Some fateful words were spoken by New Zealand Cricket's director of cricket John Buchanan during his recent media blitz to counter the current catalogue of woe: "The cricket World Cup (held in Australasia in early 2015) is the most important thing on the horizon because it's only two years away,"
Andrew Alderson: Game over for test cricket
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Buchanan's statement reeked of a cop-out; the path of least resistance; raising the white flag to admit New Zealand's test incompetence. Photo / Getty Images
People in cricket's major associations insist Buchanan has a long-term plan in place for the longest form. If anyone understands the importance of test cricket it should be him, having coached Australia to one of their all-time greatest eras from 1999-2007.
Buchanan also has a soft spot for the 50-over form. Even after his NZC appointment in April 2011, he was quoted on the country's 2015 World Cup chances: "There is no question New Zealand punch above their weight, but they don't punch above their weight long enough and I guess that's the challenge. I'm targeting 2015 and New Zealand should have the expectation of going into that tournament and winning it."
It could be time to admit the test game's up and let New Zealand focus on being one-day and T20 specialists. New Zealand's test ranking is eighth; below are only Bangladesh and Zimbabwe. The last time New Zealand rose above eighth was November 2010.
Can it be mere coincidence New Zealand has not won a test series against any country other than Bangladesh or Zimbabwe since beating the West Indies in 2005-06 at home, the first season of the national T20 league?
New Zealand may not rate test cricket but most other countries do - failure at that level endangers our status as a drawcard and opens the possibility of New Zealand being awarded fewer tests and certainly fewer against countries of note.
Compounding the problem is a lack of any guarantee New Zealand's Indian Premier League players will be available for the two tests in England during May. Both matches clash with the IPL schedule.
Buchanan should be aware that making another World Cup semifinal - New Zealand have made six in the 10 tournaments since 1975 - will have a hollow, fast-food feel if the test game does not improve in sync. Test purists want to see a more sustainable solution, over five days rather than one (or three or four).