Brian Lara factbox after reclaiming Test record
Guyana Chronicle
April 13, 2004
ST JOHN'S, Antigua, (Reuters) - Factbox on West Indies' captain Brian Lara after he reclaimed the world record for the highest individual Test score in the fourth Test against England yesterday:
1969: Born Santa Cruz, Trinidad, May 2; youngest of seven brothers.
1984: First represents West Indies at Under-19 level.
1988: Makes debut for Trinidad and Tobago.
1989: Captains West Indies B team to Zimbabwe.
1990: Test debut, third Test v Pakistan, Lahore, makes 44 and 6.
1993: First Test century, 277 runs v Australia, Sydney.
1994: World Test record 375 in fifth Test v England, St John's, Antigua.
1994: World first-class record 501 not out for Warwickshire v Durham at Edgbaston.
1994: Scores six hundreds in his first seven first-class innings for Warwickshire: 147, 106, 120 not out, 136, 26, 140, 501 not out.
1995: Walks out of West Indies' tour of England after dressing room row at end of the fourth Test but is persuaded to rejoin party four days later.
1995: Pulls out of tour of Australia two days before squad leave the Caribbean following fine by West Indies Board disciplinary committee for breach of contract on England tour.
1996: Reprimanded by West Indies Board for derogatory remarks attributed to him following a World Cup defeat by Kenya and for an altercation with team physio Denis Waight on flight from Bombay to London following World Cup.
1998: Named as West Indies captain against England in the Caribbean, leading his side to 3-1 Test series victory.
1998: Sacked as West Indies captain when players' revolt over pay delays start to tour of South Africa but is reinstated after four days of talks end impasse.
1999: Returns from dreadful tour of South Africa where West Indies suffer 5-0 drubbing in Test series and lose one-day series 6-1.
1999: Re-appointed West Indies captain for Test series against Australia in the Caribbean.
Scores 213 in Kingston -- his first three-figure innings for a year -- to lead West Indies to series-levelling win in second Test against Australia.
Hits unbeaten 153 as West Indies score 311-9 in fourth innings to win third Test. Series against Australia ends 2-2.
1999: Leads West Indies as they lose both Tests and all five one-dayers on tour of New Zealand.
2000: Resigns as West Indies captain on February 24.
Takes break from cricket for four months.
2001: Returns to West Indies side for Sri Lanka tour making 221 and 130 to become first player for almost three decades to make a century and double century in the same Test but still lose. Averaged 114.66 for series, then dislocates left elbow in one-dayer, an injury which troubles him for most of 2002.
Scores century in Champions Trophy match v Kenya, then collapses with mystery illness.
2003: Scores match-winning century against South Africa in the first game of the World Cup.
Re-appointed West Indies captain for series against Australia, lost 3-1. Leads West Indies to 1-0 win over Sri Lanka, scoring 209 in the first Test.
Scores 531 runs at 66.37 in four-Test series in South Africa. West Indies lose series 3-0.
2004: Makes ducks in both the first and second Tests as England take 3-0 lead in four-match series in the Caribbean.
Passes Matthew Hayden's world record of 380, set in Perth in October 2003, in the fourth Test with a six and a four off spinner Gareth Batty.
Highest individual Test scores
ST JOHN'S, Antigua, (Reuters) - List of Test cricket's highest individual scores after Brian Lara reached 400 on the third day of the fourth Test against England yesterday. (+ denotes not out):
400+ Brian Lara (West Indies) v England, St John's 2004
380 Matthew Hayden (Australia) v Zimbabwe, Perth, 2003
375 Lara v England, St John's, 1994
365+ Garfield Sobers (West Indies) v Pakistan, Kingston, 1958
364 Len Hutton (England) v Australia, The Oval, 1938
340 Sanath Jayasuriya (Sri Lanka) v India, Colombo, 1997
337 Hanif Mohammad (Pakistan) v West Indies, Bridgetown, 1958
336+ Wally Hammond (England) v New Zealand, Auckland, 1933
334+ Mark Taylor (Australia) v Pakistan, Peshawar, 1998
334 Don Bradman (Australia) v England, Leeds, 1930
333 Graham Gooch (England) v India, Lord's, 1990
329 Inzamam-ul-Haq (Pakistan) v New Zealand, 2002
325 Andy Sandham (England) v West Indies, Kingston, 1930
311 Bobby Simpson (Australia) v England, Manchester, 1964
310+ John Edrich (England) v New Zealand, Leeds, 1965
309 Virender Sehwag (India) v Pakistan, Multan, 2004
307 Bob Cowper (Australia) v England, Melbourne, 1966
304 Bradman v England, Leeds, 1934
302 Lawrence Rowe (West Indies) v England, Bridgetown, 1974.