Ironically, Ross Taylor's standing in New Zealand cricket has, if anything, been enhanced by his sacking from the captaincy of the national side. His dismissal has been widely judged to have been unfair, the more so because he had just led from the front in carrying the Black Caps to a rare test victory in Sri Lanka. There is now just one thing that he could do to endear himself even further to cricket followers. That is to fly to the rescue of the team in South Africa. It would be the grandest of gestures if he were to arrive in Port Elizabeth in time for the start of the second test on Friday.
Taylor could do this knowing that the folly of his demotion had been laid bare. A coach has every right to change his captain, but only if there is a candidate who is demonstrably superior. Taylor's successor, Brendon McCullum, confirmed all the fears about the consequences of his gung-ho attitude when he chose to bat against the world's best pace attack in the first test. The rushes of blood that are part and parcel of his batting will, predictably enough, be a feature of his captaincy. The outcome on this occasion was the humiliating first-innings 45 and comprehensive defeat.
Mike Hesson, the coach whose misjudgment led to McCullum's elevation, has tried to insist Taylor's absence had no impact on that dire performance. "I don't think it did. It had an effect leading into the test and we discussed that as a group, then we moved on," he said this week. "No doubt Ross batting at four would have been useful for us and that was Ross' decision and we respect that."
Hesson said, further, that Taylor's absence led to the playing of Dean Brownlie, who scored a century in the second innings. This, however, ignored the fact that Brownlie scored a duck in the embarrassing first innings. Taylor, who averaged almost 50 in tests while he held the captaincy and is easily the country's premier batsman, was badly missed.