In Jan 2014, against India
at Wellington, McCullum showed he could put aside his batting belligerence and
instead graft away for the good of the team. India led by 246 on the first
innings and had New Zealand at 94 for 5 in the second before McCullum began a
near 13-hour stand in which he made 302, the only Test triple-century by a New
Zealander, and saved the Test. He faced 559 balls and hit 32 fours and four
sixes.
Today he faced 79 balls,
on 54 – he scored a four and that made history.
Brendon Barrie McCullum born in 1981 has niche in Test Cricket. The
wicketkeeper batsman has made 11 centuries ~today’s was special.
Brendon McCullum has blasted the fastest century in Test history, a 54-ball effort that broke the record jointly held by Viv Richards and Misbah-ul-Haq. In his 101st and final Test match, McCullum attacked Australia's bowlers relentlessly and brought up his milestone by crashing a four over cover off Josh Hazlewood. McCullum celebrated to a standing ovation from the crowd at Hagley Oval in Christchurch, raising his bat to all parts of the venue in his adopted home-town. The 34-year-old was actually dismissed on 39 when Mitchell Marsh produced a superb diving catch in the gully but was reprieved when television replays showed James Pattinson had bowled a no ball. Jack Morrison Gregory played in 24 Tests between 1920 and 1928. He was known mainly as a fearsome right-arm fast bowler but he also achieved a batting average of 36.50 and 1146 runs including two centuries, batting left-handed and gloveless. At the Johannesburg Test in 1921 he scored a century from 67 balls in 70 minutes, which was at the time the fastest hundred in terms of both balls faced and minutes taken in the history of Test cricket. The record stood until 1985 when Viv Richards managed the feat with 56 balls but it remains the record for the fastest hundred in terms of minutes. With regards – S. Sampathkumar
22nd Feb 2016.
