It's hard to know what's more unfortunate: the timing of the great captaincy controversy, or the hypocrisy of the debate over the potential switch of skippers from Ross Taylor to Brendon McCullum.
Taylor is a good man and a very good player. He doesn't deserve this humiliation.
McCullum is a good man and a very good player. He doesn't deserve the opprobrium and innuendo that's about to rain down on him if he is handed the captaincy at the expense of the former.
Say what you like about unfulfilled potential, the stats show that by New Zealand standards, McCullum is the best wicketkeeper-batsman New Zealand has produced, although he is yet to fully convince as a specialist batsman, and Taylor is among our batting greats already.
And then there's Mike Hesson, a man few people know anything about, who was handed the reins of the national side with dubious credentials after an 80s icon cut and run and, surely, a man who would only agitate for such a profound change as this if he really thought it would make his team more competitive.