During the McDonald's Super Smash match between Northern Districts and Wellington on December 30, the television coverage cut to a figure hunched over a clipboard.
Closer inspection revealed the identity to be Bruce Edgar. One of New Zealand's finest opening batsmen, the country's most successful national selector and now the Wellington coach was in his element as an incognito puppeteer.
Edgar is the Banksy of the New Zealand cricket scene. You can see the artistry in what he creates, but he prefers anonymity.
Wellington needed to win. They got there with one over and nine wickets to spare. The Firebirds went on unbeaten to the title.
The shot of Edgar had him beavering over a bespoke worksheet which keeps him "in the game, play-by-play". He likes to be involved, but perhaps not to the extent of when he eked out test centuries against the pace of Pakistan's Sikander Bakht and Sarfraz Nawaz, the West Indies' Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Joel Garner and Colin Croft, and Australia's Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson in a 39-test career.