12 March,2019 08:37 AM IST | Wellington | AFP
New Zealand's Ross Taylor acknowledges fans during Day Four of the second Test against Bangladesh at Wellington yesterday. Pic/AFP
Ross Taylor whispered a prayer and an apology to the late Martin Crowe yesterday as he overtook his mentor's century tally during an exceptional innings of 200 that put New Zealand in a strong position in the second Test against Bangladesh.
Taylor's 18th Test century, one more than Crowe laid the foundation for New Zealand's 432 for six declared in the first innings of the rain-disrupted Test in Wellington. At stumps, Bangladesh were 80 for three in their second innings, needing another 141 runs on the final day to make New Zealand bat again.
Martin Crowe
The number four's sterling effort was his third Test double hundred and achieved his ambition to fulfil Crowe's prophecy that Taylor would one day overtake the late great batsman's mark. "I told Hogan [Crowe] 'my apologies' for taking so long to get there," said Taylor who scored his 17th century in 2017, nearly two years after Crowe died from cancer.
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"Seventeen was such a big number when I just started playing cricket. Once I got there it was a bit of a relief and then I didn't kick on. It was probably a little in my subconscious."
Taylor had discussed breaking Crowe's record with a sports psychologist who told him to acknowledge it would always be there and "now it's nice to knock it off and just go out there and play".
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