Latham himself was left searching for words when asked for his immediate reactions. Peter Cader, the only travelling reporter from New Zealand for the Pune Test, broke into a dance at the press conference to celebrate the team’s unprecedented success.Geoff, one among a handful of travelling fans from New Zealand – he had come over from Thames, a small town southwest of Auckland – was also left overwhelmed with emotion. “Earlier in May, I’d made up my mind to follow this New Zealand team in India,” he said. “I’m staggered to witness this. The other great game I remember watching from the ground was the win around 1980 [1978], when we beat England at the Basin Reserve.”This ranks well above that. Beating England in Wellington is great but beating India in India is far above that. I will go back, sit in the hotel, grab a beer and reflect on the special evening. I feel very privileged to be here.”New Zealand fan Geoff felt “privileged” to see his team win a Test series in India•ESPNcricinfo/Deivarayan MuthuIt will take a while to sink in for everyone, what this team has achieved. But the Black Caps assembly line will not stop whirring in the background, searching for talent that can take their success forward. Ravindra has already made it to the big time. Auckland’s Ben Lister has been tipped to fill the Boult-sized void in white-ball cricket, while Wellington’s tearaway Ben Sears, who was ruled out of this Test series in India, is capable of becoming the next Lockie Ferguson.Tim Robinson, who recently made his New Zealand and Caribbean Premier League (CPL) debuts, has the type of explosive power that made Guptill a force at the top in limited-overs cricket. Nathan Smith could potentially perform the all-round role that Colin de Grandhomme used to do. And now all of them will believe that anything truly is possible, thanks to what Latham and his men have done in India.

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