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Record-setting Taylor catches up with mentor Crowe

Ross Taylor became the joint-highest Test-hundred scorer for New Zealand on day three in Hamilton, something he never saw coming as a "white-ball player" growing up

ESPNcricinfo staff
Feat 'hasn't really sunk in yet' - Taylor

Feat 'hasn't really sunk in yet' - Taylor

An emotional Ross Taylor shares his thoughts after equalling Martin Crowe's record with his 17th Test century

"I'm sure he'd be happy." So said Ross Taylor at the end of a day when he became New Zealand's highest century-maker in Tests, drawing level with his captain Kane Williamson and his mentor, the late Martin Crowe. The "he" Taylor was referring to, visibly emotional in a TV interview, was Crowe, whom he credited - as he often does - for moulding him into the batsman he is.

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"Hasn't really sunk in," Taylor said at the end-of-day press conference. "I thought about it [the record] a little bit last year, this year I haven't really thought about it. At the start of my career, if you told me I'd get 17 Test hundreds, I would have said no chance. I always just saw myself as a white-ball player growing up."

Words of advice from Crowe aside - "had some good nights with Hogan, over some red wine, talking about my batting" - Taylor also had a tweaked technique to fall back on in his innings of 107, which helped grow New Zealand's lead to 443 against West Indies in Hamilton. "I felt a bit rushed in the first innings," he said. "It was nice to work a little bit on that and change my technique ever so slightly and nice to get the lead over 400, I think that was the main focus."

Asked about the specifics of what he had changed in his batting this innings, Taylor said: "Without giving too much away, just trying to stand a bit more side-on and not move as across my stumps as much... Sometimes, when teams are bouncing you all the time, you can have your weight a little bit more on the back foot. I tried to keep it more neutral, just trying to keep it relatively still and a pick the ball up, and I thought I pulled relatively well today."

Is breaking Crowe's record on Taylor's mind, then? "That was one of his goals, so I'll try my best," Taylor said with a laugh. "We'll have to wait and see."

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