
New Zealand Man of the Series legend Richard Hadlee pictured on the scoreboard showing his 431 Test match wickets after his final Test match after the third Test match between England and New Zealand at Edgbaston on July 10, 1990 in Birmingham, England. (Photo/Getty Images) By the late 1980s, Test cricket had already seen great fast bowlers, long spells, broken bodies and careers affected by workload. What she didn’t see was the certainty that a single man could single-handedly push the boundaries of what was considered possible for a bowler in the longest format. Richard Hadlee moved silently toward that edge.New Zealand cricket has lived with this reality for most of Hadlee’s career. They didn’t have depth in numbers or a long production line of stars. What they had was Hadlee. He played with the new ball, returned with the old one, and often did the work of several players rolled into one. He was 39 in 1990, nearing the end of his international career but still central to everything New Zealand did on the cricket field.The Test against India in Christchurch followed a familiar pattern. New Zealand built a strong base through the batting with John Wright playing an innings of control and patience. His 185, spread over nine hours, took the hosts to 459. India then found themselves in a situation they had seen many times before in that era: facing Hadlee with the new ball.Hadlee and Danny Morrison worked in tandem. India kept losing wickets and were bowled out for 164. Hadlee finished with 3 for 45. Morrison took five. Continuation was forced.India showed more fighting spirit in the second innings. WV Raman and Manoj Prabhakar added 80 for the opening wicket. Raman scored 96, Prabhakar 40. Sanjay Manjrekar came in when Prabhakar was dismissed. He faced four balls.Hadlee bowled one that rattled the stumps. Manjrekar was out for four. It was a routine dismissal in the context of a match. In the context of cricket history, this was not the case.This wicket took Richard Hadlee to 400 Test wickets. No one was there before. Not Malcolm Marshall. Not Dennis Lillee. Not Fred Trueman. Hadlee raised her hands and looked up. India were later bowled out for 296. Hadlee finished the innings with figures of 4 for 69, taking seven wickets in the match. Morrison took six. New Zealand were left with two runs to chase without delay to win by ten wickets.The match itself was unequivocal. That moment was not.Hadlee’s numbers already put him among the greats. He won matches almost by himself. He was also more than a fast bowler. He could change games with the bat from the lower order and this combination placed him alongside Ian Botham, Imran Khan and Kapil Dev among the defining all-rounders of the 1980s.What made 400 different was not just a round number. It was an idea that broke. Years ago, Fred Trueman said of reaching 300 goals, “Whoever does it will be damn tired.” At 39, Hadlee didn’t look tired. He seemed in control. He would go on to take 31 more wickets before retiring later that year, finishing with 431 in 86 Tests at an average of 22.29. In his last match for New Zealand against England, he picked up five wickets and finished with a wicket on his very last delivery.Muttiah Muralitharan and Shane Warne made their Test debuts two years later. They would push the numbers far beyond what existed then. But on February 4, 1990, that future was unknown. The four hundred was uncharted territory.On February 4, 1990, cricket found a new ceiling.
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