"I first need to cement my spot in the World Cup team," Munro tells ESPNcricinfo. "There are some big games coming up for me and the team leading into that World Cup. Just want to put my best foot forward. If I'm there, I obviously want to go all the way. That means I've to go out there and play differently on certain days, and be a dasher at the top on others; I'm pretty happy to be adaptable."
Munro is no longer that one-trick pony who smashes the new ball and throws his wicket away after a start. He showed signs of adaptability during his title-winning stints with Trinbago Knight Riders in the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) and Balkh Legends in the inaugural Afghanistan Premier League (APL).
On a slow, cracked pitch in Basseterre, Munro watched Chris Lynn and Sunil Narine fall inside five overs against St Kitts Nevis Patriots. He sized up the conditions with his mentor Brendon McCullum and worked his way to a 41-ball fifty - his slowest in T20 cricket. He then cracked 26 off his last nine balls, setting the scene for Dwayne Bravo's late burst, and TKR's fourth successive victory Cheap Cigarettes Wholesale. Munro finished with an unbeaten 76 off 50 balls at a control factor of 80% on a tricky surface.