BRIDGETOWN, April 29: Australia's Adam Gilchrist credited a squash ball stuffed inside his glove after pulverising Sri Lanka's bowlers with his match-winning 149 in the World Cup final on Saturday.
Gilchrist hit 13 fours and eight sixes from just 104 balls and pointed to his glove as he celebrated the fastest hundred in the history of Cup finals.
“I was pretty pumped up,” he told a news conference after being named the Man-of-the-Match.
Australia beat Sri Lanka by 53 runs on the Duckworth-Lewis method for truncated games to complete a unique hat-trick of World Cup titles.
“I also had a little message, to wave to someone at home in Australia about something in my glove,” he said.
“(It was) the guy (Bob Meuleman) who helps me with my batting at home,” he explained. “I had a squash ball in my bottom hand in the glove that I use in training just to help with my grip.
“I decided I will use that in this World Cup in a match but hadn't. His last words to me before I left the indoor training centre where I train with him in Perth were 'if you are going to use it, make sure when you score a hundred in the final you show me and prove to me you got it in there'.
“I had stayed true to that.”
“What I do know is the belief that arrives from the team-mates around you and the coaching staff around you and everyone involved,” he said.—Reuters