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Overton has his window to prove the point of his selection

Jamie Overton helped stop England's early slide AFP

So this is what a Jamie Overton is.

Through little fault of his own, Jamie Overton has cut a curious figure in England colours over the past 12 months. Seemingly destined to retire with one international cap to his name - coming in 2022 when he made 97 on Test debut against New Zealand - he has since been the designated square peg to fit any round-hole problem England has faced.

On his ODI debut 12 months ago - a full five years after he had last played a List A match - Overton was selected at No.8 as a specialist batter. "It felt a little bit like I shouldn't be there," he said at the time.

A couple of months later against India, in his lone appearance of the series, he was picked as the side's out-and-out all-rounder to bat at No.7. And then after seemingly switching his attention to white-ball cricket, he was picked for the series decider in the Anderson-Tendulkar trophy at The Oval. He announced his red-ball retirement shortly after.

But after six weeks away from cricket where he was able to take a breath, he showed why England have valued him so highly at Mount Maunganui with 46 crucial runs, a probing - albeit wicketless - spell with the ball, and two pieces of high-quality fielding. There's a reason England like Overton so much. It has just taken until now to put it all together.

"100%," Overton said after play at the Mount. "At No.8 I want to be contributing runs whatever the situation. And in the middle overs keep hammering the wicket and make those breakthroughs. Then in the field, I feel like I'm a good fielder, so get in those hotspots, and take the catches and the run-outs when they come."

Unusually for a fast bowler, Overton is a fantastic slip fielder. His catch to dismiss Rachin Ravindra was completed long before it reached his hands. He was denied the same courtesy in return when Joe Root put down Michael Bracewell off his bowling on two. Overton would later run Bracewell out himself, completing a diving one-handed pick-up-and-throw from midwicket.

Dropped catches happen, but it would have stung Overton more than most. For the first time in his international career, there is a genuine settled role on the table. England have their opening bowlers sorted through a combination of Brydon Carse, Jofra Archer and whoever else may be available when fit (see Saqib Mahmood), but the role of middle-overs enforcer is up for grabs and an area that Harry Brook specifically noted as one that England need to improve.

"We're still trying to learn how to take wickets in the middle stage," Brook said after his team's four-wicket defeat to New Zealand. "We've bowled really well in the powerplay in the games I've captained, so I don't feel that's as much of an issue as the middle overs. We've got to try and find a way of taking wickets through there and not just rely on Rash [Adil Rashid] to have a bit of wizardry."

Overton has played eight ODIs for England, of which they have lost six and won two. He has only bowled more than six overs on one occasion: a statistic that is a symptom of an underperforming team who are defending meagre totals. A critic, however, would point out that Overton has only taken three middle-over wickets of top six batters across that time. To take Liam Plunkett's final eight ODIs as a comparison, he took 11 top-order wickets in those middle overs, and bowled more than six overs on all but one occasion.

It is cruel to compare any one player to the standard of a predecessor that no-one has yet been able to emulate. But that is what England are looking for. Overton should have both the remaining matches of this series to stake his claim. A run of games he has so far been denied in his brief, multi-hatted career.

His batting will buy him extra time. When his two stress fractures in 2023 and 2024 forced him to take a break from bowling, it gave him extra time in the nets and allowed him to develop his game to the point where he was playing as a specialist batter in the Blast for Surrey and the Hundred for Manchester Originals. It even got him a deal with the Adelaide Strikers.

"I spoke to one of the analysts halfway through the tournament," Overton said last year of his time in the BBL. "And he was like, 'Yeah, we didn't really pick you for your bowling."

At Mount Maunganui, he arrived at the crease in the 12th over and added 87 with Brook as they went blow-for-blow. That he was able to strike at close to 100 even with England in the depths is a big tick in his favour. So too was his on-the-spot decision to move away from his natural gameplan of standing still at the crease, and instead copy his captain Brook in moving around to disturb New Zealand's lengths.

"There were times when I was thinking 'what am I doing here?'" Overton said of his innings. "I normally don't move around. Whereas today I feel like because the wicket was doing a lot to try and move across or step back, and it's one of those which was trial and error. I actually found out today it will suit my game going forward."

Two boundaries off Nathan Smith, the first backing away and hitting through cover, followed by a whip through mid-wicket after walking across his stumps, proved his point.

For a year now, Overton has been a nice-to-have for England. A multi-talented cricketer capable of fitting in wherever and whenever. But with two games to go in the series and a spot up for grabs, Overton has the opportunity to prove to England he is no longer a nice-to-have, but a must.