Published on 12:00 AM, March 28, 2015

Old-time master carves 'Stradivarius in willow'

Working from a small town in Waipawa, James Laver has shaped the bats of many cricketing legends and both teams stars in the World Cup final will likely have bats carved by his hands. PHOTO: AFP

Few cricket fans have heard of James Laver, even though the master craftsman's bats -- likened to "Stradivarius in willow" -- have graced the innings of legends such as Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara and Ricky Ponting.

Laver works in relative anonymity in the hamlet of Waipawa on New Zealand's North Island, hand-carving bats for his boutique Laver & Wood label while also supplying some of the world's top players.

But elite batsmen inevitably have lucrative endorsement contracts with major manufacturers, so the bats he makes for the stars appear with the sponsor's name on, rather than Laver's.

Laver explained he has an understanding with major manufacturers that he can talk about retired players who have used his blades, but not those who are still playing.

The result is polite evasiveness when trying to determine the level of Laver's involvement in Sunday's Cricket World Cup final between New Zealand and Australia.

Can he confirm his bats will be used in the decider at the Melbourne Cricket Ground?: "Yes"

Can he say who will be using them?: "No," he replies with a twinkle in his eye. "But they'll be on both sides."

"People often ask if I get frustrated that my name's not on there but it's not like that," he said.

"I know my bats will be used in a World Cup final regardless, and that's quite cool, in a way."

Drifts of wood shavings reach knee high in the corners of Lavers' factory, where bats of every kind line walls and shelves -- from rough-hewn "clefts" of imported English willow, to split, battle-scarred blades sent by clients around the world to be replaced.

After one half-formed bat has gone through a mechanical press -- two tonnes of pressure to compress the wood and harden the face -- Laver administers a quick "thwack, thwack, thwack" with a mallet.

"You're listening to the bat, every bat has a different pitch," he says. "A close grain might have one sound if it's a good bat, but if it's not so good it'll be different. Also, you're getting a feel for how well the blade bounces and what it's going to do."

Laver originally trained as a construction engineer in his native England but wound up serving an apprenticeship with batmakers Millichamp & Hall.

After marrying a Kiwi, the 44-year-old moved to New Zealand and set up Laver & Wood in 1999, keeping alive century-old practices that have disappeared elsewhere in the face of mass production.

"We're the only company worldwide now that would make a bat through the all phases from the cleft to the finished product in whatever shape you want it," he said.

Each bat is handmade after customers provide details such as height, batting style, favourite shot, most common dismissal method, type of wicket played on.

The factory produces about 1,800 bats a year, compared to 700 a day from major manufacturers, with prices ranging from NZ$400-1,000 ($305-760).

Laver said about 60 percent of his customers were Indian, mostly expatriates, who were looking for a bat that was individually tailored to improve performance and also carried exclusive cachet.

Each bat takes about four hours of labour and goes through a week-long process of curing, shaping, sanding and polishing.

One of the bats being worked this week was a four pound (1.8 kg) monster. Laver says there is no doubt blades are getting bigger and he believes administrators will eventually have to impose limits.