplished in every way.
From memory, Nicholls was picked off the back of a Sri Lanka A series, where he scored one big, quick ton (did he score two? Maybe not) and Manu didn't make any significant runs.However, I think he can feel rightfully miffed that Nicholls beat him for a test spot in 2015/16. Munro clearly had a stronger case on performance grounds and Nicholls fails the eye test just as badly as he does. It was essentially a hunch selection which worked surprisingly well before fizzling out. Some will call that a harsh appraisal of Nicholls, but I think it would be equally exaggerated to say he was a roaring success. Ultimately, the guy has been all but discarded in what would otherwise be close to his prime years, due to sustained poor performance.
Yes and he was only a T20 specialist because the selectors refused to give him a chance in tests and because he had just been ditched in ODIs that season (which was fair). It may not have been some sort of concerted anti-Munro campaign, but there was definitely a succession of selection decisions which all went against him and which culminated in him losing his contract. In those circumstances I never even really perceived him as ditching NZC, it seemed like a no-brainer for him to be a freelancer when he wasn't offered a central contract.The thing with the NZ contracts is that they don't value T20 specialists. The way it's weighted, if you want to be a one-format specialist, you choose Tests, & the T20 side is still treated as a feeder for the ODI side, sort of. Once you get pigeonholed as a T20 specialist, you're on your way out.
In addition for Munro, him leaving opened up a place for Conway, & after his first summer, they just never looked back.
I mean - in both cases, it "wasn't their time" because the selectors chose a guy with a lesser record over a guy/guys with outstanding records (or continued to pick someone while a different guy was killing it in domestics). Choosing to ignore the best performed guys is pretty much the essence of a dodgy selection. Dodgy selections are sometimes proved right (I don't think Nicholls conclusively falls into this category) but that doesn't mean the selectorial logic can't be called out. This wasn't like the 90s Australia team where outstanding FC batsman missed out to other outstanding FC batsman - we decided to pick and stick with a notably lesser performer who turned out to be ok but not great.Nicholls scored 5-6 high quality Test tons (nine overall). I'm just not sure Manu had that in him v a very good SA attack, or against England...but it would have been nice to have found out. It just wasn't his time. Similar could be said of Tom Bruce - averaged over 50 at FC level (47 now) and might've done a job, but couldn't crack our side, had to make do with T20Is.