Vettori has taken 298 ODI wickets with his left-arm spin and should have the opportunity to join the elite 300 club when the Black Caps play Afghanistan in Napier on Sunday.
Eleven players, none of them New Zealanders, have reached the milestone, including all-time leader Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan (534) and Wasim Akram of Pakistan (502), the only two men to have broken through the 500-wicket barrier.
Instead, he said he was focused on his Test figures -- he has 362 wickets and 4,531 runs and had hoped to eventually become the second player behind the great Kapil Dev to achieve the double of 400 Test wickets and 4,000 runs.
That now looks unlikely for Vettori, who is 36 and in the twilight of his career, but he said the Black Caps' strong run as World Cup co-hosts was inspiration enough.
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"Because of how we're progressing as a side and because it's been going so well, I haven't really thought about it, but it would be a lovely thing to achieve."
The former New Zealand skipper, who made his ODI debut in 1997, won plaudits when he came on against Australia last week and slowed their scoring dramatically, helping New Zealand to a nail-biting one-wicket win.
"It's hard to do it all the time, so if I can allow those other guys to attack, that's really the role."
Vettori was full of praise for the raucous support home fans have given the Black Caps, particularly during victories over England in Wellington and Australia in Auckland.
"To play in front of that crowd in Wellington and hear the noise and hear the chanting during Tim(Southee's) spell, then to follow it up with the crowd in Auckland, the crowd was almost deafening there," he said.