New Zealand Cricket deserve a "player of the day" trophy for their efforts to adjust the annual scheduling and juggle the three formats of the game for the coming season.
Features include: reducing the gap between the two segments of first-class matches from 76 to 34 days, bringing the Twenty20 game to a Friday night audience and dovetailing the formats so form players will be ready to face England. They visit for limited-overs matches in February and test matches in March.
England's visit is the solitary home series for New Zealand, who will be playing in Sri Lanka and South Africa during the early part of the summer. That highlights an unavoidable downside to the schedule.
The country's best players will now be unavailable for their provinces for most of the summer. The chequebook may well have to come out to lure overseas players - and subsequently paying fans - to the HRV Cup.
NZC appears to have taken heed of England's model which, until recently had them as the best test team in the world. They remain the defending T20 world champions. The English formats are mixed and players switch between them regularly.