The debate among the Australian cricket fraternity about how to expand the Big Bash League has come with a familiar echo here: "get a New Zealand team into the competition".
Competitions like the BBL and the Indian Premier League are revolutionising how people want to watch the game. Those are not 2017 presidential inauguration crowd numbers we see across the Tasman or in India; they're real. To a lesser extent, that also happened with the McDonald's Super Smash. People rolled through the turnstiles at boutique grounds, particularly on weekend afternoons.
This writer loves watching test cricket most, but purists are fast drifting into the minority, if they haven't arrived. The value and impact of T20 cricket must be treated with sincerity. It has influenced the test game more than vice versa, hence the added debate about whether we should revert to four-day tests.
New Zealand Cricket will want to gain as much goodwill as possible from such extravaganzas, but without detracting from a local game which can struggle to captivate a public with more avenues for both their disposable income and their time than past generations.
Logic says not to go down the solitary-franchise-in-an-Australian-competition road because it risks decimating your domestic pathways. Local rugby league, basketball and football leagues all battle for recognition with the rise of the Warriors, Breakers and Phoenix.