It was a homecoming of sorts for Netherlands captain Peter Borren this week at the International Cricket Council's World Cup qualifying tournament.
The last time Borren played in New Zealand at representative level he was wearing the black of the home team at the under-19 World Cup in 2002 alongside a captain called Ross Taylor and an all-rounder called Jesse Ryder. Team-mates Neil Broom, Michael Bates and Rob Nicol also went on to play internationally.
The then-Cantabrian all-rounder took the most wickets (eight, including three for 34 against South Africa) and had the best economy rate among the Kiwi bowlers. After that? He packed his bag, dusted off his Dutch passport, went on his OE, settled in Amsterdam and never returned. In short: he went orange.
Now 30, Borren is part of a Dutch team contesting two World Cup spots over the next three weeks against Nepal, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Scotland, Kenya, Namibia, Canada, Papua New Guinea and Hong Kong. Borren says he's "confident we should qualify". The 10 ICC member nations, Ireland and Afghanistan already have.
His passport could be excused for looking dog-eared, given he's played international cricket in South Africa, Kenya, the West Indies, Canada, Ireland, Scotland, India and the UAE since debuting seven-and-a-half years ago.