“We’ve been clearing neighbours’ stuff,” Tickner said, “using the forklift and loader. I actually got my old man’s loader stuck so hopefully he doesn’t watch this news report because it’s about a metre in the mud at the moment. I probably shouldn’t have driven around the neighbour’s yard. They said it wasn’t that deep and I got it stuck. So yeah, sorry about that, dad.”It has been a week of dramatic contrasts for the family. Tickner was in the original squad for the first Test and told early last week he would be debuting. However, the cyclone hit two days before the start, knocking out the power and meaning he could not get a hold of people to tell them the good news. When he did get through to his father, the conversation turned to whether he should even play.”I finally got hold of my dad and he just wanted us to represent our family well and represent Hawke’s Bay. I couldn’t really say no to playing my first Test and I knew I was going to help out, I just wanted to be a bright light for them at home.”The defeat to England by 267 runs reflects England’s domination, though Tickner grew into the match. Figures of 1 for 72 in 13 overs in the first innings were improved to 3 for 55 in the second. While his wife was able to come down for the whole thing, John only had a small window on day one. Thankfully, he was able to see his son remove Ben Duckett.”He was taking generators back down to Hawke’s Bay to help the people,” Tickner said. “He just stopped in for about half an hour, luckily saw my first Test wicket, and then went on to a seven-hour drive back home to help everyone.”There is a pang of guilt for Tickner, not least because Tauranga and Mount Maunganui became something of a bubble: everything geared towards the Test and good weather compared to what was unfolding elsewhere. There was rain in the build-up, but the match days were uninterrupted. It was easy for those unaffected to forget how bad things were a matter of hours down the road.Tickner’s father “luckily” saw his son’s first Test wicket•AFP/Getty ImagesAs such, New Zealand Cricket as a whole is looking to offer assistance. On Wednesday, it announced it would be partnering with ANZ NZ to raise money for the New Zealand Red Cross Disaster Fund during an ODI against Sri Lanka at Eden Park on Sunday. ANZ NZ will be pledging the equivalent of around US$ 622,600 and encouraging the public to donate further. All ticket proceeds will be donated to the fund.”We were wanting to help out how we could,” Tickner said, “and it’s awesome to see NZC and ANZ coming forward for the first game against Sri Lanka. It’s going to be awesome. Hopefully, we can have a sell-out and all that money goes to them. The cyclone, it’s around the whole of New Zealand – it’s been hard for everyone throughout the country, I’m not saying just Hawke’s Bay. I just want everyone to go out and support and you can help donate food, clothing all around New Zealand. So everyone can help.”Tickner will look to get back and continue to help in the recovery in Hawke’s Bay. Following the culmination of this series with England, there is a nine-day gap between the start of another two-match series against Sri Lanka.What distractions there are for the New Zealand team this week are understandable. Especially with matters far more important than cricket occupying them. But Tickner is hoping a squad brought together by their country’s pain can produce a strong reaction in Wellington this week.”I definitely want to get my first win in Test match cricket and really want to do it for the people in Hawke’s Bay,” he said. “Now we’ve banded together as a team and fundraising this money I think it’s going to be very special.”

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