New Zealand Coach Gary Stead Says Kane Williamson Is Fine, Plays Down Hamstring "Twinge" Ahead Of T20WC Opener
T20 World Cup: New Zealand head coach Gary Stead is confident that captain Kane Williamson will be fit in time for the team's opening fixture against Pakistan on October 26.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: October 13, 2021 05:27 pm IST
Highlights
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Kane Williamson will lead New Zealand in upcoming T20 World Cup
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New Zealand will their first match against Pakistan in T20 World Cup
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Williamson was left from SRH' final XI in their last game vs MI
New Zealand head coach Gary Stead is confident that captain Kane Williamson, who hurt his hamstring during the IPL last week, will be fit in time for the team's opening T20 World Cup fixture against Pakistan on October 26. Williamson was left out of SunRisers Hyderabad's playing XI for their final match of the Indian Premier League, but Stead played down concerns around the chances of the injury hurting Williamson's participation in the marquee event. "Kane's fine," Stead told New Zealand Cricket. "He's just had a very, very slight hamstring twinge, but he's getting through everything at the moment, he's feeling good," he added.
"They (SunRisers Hyderabad) were out of the competition as well, so I'm not sure if that was something he had to play in."
Williamson joined the New Zealand camp from the IPL. Other members joining the national squad straight from the IPL included James Neesham and Adam Milne from Mumbai Indians alongside bowling coach Shane Bond.
With two weeks to go before New Zealand play their first match of the tournament, Stead is using the lead-up to the match to get his squad accustomed to the heat of the United Arab Emirates.
"Today we've probably trained in the hottest part of the day. Two o'clock we start and it's somewhere between 35 and 38 degrees probably. You can feel you burn pretty quick. We've just got to keep the fluids up. A little bit of shock therapy and getting get people back into the hot weather and working hard," Stead said.
"...making sure we manage guys in the next wee-while and be clear around our training and what we're trying to achieve. We're certainly not doing it to try and cook people."