Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 331 Wed. May 04, 2005  
   
Sports


Lara's 400 was on his mind


Chris Gayle kept teammate Brian Lara's world record uppermost while he became the fourth West Indian to score a triple century on the penultimate day of the final Test on Monday.

Lara heads the list, with his world record 400 not out last year, and 375 in 1994 against England, both coming at the Antigua Recreation Ground.

Sobers, who held the previous world record of 365 not out against Pakistan at Kingston in 1958, and Gayle's fellow Jamaican Lawrence Rowe with his silky 302 against England at Bridgetown in 1974, have also reached such rare heights for West Indies.

Jamaican Gayle scored 317 out of the West Indies' total of 565 for five, which they made in reply to South Africa's first innings of 588 for six declared.

Lara made the world record score of 400 not out against England at the same ground in 2003-04.

"I was trying to get as close as possible to 400, but it didn't happen and I'm satisfied with my performance," Gayle told a news conference.

"It would be a long way to come back if I had to start all over again. When will I reach this stage again?"

Gayle's innings was the highest by any batsman against South Africa and the 14th highest in Test history.

But he had been focused on Lara's milestone only.

"The only record I was thinking about was the 400," Gayle said.

Gayle batted for 10 and a half hours, faced 483 balls and hit 37 fours and three sixes.

He said he felt the strain of his long innings as it dragged on.

"I take it session by session and build from there, but just after lunch I found myself lapsing and I called for some water," Gayle said.

On Sunday, when he reached 184 not out, Gayle dedicated his innings to his mother, Hazelyn Gilroy.

He said he had telephoned her after Sunday's play.

"She was very happy, she said, 'Go get the next one'," Gayle said.

Gayle hoped his innings would prompt the Jamaican government to allocate more resources to cricket.

"They're focused on football, which has become the number one sport in Jamaica, but they could take a lot more interest in cricket," he said.

Picture
I'M HERE TOO: West Indies' Chris Gayle raises his arms upon reaching his triple hundred on the fourth day of the final Test against South Africa at Antigua on Monday. PHOTO: AFP