Brian Lara's world record of 375 was broken by Matthew Hayden's 380* a few months earlier.
And he went onto reclaim his throne mere months after Hayden became the record holder. The venue was the same, Antigua Recreation Ground, St John's, Antigua and even the opposition was the same, England, all a decade apart.
Shane Warne names Brian Lara as captain of his greatest West Indies Test XI
Skipper Brian Lara won the toss and chose to bat first and when he came out to bat at no.3 at the fall of Darren Ganga’s wicket, it seemed he was determined to go past Hayden’s record and what followed was England grounded into submission by one man alone. Chris Gayle made 69, Ramnaresh Sarwan made 90 and Ridley Jacobs made 107*, but it was all about Lara.
He ended day one on 86 and day two on 313, becoming only the second batsman after Sir Don Bradman to make two scores of over 300 in Test cricket. He survived an early appeal by Steve Harmison for caught behind, a runout call when he was on 127 and another caught behind off Gareth Batty when he was on 373.
With this amazing knock of 400*, Lara regained his throne and only Mahela Jayawardene, with his 374 against South Africa in 2006 came anywhere close to his record.
Watch Lara’s amazing knock here: