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," Buchanan told NewstalkZB.
"To put our best foot forward in an event in our own backyard, we need to place that as a priority above the longer form of the game," Buchanan said - alongside his catch-cry demanding trust, honesty, accountability and integrity. Whoa, John ... you've got to be kidding (cue cricket purists hyperventilating). This indicates the state of our cricket has sunk to such a point that the prospect of 50-over matches will take priority for two years. Could pyjamas have finally won the war over whites?
Buchanan's statement reeked of a cop-out; the path of least resistance; raising the white flag to admit New Zealand's test incompetence. Cricket might well evolve over the next generation into a Twenty20 cash cow comprising a plethora of agricultural shots over midwicket but, for many in the New Zealand cricket community, test matches will always take priority.
Some still find something captivating in the sport being played properly at test level. Observing Vernon Philander bowl in Cape Town or Hashim Amla bat in Port Elizabeth are exhibits A and B.
The focus on short forms allows cricket in this country access to more money but plenty of other countries manage all forms of the game. Why not New Zealand?