You have to hand it to Neil Wagner; whatever the state of the game, whatever the temperature, however unpromising the situation you can bank on him putting in a gut-busting shift.
Things don't always work out for the bouncy left armer, and he can be costly if batsmen collar his short-of-a-length modus operandi.
But he'll never die wondering and today Wagner, who admitted to not feeling the ball was coming out well in the morning, had a day to truly savour, helped it should be said by some lame West Indies batting.
Wagner, second change behind the strictly medium-pace dobbers of Colin de Grandhomme, got through 14.4 overs unchanged other than for lunch and was never less than challenging.
Few bowlers in the game can match Wagner for tenacity and willingness to push himself with a short-pitched attack plan, which calls for considerable craft not to pull the ball down too short and to keep the batsmen hopping.