Tim Seifert likes to go bam bam

New Zealand have an attacking new wicketkeeper-batsman. Dare we say: shades of McCullum?

Deivarayan Muthu20-May-2020Tim Seifert is up against Bhuvneshwar Kumar in his first T20I as an opener. The wicketkeeper-batsman hurries down the track, picks the knuckleball and swipes it disdainfully into the stands beyond midwicket. Two balls later, he comes down the pitch again and wallops Kumar down the ground, forcing the umpire to duck for cover. On commentary, Ian Smith is excited, saying he sees a bit of Brendon McCullum in the 25-year-old.Seifert clubs 84 off 43 balls and hands India their worst T20I defeat in terms of runs.This ability to bash the ball – and his boyish looks – had already earned Seifert a nickname from his Northern Districts team-mates, inspired by, of all things, .”At that time [in 2014], I was the youngest one in the Northern Districts team,” Seifert says on the phone from Hamilton. “They thought it was a bit like Bam Bam with his stick. It was Corey Anderson or Daryl Mitchell who gave me that nickname, and apparently, they say I look like him too. ()”ALSO READ: Tim Seifert: the top-order outsider looking in for New ZealandGoing down the track to club the ball is just one stroke in Seifert’s wide range, which perhaps owes its breadth to his diverse and rich sports background. He played hockey for New Zealand Under-18s and Under-21s for his district, Midlands. His father, too, played multiple sports; his mother played netball, and his sister nearly became a professional golfer.”Playing hockey has helped playing cricket, especially the reverse hits and the switch hits,” Seifert says. “Because that’s the same kind of shot you play in hockey – the reverse shot. And I enjoy playing golf as well. The whole swing path of the club is very much like the cricket [bat-swing] path as well.”Some of the more artful of those shots were on show when he struck a 40-ball hundred, the fastest in New Zealand’s domestic T20 competition, late in 2017. That came against an Auckland bowling attack containing Lockie Ferguson, Sam Curran and Tarun Nethula. Seifert has been among the top run getters in the tournament since that season. It has been the platform from which he has boosted himself into New Zealand’s senior white-ball sides.