New Zealand will be relying heavily on skipper Kane Williamson and veteran Ross Taylor to lay a strong foundation. Tom Latham, Henry Nicolas, B.J. Watling, Tom Blundell, all have healthy Test averages too. And then you have Devon Conway, the oldest man to score a double century on debut. At 29 years and 329 days, the left-handed Conway went past Ranjitsinhji’s 154 not out for England against Australia in Manchester, 1896. The Kiwis’ pace quartet, with young Kylie Jamieson and the feared pack of Tim Southee and left-armers Trent Boult and Neil Wagner has the potential to run through any side. Southee has Virat Kohli in his sights; Rohit has had similar problems against the in-swing of Boult and Pujara and Rahane are shaky against Neil Wagner, who can dish up the short-pitched stuff with disconcerting consistency. Indian batsmen need to play with the conviction and resolve they surely possess, while the bowling can put NZ under pressure any time. The WTC final looks all set to be a closely fought encounter between two evenly matched teams.