‘It wasn’t a flat pitch’ – Harry Brook rates latest Test carnage as his best so far

Cricket
Harry Brook hailed what he rates as the best of his four Test hundreds to date after helping England recover from 21 for 3 to finish day one of the second Test against New Zealand on 315 without any further loss.

This fourth century – the slowest so far, yet still only from 107 deliveries – continued a theme of breaking records seemingly every time he comes out to bat. No one has more than his 807 runs after their first nine innings, and at the time of writing, only Sunil Gavaskar (912) and Don Bradman (862) have scored more in their first six Tests.

“I think so,” Brook said when asked if this was the top of his four three-figure scores. “The position of the game makes that decision, to be honest. The ones in Pakistan were amazing and good fun, but they were all very flat pitches. Today wasn’t a flat pitch. It’s a good cricket wicket, but not a flat pitch where you can smack it everywhere. I’ve done that a little bit, but it’s a pretty good pitch.

“It (the pitch) always gets easier when the ball gets a bit older. The longer you bat, it gets easier too. The hardest part about batting is the first 20 balls. If you get through that, it gradually starts to get easier. The ball got a bit older and it probably didn’t seem to do as much. There was still a little bit there, and a little bit of bounce.”

The 24-year-old heads into Saturday unbeaten on a career best score of 184. That Brook was able to play in the manner he did, operating comfortably above a run a ball for the majority of his innings was all the more impressive given the scene when he arrived to the crease. The returning Matt Henry – accompanied by his captain Tim Southee, who had chosen to bowl first upon winning the toss on a green pitch – removed England’s top three inside seven overs.

With Joe Root – who peeled off a 29th Test century during his 101 not out – for company, Brook was the dominant scorer in a yet unbroken stand of 294 – a new English record for any wicket in New Zealand – thanks to 24 fours and five sixes. Having come into Wellington averaging 77 in Tests, he now sleeps over an average of 100.88.

“I’m sure it’ll come down very quickly,” Brook said of that statistic. “The onus is clearly on staying grounded despite the tumbling records, and even putting forward a strong case for a fourth Player-of-the-Match award in a row. I’ve just said now actually good times at the minute, but just around the corner there might be bad times so you’ve got to enjoy these moments and cash in as much as I can.

“One of the things I’ve tried to work on over the last few years is staying as level headed as possible. There could be a bad moment from the corner and anything could happen, so enjoy the good moments. But we’ve still got four days left to play, and hopefully I can be a vital part of it tomorrow.”

Brook has yet to score a double hundred, with a first-class best of 194 against Kent last summer, and could have ticked that box on Friday had rain not washed out the remaining 25 overs of play. In fact, he also has a shot at besting his head coach: it was on this ground in 2014 that Brendon McCullum registered his top score of 302 against India. Brook, however, says his motivation is not to usurp his boss, but to rather overtake his father.

In 2001, David Brook had struck an unbeaten 210 for Burley Cricket Club in the Airedale and Wharfedale League. Brook junior, aged two at the time, anticipates a message reminding him of the 26 runs left to get to draw level.

“My dad’s highest score is 210, and my highest [first-class] score is 194. So that’s in the back of my mind at the minute,” he said. “But obviously [I] need to face the first ball tomorrow, which is the main thing.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Sources: Vols QB Iamaleava to play vs. Georgia
Wisconsin fires offensive coordinator after 2 years
Purdy status iffy after another limited practice
CP3 joins Stockton, Kidd with 12,000 career assists
Predicting Amorim’s first 11 games at Man United — and how he compares to prior coaches

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *