In the winter of 2018, he was ready to admit he needed help from the outside. He started to go to mental-skills coaches. “It had reached a point where I was willing to try anything really,” Neesham says. “It became pretty clear to me that it wasn’t a physical problem that was holding me back. It was how I was approaching the game.”Sometimes you just have to put your hand up and say you don’t have all the answers. And being able to open up to someone else like that and take their suggestions – it feels like the right thing to do but also the brave thing to do.”He realised two things over those sessions: that he needed a life outside cricket, and that his cricket was his responsibility and not any coach’s.For the first part, he took up the job at Halter. “What it reinforced for me was that I am more than a cricketer,” he says. “I don’t potentially need this sport but I do enjoy the sport, and that’s really the reason for me to play.ALSO READ: James Neesham marks return with five sixes in an over”I don’t need to be playing to service my mortgage or to feel self-worth as a person. I think once you get a perspective and you realise that you will survive without the game, you will enjoy the game for what it is. And it is just a game.”It is something that I loved playing when I was a kid, from the age of four or five, and long before I thought it would pay for things I wanted or give me status I wanted or whatever the outcomes are. And I think having those times away from the game and realising that I sort of did enjoy life not playing cricket really allowed me to come back and treat it for what it is – which is just a game really.”To sort out his technique he watched his most recent footage, and saw it was not Jimmy Neesham. It was a Frankenstein’s monster. “When you look at being in Otago and at Derbyshire or Kent or Black Caps or New Zealand A, there is always a different set of people around and different batting coaches and support staff, and they obviously all have their opinions on things you should be doing and the way you should be batting,” Neesham says. “I think I really started falling between stools a little bit. Trying to please different people.”I really didn’t see in any part of my technique anything that I believed in. It was all sort of an amalgamation of different ideas from different coaches.””If I scored 80, I wanted a hundred; if I scored 120, I wanted 150. Basically, no game was a success”•Getty ImagesHe went back to Kit Perera, who coached him when he was just out of school, and in three hour-long sessions they took the batting back to where it was. “I started to see the ball-striking that I had when I was a kid,” he says. “From then on it was all about purifying it, and letting it work with your tactical awareness and your situational awareness of batting.”He joined Wellington, where Bruce Edgar, Hamish Bennett and Michael Bracewell were in the leadership group. He liked the culture there, which focused on players as humans and not just cricketers. He stopped obsessing over perfection. Now if he was 30 off 40 and hit a ball straight to cover, he didn’t let it spiral out of control and lead to his dismissal.The body began to react too. Neesham has now had an 18-month injury-free run. “I can run in and worry about where the ball is going rather than what my back is doing.” He is back in the World Cup squad, consciously thinking of the team more than himself, and more importantly, in love with the game.Why exactly does he love it, though?”Anyone can get anyone out on their day,” he says. “Anyone can beat anyone. I think we have all seen guys bat terribly and get hundreds. We have all seen guys nick off first ball, playing a perfect shot. You really understand you have to take each day and train as best as you can and prepare as best as you can absolutely, hit as many balls as you can. Once you are on the field, you have to accept that there is nothing you can do to guarantee your success.”Or, in the words of the man who replaced him for the last World Cup, Elliott, “You have to care a lot, but play like you don’t care.”

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