England must decide what Eoin Morgan’s best role is and work out if Chris Silverwood needs a helping hand

Matt Roller28-Oct-2019England have treated T20 cricket as ODI-lite since their last-over defeat in Kolkata three years ago. The nature of the international schedule means their T20Is have resembled exhibition matches, tacked on to the start or end of 50-over series, and the lack of an impending world tournament has led to a bitty record: they have won 12 games, lost 10, and used 26 players since that 2016 final.But their five-match series in New Zealand is an important step on the road to Australia next winter. There are only 12 more games scheduled for England between this tour and the start of the World Cup, so it is important that they gain at least some idea of where they stand in the format. Here are five questions they would do well to answer…Are the Blast’s best good enough?This series represents a big opportunity for four of the Blast’s most consistent performers in recent years, all of whom are largely untested outside of domestic cricket.Pat Brown and Matt Parkinson are the two leading wicket-takers in the Blast over the past two seasons, with 48 and 46 scalps respectively. Brown’s temperament stood out in the past two editions of T20 Finals Day, as he repeatedly held his nerve on county cricket’s biggest stage with his array of variations at the death, but a combination of flat pitches and short boundaries in New Zealand will provide a stern test.