The frenetic scoring has left bowlers with few places to hide and raised concerns about the sport’s balance between bat and ball ahead of next month’s T20 World Cup in the United States and the Caribbean.
“It’s forever changing, and we’re even seeing in the last few weeks in India that it’s changing again,” Southee told New Zealand media. “You have to change as a bowler, especially. You have to move with the times, and if you don’t you get left behind. “As a spectacle, it´s exciting. “As a bowler, I´d like it to come back in our favour a little bit more. But I hope that people are enjoying watching cricket.”
Southee was named in his seventh T20 World Cup squad this week, joining fellow old stagers Trent Boult and Kane Williamson.
New Zealand will rely on their usual strength in pace bowling at the tournament, with quicks Matt Henry and Lockie Ferguson included along with medium pacer Daryl Mitchell.
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