The New Zealand Herald

Captain simply fantastic

Williamson equals Crowe’s record but makes it obvious his work is not yet completed

- Andrew Alderson in Hamilton Skipper’s century gives New Zealand slim hope B10

The best sight of Kane Williamson on the third day of the third test was not necessaril­y the immaculate stroke-making on his way to an unbeaten 148, but the manner in which he strode from the ground.

With helmet and gloves fixed in place and pelvis tilted forward, he made a beeline for the dressing room’s ice bath.

There was no pause to absorb the adulation from the crowd or teammates. The New Zealand captain has work to do if the weather continues to flummox the water-logged forecasts. He excelled aesthetica­lly. His checked back foot strokes through cover point, drives either side of the wicket and delicate late cuts were executed with footwork that would receive unanimous 10s on Dancing With The Stars. He excelled statistica­lly. Williamson reached his 17th test century, equalling Martin Crowe’s New Zealand record.

He became the sixth Kiwi to get 5000 test runs when he pulled Vern Philander for six over square leg.

Williamson is the fastest in 110 innings, seven inside Crowe’s old mark. At 26 years and 231 days he is also the third youngest test player to complete the feat behind Sachin Tendulkar and Alastair Cook.

His 190-run record second-wicket stand with Jeet Raval (88) saw New Zealand wrest back control at 321 for four in reply to South Africa’s 314. He excelled with his leadership. An example was when he appeared to get offered the light by the umpires at 6.47pm; Williamson decided to continue, thus maximising the chance to score runs and advance the match.

Yet none of those factors would have infiltrate­d the captain’s mindset as he strode through the pickets at

2010 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017

77 tests, 5444 runs, average 45.36

KANE WILLIAMSON

61, 5088 runs, 51.39 81, 6030, 47.10 82, 5334, 37.82 101, 6453, 38.64 81, 4702, 37.02 131 v India 102* v South Africa 135 v Sri Lanka 114 v Bangladesh 113 v India 113 v West Indies 161* v West Indies 192 v Pakistan 242* v Sri Lanka 132 v England 140 v Australia 166 v Australia 108* v Sri Lanka 113 v Zimbabwe 104* v Bangladesh 130 v South Africa 148* v South Africa * Not out Ahmedabad Wellington Colombo Chittagong Auckland Jamaica Barbados Sharjah Wellington Lords Brisbane Perth Hamilton Bulawayo Wellington Dunedin Hamilton stumps. The match result is the sole barometer of success for cricket’s patron saint of modesty.

Williamson made his lowest test aggregate (3) at Wellington, but shrugged off that cloak of disappoint­ment the moment he leant into a cover drive off Morne Morkel to go from two to six. From there he was a picture of batting applicatio­n. His influence was further bolstered by a rare test six — the 10th of his career — on-driving Keshav Maharaj towards the sightscree­n and holding his shape. Further sixes were pulled from Vern Philander and Morkel.

The batting tended to be of low risk and maximum impact, which tamed South Africa in the field. Despite accurate lines, bouncing the ball on the used block strips to enhance its reversing qualities, and intense powwows between captain Faf du Plessis and his bowlers, the visitors’ attack could not penetrate the captain’s mental or physical defensive shields.

Williamson benefited from what was effectivel­y a padded-up vacation with Raval and Tom Latham posting an opening stand of 83, beating the previous first-wicket best of 18 by either side in the series.

“He [Williamson] is never satisfied with a century,” Raval said. “He wants to get big runs to help the team into a good position. I was lucky enough to be at the other end.

“He’s so calm, and knows his game. He senses each situation well by Tuesday, March 28, 2017 soaking up the pressure and then knowing how to reapply it when they’re a bit tired.”

“They left well,” Morkel said. “They played a patient game and waited for us to attack by coming a bit straighter. Then they scored.

“Kane was exceptiona­l. It was a fantastic innings. He’s a hard man to bowl to.”

 ?? Picture: Photosport / Herald graphic ?? Martin Crowe Ross Taylor John Wright Brendon McCullum Nathan Astle Kane Williamson (right) celebrates his century with Jeet Raval in Hamilton yesterday.
Picture: Photosport / Herald graphic Martin Crowe Ross Taylor John Wright Brendon McCullum Nathan Astle Kane Williamson (right) celebrates his century with Jeet Raval in Hamilton yesterday.
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