“Yeah, it’s almost series-by-series, and like I say after this, there’s a pretty large block away from the group as well, and there’ll be more conversations had,” Williamson said at his press conference in Mount Maunganui. “Yeah, so just kind of cross those bridges as we come, and like I mentioned earlier, just with the balance in mind for the young family.”
Williamson had also previously flagged his shifting priorities, telling NZC of the delicate balance between time with his young family and his international commitments with New Zealand.
“Yeah, I mean, my position’s still the same,” Williamson said. “It’s the balance, and I’ve got a young family, and that takes a lot of my time and attention now, and I’m still enjoying my cricket. As long as that’s at the forefront…and New Zealand Cricket have been really helpful and respectful of that as well.
“And so whilst I’m still here, I want to try and contribute as much as I can and give to the team as much as I can, and it’s great to be involved in this series at home again. I mean, there’s quite a big break post this, so plenty more time to weigh all these things up.”
“Yeah, those are amazing tours, and I’ve had a few of them in my time, and as we know, the depth as well in New Zealand Cricket at the moment is outstanding,” Williamson said. “I mean, gosh, the injuries that we’ve had and the guys that are coming in and contributing like they are. I mean, I think in Wellington, across our four bowlers, there were about seven Test matches between them and to see them come in and do as well as they’ve done has been fantastic. So going into, you know, a big sort of Test 18 months, with a real battery of fast bowlers is exciting, and certainly going to England and Australia, etc, are really sort of mouth-watering prospects and great opportunities because they are tough tours.
“And for me, I mean, yeah, like I say, I’ve been involved with a few of them before, and my position is still the same, and it’s sort of executing that balance as well as I can. Still wanting to very much respect that, there’s a team being built, and so you’re wanting to give as much as you can to it, you know, whilst you’re here.”
“That’s funny, eh? Like, you play one Test and you’re pretty stoked and then you hang around for a bit and then you have other conversations like maybe the question you were asking [10,000 Test runs],” Williamson said. “For me it’s about contribution [to the team], you know. I’ve never really played for, you know… just never used this team for my own personal gain, and I know cricket’s sort of saturated in stats, but you’re wanting to go out and contribute to a team that you care about, so whatever runs you get are not really yours, they’re for the team, and so what you end up on is whatever it is, and there’s so many factors to that, you know.
“There’s the amount of games you play, there’s the amount of opportunities that you get to bat, blah, blah, blah. But that’s not really why I love the game, and so for me it’s about continuing to commit to the reasons why I love it, and that’s being a part of a group and trying to contribute as much as you can.”
“I think sometimes you get a little bit like… I guess from my point of view as well, you get a little bit selfish in the thought of having a New Zealand player with 10,000 Test runs would be quite a cool stat to get to,” Ronchi said after the Wellington Test. “You look at what it might mean to cricket in general. But again, like you said to him – it’s not always a thing, he’s not looking at numbers and expecting I’ll do this or I’ll do that.
“So it depends on the individual and who you look at. I think knowing Kane and how he wants to go about his cricket… it’ll be in his mind anyway, but he knows that his style and the way he wants to go about it is a particular way. If he gets there, he gets there, if he doesn’t, he doesn’t.”
Deivarayan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo