It wasn’t simply that Southee claimed five wickets in his maiden Test innings, including two in three overs as England slumped to 4 for 3 on the first morning, or that he capped that same match with a startling nine sixes in a never-since-bettered knock of 77 not out from 40 balls from No.10. It was that he did so only days after returning from a Player-of-the-Tournament display at the Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia, and with a basic method that has barely altered in the intervening years.”I was gifted with a nice wrist,” Southee explained to Ian Bishop during an ICC masterclass in 2019, describing how the ball always seemed to sit perfectly in his fingers, seam canted for the outswinger that directly accounted for four of those five debut wickets, plus his maiden scalp of Michael Vaughan, who was done in lbw by one that didn’t budge.And if he had to work harder on the ball that ducked back in, then few cricketers became more synonymous with the “three-quarter seam”, Southee’s answer to an inswinger, and arguably the ball that landed New Zealand their crowning glory in 2021, with his priceless extractions of Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill on the penultimate evening of the WTC final against India in Southampton.3:21

Dale Steyn explains the concept of the three-quarter seam

The best measure of Southee’s standards remains, however, the man himself. That unrivalled penchant for six-hitting, for instance, has been a central theme of this England series, given how close he is to launching a century of them, but it bears repetition nonetheless: no-one in history can hold a candle to his rate of one six every 27 balls faced, not even the bomb-dropper de nos jours, Yashaswi Jaiswal, who has taken 51 balls for each of the 35 he has struck since the start of 2024.And then there’s his supreme ability as a slip catcher. Southee is one of a vanishingly rare breed of fast bowlers whose bucket hands come with the requisite agility to cling onto a succession of blinders. With 85 Test catches so far, he’s safely ensconced as New Zealand’s fifth-most prolific fielder, and had he not been bowling some 36 overs in every match, his place on the podium would have been secured long ago.For 16 years, every facet of his game has been more than a notch above the usual bass-line, and so it’s in the spaces in his narrative where the body of Southee’s work lies. Is it preposterous graft that has made him the most enduring all-formats fast bowler in international history, or the innate talent and athleticism of this Whangerei farm-boy made good? Or, simply a refusal to face the sort of facts that have been hounding him in these past two Tests at Christchurch and Wellington, where Ben Duckett and Harry Brook have taken turns to beast him towards the exit?

For 16 years, every facet of his game has been more than a notch above the usual bass-line, and so it’s in the spaces in his narrative where the body of Southee’s work lies

Whatever it is, Southee has shown, time and again in his career, that it’s never over until it’s over. Even last month in India, with the whispers already mounting, he contributed just three wickets in two Tests, as New Zealand surged to a sensational 3-0 series win.But what wickets they were: twice he claimed Rohit as the first wicket of the match, including at Bengaluru where he set the tone for India’s sensational slide to 46 all out. Then, with Sarfaraz Khan threatening a VVS-style miracle in the second innings, Southee summoned all the outswing he could muster, and induced a scuff to cover to ignite the victory surge.And then, at Pune, when Ravindra Jadeja launched Ajaz Patel towards the long-on boundary in India’s final role of the dice, who should come galloping around the rope to seal one of the greatest Test upsets of all? There’s no player in New Zealand’s history that could have been a surer bet in such circumstances. Within the week, such surety will be history too.

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