The Kiwis are a wonderful bunch of people

Over the years, the Kiwis have met disappointments with a smile rather than a frown, their behavior raising the bar. 

Published : Jun 30, 2021 20:51 IST , Chennai

Tim Southee in action at the World Test Championship.
Tim Southee in action at the World Test Championship.
lightbox-info

Tim Southee in action at the World Test Championship.

When Tim Southee recently auctioned his World Test Championship final shirt to raise funds for the treatment of an eight-year old suffering from a rare type of cancer, it shone light on a wonderful bunch of guys.

Over the years, the Kiwis have met disappointments with a smile rather than a frown, their behavior raising the bar.  

And talking about disappointments could there have been a greater setback than seeing the ICC ODI World Cup final at Lord’s being snatched away from them by a bizarre rule. Most teams in a similar situation could have exploded with hurt and anger. Not the Kiwis.

They collected their runner-up awards with grace and dignity, underlining their glowing qualities.

READ|

And in Kane Williamson, the New Zealanders have a captain and a role model. Play the game hard but fair. While winning matters, the means to it is more important.

Southee’s gesture to help a young girl is not one in isolation. Over the years, the Kiwi cricketers have, in their own quiet way, chipped in for noble causes. Yet, they do not advertise it. You hear about them when in New Zealand, from those in the know of things.

READ|

The manner the Kiwis rallied around their former captain and batting great Martin Crowe is a case in point.

Crowe was in some pain when he attended the Wellington Test of 2014. The cancer had returned.  Yet, throughout the match, he was surrounded by his former team-mates who made their skipper laugh, feel at ease and momentarily forget the great physical discomfort he was under. 

This is how men of honour pay homage to their leader. Sadly, Crowe passed away in 2016, but his men cushioned the agony as the scourge consumed him. 

But for the occasion when Ross Taylor lost his captaincy to Brendon McCullum under controversial circumstances, the Kiwis have been rather blemishless in the manner they go about their cricket. 

And as the WTC final revealed, you can be nice and sweep the world too.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment