Kane Williamson seems an invisible hero at times amid the dashing strikers of the New Zealand one-day team's top order.
The 23-year-old has anchored the hosts' two totals in the Indian series with scores of 71 and 77.
He has been dismissed at 161 for three and 174 for three respectively, enabling the team to meet expectations of being no more than three wickets down at the 35-over mark where NZ wins more one-day international cricket than they lose.
His efforts have enabled the middle and lower order hitters to flourish in that proven formula.
Last night was the 11th time Williamson has passed 50 in 46 ODI innings. Theories parroted about him being solely a test player must cease. Textbook strokemaking doesn't necessarily make a slow scorer. Yes, his ODI strike rate (78.12) is less than anyone else in the top six - Corey Anderson has (159.38), Jesse Ryder (95.02), Brendon McCullum (90.44), Ross Taylor (81.90) and Martin Guptill (81.06) - but only Taylor (27 per cent of the time) and Guptill (27.8 per cent) pass 50 more often than Williamson (23.9 per cent).