In a quiet but historic moment during a rain-affected ODI against New Zealand, Shai Hope didn’t just score a century—he rewrote cricket’s record books. His unbeaten 109 may not have secured a win for the West Indies, but it earned him a place no one else has ever held: the first batter in history to score an ODI century against all 10 current Test-playing nations .
Not Sachin Tendulkar. Not Virat Kohli. Not Ricky Ponting or Kumar Sangakkara. None of them managed this elusive milestone. But Shai Hope—often underrated outside the Caribbean—has now done what the greats couldn’t. This isn’t just a personal triumph; it’s a landmark achievement in the annals of international cricket.
On the surface, scoring ODI centuries seems common among elite batters. But scoring one against **every** Test-playing nation is a different beast entirely. It requires:
Hope’s feat is even more impressive because he achieved it while representing a team that has struggled for consistency in white-ball cricket in recent years.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t a knock on the legends. It’s a testament to how hard this milestone is.
Hope, by contrast, now has at least one ODI hundred against: Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, and Afghanistan .
His journey to this milestone spanned nearly eight years:
Each century came in different conditions, showcasing his adaptability—from seaming tracks in England to spin-friendly pitches in Asia.
Hope’s latest knock also pushed him past **6,000 ODI runs**, placing him among the West Indies’ all-time greats. More symbolically, it gave him his **19th ODI century**, tying him with the legendary Brian Lara for the most by a West Indian batter .
For a player who debuted in 2014 and has often carried the West Indies’ batting lineup alone, this parity with Lara is deeply meaningful.
In an era where West Indies cricket has grappled with administrative chaos and player availability issues, Hope has been a constant. His achievement shines a light on the resilience of Caribbean talent.
[INTERNAL_LINK:west-indies-odi-revival-hope-leadership] explores how Hope’s leadership is helping rebuild the team’s identity.
The cricket world took notice:
The Shai Hope century feat is more than a stat—it’s a story of persistence, adaptability, and excellence against the odds. While his century didn’t win the match, it secured his place in history. In a sport often dominated by Indian, Australian, or English narratives, Hope’s achievement reminds us that greatness can emerge from anywhere. And sometimes, the quietest players make the loudest statements.
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