The wedging of New Zealand cricket tours into rain-filled segments of the international calendar looks set to continue after the current Sri Lanka series.
Two series in the next 18 months - away against Sri Lanka and the West Indies - are set for the wet season in those locations and the International Cricket Council's scheduling likely consigns players to further cabin fever where they'd be advised to take some decent reading material, video games or poker sets, depending on their preference.
It reflects the difficulty the ICC's Future Tours Programme has in scheduling cricket through until April 2020. New Zealand's top players (i.e those involved in the Indian Premier League) are set down to play all but two years of that seven-year and five-month period.
At this rate, cricket fans will struggle to retain an interest in teams like New Zealand who are battling in all formats.
New Zealand is scheduled to tour Sri Lanka for another three one-dayers and one Twenty20 international next November which, given each of the five one-dayers and the sole T20I were affected by rain this year, make little sense. That series follows a two test/three ODI/one T20I tour to Bangladesh (a series also scheduled at the back end of that country's rainy season).