That's what I mean about them being on a hiding to nothing on that wicket.
The easiest way to survive on those wickets, rather than trying to back your ability to defend well, is to try to make them bowl badly by putting them under pressure.
You need a lot of audacity to make that call, but based on the evidence of last week, guys that have the game to put pressure on Australia - guys like Brendon McCullum, Jesse Ryder and Ross Taylor - did not have the confidence to do it.
You have to have a bit of sympathy for them on that count because if they did have a go and it didn't come off, they would have been torn to shreds.
I like the look of Dean Brownlie and just hope there is no pressure to move him up the order. He looks like a quality No 6.
He is tidy and organised. He has what I'd call a sustainable method of scoring runs and I can see him putting together big scores consistently.
He's not dour or boring, but he quietly accumulates with a reasonably decent technique.
Just because you're good in the middle-order doesn't mean you're going to be successful at the top of the order. In fact, it can often mean the opposite. I hope they have the good sense to let him develop into a world-class No 6, which he can be.