Brian Charles Lara (born May 2, 1969) in Cantaro, Santa Cruz, Trinidad and Tobago. He is 10th in a family of 11 children. His dad Bunty Lara passed away in 1988. His mother Pearl Lara suffered from cancer and died in January 2002. He is also the father of an eight-year-old daughter called Sydney with Trinidadian model Leseal Rovedas.

From an early age, Lara showed precocious talent. His father Bunty and one of his older sisters were first to recognize young Brian’s exceptional batting talents and enrolled him in the local Harvard Coaching Clinic only at the age of six for weekly coaching sessions on Sundays. As a result, Lara had a very early education in proper batting techniques.

Lara’s first school was St. Josephs Roman Catholic primary. Then he went to San Juan secondary, but played no cricket there. A year later, fourteen years old, he moved on to Fatima College. He moved in with his fellow Trinidadian test player Michael Carew in Woodbrook, Port-of-Spain (a 20 minute drive from Santa Cruz). Michael’s dad Joey Carew was very instrumental in his cricketing & personal career development. Michael got Lara his first job at the Agostura Bitters in Marketing department. Lara played in Trinidad and Tobago junior soccer and table tennis sides, but cricket was always the path to recognition in Trinidad in those times. Lara wanted to emulate his idols: Greenidge, Richards and the left-handed Roy Fredericks.

Lara began his cricket career while at school in Fatima College. When he was 14, he played in the under-16 and First Divisions of national schoolboys’ cricket. He amassed 745 runs in the schoolboys’ league that year at an astounding average of 126.16 per innings. Immediately afterwards he was selected for the Trinidad national under-16 team. When he was 15 years old, he played in his first West Indian under 19 youth tournament. In 1984, Lara represented West Indies in Under-19 Test Cricket. 1987 was a breakthrough year for Lara, when he broke the West Indies youth batting record. In January, 1988, Lara made his first-class debut for Trinidad and Tobago in the Red Stripe Cup against Barbados.

The Bajan attack contained Joel Garner and Malcolm Marshall. Lara batted nearly a full day and made 92. Later in the same year, he captained the West Indies team in Australia for the Bicentennial Youth World Cup. His innings of 182 as captain of the West Indies under 23 XI against the 1988-89 Indians elevated Lara’s reputation even further. He was selected for the Port-of-Spain Test of that season. He did not play, however, and at the same time suffered the personal setback of the death of his father. In 1989, he captained West Indies B Team in Zimbabwe and scored 145 for the West Indies ‘B’ team in Zimbabwe, a side that included several players with Test experience. In 1990, at the age of 20, Lara became Trinidad and Tobago’s youngest ever captain and won the one-day Geddes Grant Shield. It was also in 1990 that he made his Test debut for West Indies against Pakistan, scoring 44 & 6.

Lara loves carnivals, Chinese & Italian foods, and is known to be a practical jokester.

Career highlights

Lara showed his talent in his 5th Test, striking 277 runs against Australia in Sydney, his maiden Test century. It remains the fourth highest maiden Test century by any batsman. . It was also the highest individual score in all Tests between the two teams, the third-highest ever recorded against Australia, the fourth-highest in all Tests by a West Indian.
He became the first man to score seven centuries in eight first-class innings, the first being the historic record 375 against England and the last being the record 501 not out against Durham.
He is the all-time leading run scorer for West Indies and the 3rd leading run scorer in all of Test cricket . He also holds the world record for the fastest 10,000 runs, a feat achieved in 111 matches and 195 innings.
He has (as of June 2005) scored 30 centuries (the most for a West Indian and 4th for all Test cricket), of which 7 are double centuries (surpassed only by Bradman) . He has scored centuries against all Test-playing nations.
Lara fought many lone battles as the West Indies collective batting strength slumped over the years. He has scored an astonishing 19% of his team runs , a feat surpassed only by Bradman (23%) and George Headley (21%). Lara scored 688 runs (a record 42% of team output and the second highest aggregate runs in history for a three-Test series) in the 2001-02 tour of Sri Lanka .
He also scored a century and a double century in the third Test in that same Sri Lanka tour, a feat repeated only five other times in Test cricket history .
A devastating batsman when in form, Lara holds the world record of scoring most runs (28) in a single over in Test cricket .
He is fourth all-time in the category of most catches in a career by a non-Wicketkeeper.
In 1994, he was awarded the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality Award. In 1995, he was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year.
Comfortably averaging over 50 per innings (the benchmark for batting greatness in Test cricket), Lara has often been ranked the number one batsman in Test cricket according to the PricewaterhouseCoopers Cricket Ratings .
Lara has played some of the most brilliant innings in recent years. Wisden published a top 100 list in July 2001, a distillation of the best performances from 1,552 Tests, 54,494 innings and 29,730 bowling performances. Three innings by Lara were placed in the top 15 . His heroic 153 not out in Bridgetown, Barbados, during West Indies’ 2-2 home series draw against Australia in *1998-1999 was deemed the second greatest Test innings ever played, behind Bradman’s 270 against England in the Third Test of the 1936-1937 series at Melbourne. On 13 October, *2003, PricewaterhouseCoopers Ratings team published a list of top innings since 1990 under their own methodology. Lara’s 213 against Australia in Kingston, Jamaica in 1999 came out to be the top innings. His 375 was placed 8th and his three other innings, including the 153 not out, were not far behind.

Batting average

Lara’s batting average in Tests is over 52 an innings and in One-day Internationals he averages over 42 an innings at a strike rate (% of runs scored per ball) of close to 80. The following four graphs show his test batting average over the years in four chronological sections:

1.The beginning: his first 55 Test innings, from December 1990 to April 1996, with an average of 60.32
2.The first drop of his batting form: innings #56 to #103, November 1996 to March 1999, with an average of 36.00
3.Then second drop of his batting form: innings #108 to #138, April 1999 to April 2001, with an average of 30.58
4.The rise of his form in recent years: innings #139 to #197, April 2001 to August 2004, with an average of 64.93

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