Williamson has now been central to three of the greatest Test results of the last five years. In Abu Dhabi 2018, as his gamble on a debutant paid off and Pakistan collapsed from 130 for 3 to 171 all out in a chase of 176, he was seen walking towards the huddle with the energy of an extra trying not to mess up the shot instead of the hero who should be taking curtain call. As if to him it was all just academic. Ajaz Patel was a spinner. It was a day four pitch. He had just taken three wickets in four overs. The last pair was in. One of them was Azhar Ali who doesn’t match up well against slow left-armers. The other was a No. 11 and they sometimes find the temptation to hit the ball in the air extremely hard to resist. In such a high-pressure situation, Williamson was able to let logic in, and it helped his team win; it would have helped reduce the burden if they had lost too.The same thing happened in 2017. Australia’s ninth wicket had fallen when they were 61 runs off. Now they needed seven. Williamson went to Tim Southee and hatched a plan. You bowl full. Make the guy on 146 not out hit straight. I’ll be at short mid-on and try to run out the No. 11 who, given it’s the last ball of the over, will be trying to do everything he can to stay off strike. Hazlewood strayed. Williamson pounced.Staying calm and alert and centred. This is what he does and perhaps the most famous instance of his doing so was in 2015 when he launched Pat Cummins high into the night sky and sent a stadium that the All Blacks frequent – so they should be used to seeing amazing things – into rapture. Forty-thousand people were busy losing it but the man in the thick of it all would indulge in a fist pump that was almost apologetic when there was grounds to be apoplectic. This was victory over the arch-rivals with just one wicket to spare and he acknowledged it by being slightly more than deadpan.Each of these times New Zealand lurched from losing a game they fought so hard for to winning one they had no business doing; from the lowest of lows to the highest of highs, and yet they had absolutely nothing over Williamson. He actually forgot all about the run-out in 2017 because when a seven-year-old asked him about it, he began talking about an entirely different match altogether.In some ways, Williamson is well placed to be this way, to escape the bonds that come with greatness. Virat Kohli can’t do that. He can’t even be sure of the privacy inside his own hotel room. Joe Root can’t do that. He scored all the runs in the world in 2021 and still all anybody asked of him was why his team kept playing so badly. Steven Smith can’t do that. He once made a mistake that made the Australian prime minister mad. It is perhaps the one critical advantage he has over the rest of the fab four. He can afford to be detached. It doesn’t mean he doesn’t want to win. Just that, more often than not, he is in the best headspace to do so.

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