Hesson made it clear before the final Indian test that legspinner Ish Sodhi would return in the Caribbean, where conditions will be more favourable than at the Basin Reserve and more balance is required.
Tim Southee, Trent Boult and Neil Wagner - especially with his old ball ability and fierce determination - are settled.
The numbers don't add up. Something has to give.
"To play with the freedom and skill he did was exceptional," coach Hesson said of Neesham's century.
Hesson acknowledged the curly nature of the situation, even raising the prospect of playing two spinners in the West Indies, depending on the pitches.
"There's competition and that's always something you try and generate. You try and balance that with giving people confidence in selection but to have true competition in many places is only good for the side.
"It's hard, but it's a nice problem to have."
At the top of the order, neither Hamish Rutherford nor Peter Fulton were convincing. Both will want to score runs in the final round of Plunket Shield play starting on Sunday.
Hesson has made clear, more than once, that both bring qualities to the team beyond simply scoring runs. That's fine, up to a point. Fulton, in particular, is vulnerable, having made just 123 runs at 13 over the five tests. Rutherford had two useful scores but was more cold than hot.
Ross Taylor will return at No4, with Tom Latham making way. But Latham has made 687 runs at 68.7 going in first for Canterbury this season. First, though, there'll be time to savour the series wins over the West Indies and India.