CRICKET
Alastair Cook becomes first Englishman to score 10,000 Test runs
The English batsman made history at the Riverside on Monday by reaching 10,000 Test runs during a second-series victory over Sri Lanka.
Alastair Cook became the first England batsman to score 10,000 Test runs when he made five against Sri Lanka on the fourth day of the second Test at the Riverside on Friday.
The England captain became just the 12th batsman -- and the only one still playing Tests -- in history to reach the landmark when the left-handed opener clipped Nuwan Pradeep for four through mid-wicket.
He was also the youngest to do so at 31 years and 157 days old, beating the previous record of India great Sachin Tendulkar (31 years and 326 days).
This was Cook's 128th Test and 229th innings at this level.
The Essex batsman scored a hundred on debut against India at Nagpur in 2006 and has now made 28 Test centuries.
At 31, Cook could have several more years as an international cricketer left in him, but whether he will break Tendulkar's all time aggregate Test record of 15,921 runs made in 200 Tests remains to be seen.