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NZ batsman Taylor to face Pakistan prior to eye surgery

Cricket - New Zealand v Pakistan - World Twenty20 cricket tournament - Mohali, India, 22/03/2016. New Zealand's Ross Taylor misses a shot. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi Picture Supplied by Action Images

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - New Zealand's Ross Taylor has passed an eye test and will be available to face Pakistan but the batsman plans to undergo surgery on a benign growth of the conjunctiva after the match and faces six weeks on the sidelines. Taylor did not bat in the second innings of the series-opening test in Christchurch after having an preliminary eye test on the first day and was a doubt for the second match at Seddon Park in Hamilton starting on Friday. After New Zealand wrapped up victory on Sunday, coach Mike Hesson said the 32-year-old former skipper had experienced a problem with vision out of the eye for about a year and a test showed it may have deteriorated "quicker" than hoped. However, a second eye examination in Hamilton returned a more positive prognosis. "Ross has a pterygium on his left eye, which is gradually getting bigger. Both the specialists he's seen in recent days have advised Ross still has 20/20 vision and Ross himself feels confident he is ready to play," team physiotherapist Tommy Simsek said in a media release. "Ross will still need to undergo a medical procedure on his eye to remove the pterygium before it gets any larger. He'll have surgery following the test which rule him out of cricket for approximately four-to-six weeks." (Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by John O'Brien)