New Zealand's relationship with its test spinners has been mixed down the years.
The standard arrangement has had one primary spinner in a seam-dominant attack, whether he be Hedley Howarth, the fine, durable left armer of the 1970s, John Bracewell or Stephen Boock, - but rarely both together- in the 1980s, and Dan Vettori from 1997 until 2014.
A second slow bowler has often been employed as a kind of support performer. Think either Bracewell or Boock, Paul Wiseman alongside Vettori or, on one unmemorable occasion, Peter Petherick paired with Howarth, at Eden Park against Australia in 1977. Australia made 377 and the two spinners shared nine overs out of 97 in a 10-wicket flogging.
New Zealand's use of three spinners at Kanpur was intriguing for its rarity, and that they chose one more than the hosts, who've never been tardy in throwing a pile of spin bowlers into a test.
In 1988, India opened with a brisk offspinner Arshad Ayub to decisive effect at Bangalore and he had legspinner Narendra Hirwani, and two left armers, Ravi Shastri and W.V. Raman with him.