Kevin Pietersen Slams Career-Best Triple Century for Surrey
Kevin Pietersen surpassed his previous First-Class best of 254 in a mammoth unbeaten innings of 355 for Surrey on day two of their County Championship Division Two match against Leicestershire at The Oval.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: May 12, 2015 04:45 pm IST
England's exiled batsman Kevin Pietersen continued from a career-best score overnight score of 326 and finished on 355 not out on Tuesday, even as ECB director Andrew Strauss poured cold water over his aspirations of making a comeback for England.
On Monday, Pietersen surpassed his previous First-Class best of 254 in a mammoth innings for Surrey on day two of their County Championship Division Two match against Leicestershire at The Oval.
The 34-year-old's new record total came in just 373 balls as he smashed 34 fours and 14 sixes to all corners of the south London venue.
His mastery of the Leicestershire attack was so complete that, by the close of play, no other Surrey player scored more than 36 in their first innings total of 528 for nine.
It was a perfectly timed statement of intent from Pietersen just 24 hours before Strauss's first public address as England's new director of cricket.
The South Africa-born star had notched his first Championship double century since July 2012 earlier in the day and then passed his previous first-class best of 254 not out for Nottinghamshire against Middlesex in August 2002.
Pietersen wasn't finished there and he continued to demolish Leicestershire's bowling before reaching his triple hundred in typically flamboyant fashion with a sweep for six.
But, despite his welcome return to form, Pietersen will know that routing a team from English cricket's second tier is still a far cry from dominating in similar fashion in the Test arena against New Zealand and Australia, who both face England over the coming months.
Pietersen's slender hopes of a recall remained with Strauss, who was appointed the England and Wales Cricket Board's (ECB) new director of cricket over the weekend at the same time Peter Moores was dismissed as coach.
Strauss, who captained Pietersen during their time in the England team and had a difficult relationship with the batsman, held his first press conference on Tuesday.
Pietersen has been cast adrift from England's plans since he was sacked from all apparent future plans in the aftermath of their 2013-14 Ashes whitewash defeat.
But incoming ECB chairman Colin Graves provided renewed hope that Pietersen could yet return when he hinted in March that runs for Surrey could provide the pathway he needs and he responded by agreeing a new contract with the county.
Pietersen sought to diminish the significance of Monday's innings, before taking the field on 35 not out overnight, when he told one of his Twitter followers he did not expect it to have a decisive bearing on his England return.
At the suggestion it could be "the most important innings of your life", Pietersen posted: "Ha! Seriously? Not sure my career can be decided on one innings on a Mon in London...we get judged on Ashes series'."