New Zealand Cricket groundstaff are under no specific orders to doctor pitches for the test series against England.
After the University Oval strip died in the second half of the first test, outspoken former England batting great Geoff Boycott described it as the sort of pitch that "will kill test cricket. You could play for 10 days and not get a result".
But lest that be interpreted as the first step in a policy to draw the sting from England's top class new ball bowlers Jimmy Anderson and speedster Steven Finn on the faster-paced pitches of the Basin Reserve and Eden Park, it's not.
New Zealand Cricket general manager of grounds and facilities, Ian McKendry, denied there were any instructions from team management for pitches to be deadened.
"It's up to the groundsman to come up with the best possible cricket pitch he can," McKendry said.