Justin Greaves produced a nine-and-a-half-hour batting masterclass before walking into Caribbean lore after his maiden Test double hundred secured an unlikely draw for West Indies in the opening Test against New Zealand in Christchurch on Saturday.
The 31-year-old's unbeaten 202 was the bedrock of West Indies' 457-6 -- the second-highest fourth-innings total in Test match history, in pursuit of an improbable victory target of 531 at Christchurch's Hagley Oval.
His method was more metronome than fireworks and while it came against a New Zealand attack depleted by mid-match injuries to seamers Nathan Smith and Matt Henry, Greaves' 388-ball vigil forced a draw and fetched his team's first points in the new World Test Championship cycle.
Greaves forged a 196-run stand with Shai Hope (140) and then raised 180 with Kemar Roach (58) for the unbroken seventh wicket for a pride-restoring draw that felt as good as a win.
"Special day for me, special day for the team," player of the match
New Zealand captain Tom Latham rued falling short of a victory but found solace in being part of a classic Test match.
"It was a Test match that had it all," he said.
"For it to head down to the final hour with all three results on the cards - it was a great Test match to be involved in."