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Matt Prior calls England's draw with New Zealand 'phenomenal'
Matt Prior said England produced an "unbelievable" effort to bat out the final day and secure a draw in the Test series decider against New Zealand.
Prior, who made an unbeaten 110, held firm with last man Monty Panesar as England finished on 315-9 in Auckland.
"I'm not one to celebrate draws but to escape with that is a phenomenal effort," said Prior.
"I think Monty had been sleeping so I had to wake him up first, but he was magnificent. I knew he'd be fine."
Prior said he reminded the spinner of the rearguard action in Cardiff in 2009 when Panesar and James Anderson combined to defy Australia at the death.
"He was actually really calm," said Prior, after the duo batted out the final 19 balls under intense pressure at Eden Park. "We mentioned the Ashes, we mentioned Cardiff. He was really chilled out.
"My role is to help him with game plans, tell him this is what they're going to do, this is how they're going to try to get you out.
"All our guys have been working so hard in the nets for that exact moment."
Ian Bell and Joe Root set the tone by batting for almost the entire first session, with Bell going on after lunch to make a determined 75 from 271 balls.
His departure in the final over before tea meant Prior had to steer the tail-end batsmen through to the close.
The Sussex wicketkeeper praised Stuart Broad, who batted for a record 103 minutes without getting off the mark, for his 77-ball innings of just six runs.
Broad has endured a miserable run with the bat but his innings used up valuable overs.
"The way Joe Root and Ian Bell started this morning was phenomenal and I have to give a special mention to Stuart Broad," said Prior.
"The way Broady played was phenomenal. He's been working so hard with Andy Flower in the nets and has been getting frustrated with it.
"Forget what score he got, the amount of balls and the amount of time he took out of the game was phenomenal."
Prior, who made a half-century in the first innings, faced 182 balls and batted for four hours and 29 minutes, having come to the crease just after lunch.
It was the 31-year-old vice-captain's seventh Test century and the longest innings of his 65-match Test career.
Asked how he approached the day, Prior said: "You've got to find a way to face 90 overs. The wicket was still good, and we knew it was only going to get slower. You just dig in for as long as you can."
Defeat by the eighth-ranked Test nation would have dropped England to number three behind South Africa and India in the Test rankings, but captain Alastair Cook insisted complacency had played no part in their difficulties.
"At no stage did we underestimate New Zealand," said Cook. "We did not play as well as we would have liked, but that takes nothing away from New Zealand, who put us under huge pressure."
New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum said: "I've got mixed emotions. I'm incredibly proud of our boys.
"We pretty much tried everything. We came up against some of the best players going around at the moment. They were outstanding. We tried everything but came up just short. It was a wonderful Test match."
England will now prepare for home series against New Zealand in May and then Australia in July and August.
Listen to match highlights and Jonathan Agnew and Geoffrey Boycott's analysis of the Test on the Test Match Special podcast