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Personal Information

Full Name Brian Charles Lara
Born May 2, 1969 Cantaro, Santa Cruz
Age 55 Years, 6 Months, 22 Days
National Side West Indies
Batting Style Left Handed
Bowling Leg break googly
Sport Cricket

Ranking

Test ODI T20
Batting - -
Bowling - -

Man of the Match

Test ODI T20 World Cup CL
12 30 4

Career Information

Teams Played West Indies, ICC World XI, Mumbai Champs, Northerns, Southern Rocks, Warwickshire, West Indies Inv XI, Young West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago, West Indies Under-19, Marylebone Cricket Club, Sachins Blasters, Bravo XI, West Indian Legends, Ponting XI
Career Span

Brian Charles Lara Profile

Brian Charles Lara Overall Stats

Batting & Fielding Performance

M I N/O R HS 100s 50s 4s 6s AVG S/R CT ST Ducks R/O
Test
131 232 6 11953 400* v ENG 34 48 1559 88 52.88 60.51 164 0
ODI
299 289 32 10405 169 v SL 19 63 1035 133 40.48 79.51 120 0
World Cup
34 33 4 1225 116 v SA 2 7 124 17 42.24 86.26 16 0

Bowling Performance

I O M R W Best 3s 5s AVG E/R S/R Mtc
Test
4 10 1 28 0 0/0 v ENG 0 0 - 2.80 -
ODI
5 8.1 0 61 4 2/5 v ENG 0 0 15.25 7.46 12.25

Brian Charles Lara Profile

One look at Brian Charles Lara's Test scores, and there is no doubt in one's mind that here is a batsman with a vociferous appetite for runs. In the year 1994, he broke his countryman Gary Sobers' long standing record for many decades by scoring a brilliant 375. As if to prove that this was not a fluke, he followed it up with an unbeaten 501 in a first class match for Warwickshire the following season. In 2004, Lara became the first batsman to reclaim the highest individual Test score record by scoring a 400 against England, in the process breaking Hayden's 380.

Lara's attitude towards cricket can be best described as moody brilliance. To go with the above records, he is probably the only batsman to have tackled Murali the way he did, scoring 600-odd runs in a three match series in Sri Lanka, his innings epitomized by quicksilver feet movement. And then there were times, when he looked good to be anywhere but the batting crease, almost as if his mind's not on the job. As if to drive home a point, Lara's overall Test average of almost 53 is not too dissimilar from his 51 against the Aussies, and it was only 41 against NZ.

Brian Lara's ODI record of more than 10,000 runs at an average of almost 41 was equally great, but somehow, his amazing Test innings overshadowed the same. Incidentally, Lara became the second batsman, after Sachin Tendulkar to score more than 10,000 runs in both forms of the game.

On retirement, Lara is one of the few cricketers, whose Test average was more than his First Class one!

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