As someone assuming the mantle of captaincy, Central Districts captain Greg Hay showed why he is wearing the stripes for what is fast becoming the country's dominant major association cricket team as he joined the riot to give the Otago Volts some stick in Napier today.
But one wonders if Hay's mind was on the round-six Plunket Shield match in Napier or in sympathy of his provincial Nelson side who also were taking some serious stick at the hands of the Pay Excellence Hawke's Bay senior men's representative side throwing down the gauntlet to the Hawke Cup holders at Saxton Park today.
No doubt, the 34-year-old veteran, who carved up his 13 first-class century against the whipping boys of the domestic men's Plunket Shield competition on day one, is cricket savvy enough to know where his allegiance and total focus are required when the higher echelons come calling.
"It was a good day for the Stags and it was to turn some starts into three figures but, again, Haysey is just going along like he has all season, really, and then Youngy's just come in and playing the way he is is all just good stuff," said fellow opening batsman George Worker after the defending champions won the toss and posted 357-1 in 96 overs.
Black Cap Worker, who scored his eighth first-class ton with 110 runs from 166 balls in 220 minutes, including 17 fours and six, forged a record 202-run CD first-wicket partnership with Hay, against the Volts, as the pair eclipsed the previous best 137-run effort of Tony Blain and Robbie Hart in the 1984-85 season.