A fan famously declared:
This time, it felt like destiny. The Wilson Baby had been "reborn" in the most crucial match of the tournament. New Zealand went on to win a heart-stopping finish (thanks to a last-ball six from Grant Elliott), and the Wilson Baby became a permanent part of World Cup folklore. New Zealand lost the final to Australia a week later. Kane Williamson made just 12 runs. The "Wilson baby" didn't survive that match. But by then, it didn't matter.
Then, during the match against Australia, Williamson played a sublime, mature innings under pressure. He paced it perfectly, and in the 42nd over, he calmly pushed a single to reach his 5th ODI hundred. The stadium roared. But online, the joke reached its peak. Wilson Baby 2015
However, amid the team's success, their batting linchpin, the technically elegant and cool-headed Kane Williamson, was going through a bizarre slump. By his lofty standards, he wasn't scoring big. He was getting starts—20s, 30s, a single 50—but the coveted century (100 runs) eluded him. For a player of his class, this was an anomaly. New Zealand fans began to fret. The team was winning, but they knew that to beat the heavyweights like Australia, South Africa, or India in the knockouts, Williamson would need to fire. The story truly began during the pool match between New Zealand and Australia on February 28, 2015, at Eden Park in Auckland. It was a high-voltage trans-Tasman clash.
It is not about a real baby, but about a symbolic, fan-created "mascot" that represented the hopes and frustrations of the New Zealand cricket team, specifically their star batsman, Kane Williamson. A fan famously declared: This time, it felt like destiny
The internet exploded.
In the 39th over, with the required run rate climbing, Williamson drove a ball through the covers and ran two. He had reached his second century of the tournament—98 balls, 12 fours, 1 six. New Zealand lost the final to Australia a week later
Why "Wilson"? Because Kane Williamson’s nickname is "Willy" (short for Williamson). Adding the "-son" suffix, the fanbase affectionately (and humorously) named the metaphorical baby "Wilson." The "birth" was his long-awaited century. The entire r/Cricket community erupted in a mock celebration—congratulating "Kane and his wife on the arrival of little Wilson." What started as a silly joke quickly transformed into a powerful, self-aware meme that followed the New Zealand team for the rest of the tournament.