West Indies v England: James Anderson inspires victory
- Published
Second Test, day five, St George's, Grenada |
West Indies 299 & 307: Brathwaite 116, Anderson 4-43 |
England 464 & 143-1: Ballance 81*, Cook 59* |
England won by nine wickets |
James Anderson inspired England to a nine-wicket win over West Indies on the final day of the second Test.
Anderson took three wickets, two catches and ran out Jason Holder with a direct hit as the home side slipped from an overnight 202-2 to 307 all out.
That left England 143 to win, reached with an unbeaten 81 from Gary Ballance and Alastair Cook's 59 not out.
Victory in Grenada, a first Test win overseas since 2012, gives England a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
The unlikely circumstances of the victory - England needed to take eight wickets on a docile pitch quickly enough for a run chase to be possible - are not the only reason for Cook's side to be delighted.
It comes on the back of a disastrous World Cup campaign, the threat of "enquiries" from incoming England and Wales Cricket chairman Colin Graves if they do not succeed in the Caribbean, and after the make-up of their attack for this match came under fire.
But there are still issues to be addressed for the final Test in Barbados, not least the position of Jonathan Trott at the top of the order.
After making a first-innings half-century, Trott fell for his second duck since returning to the side in the first Test. In a three-ball stay, he survived an lbw review before chopping Shannon Gabriel on to his stumps.
Ex-England batsman Geoffrey Boycott on Test Match Special |
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"Some of these players played in the World Cup and got panned for their performances. They know they are the better Test side, but it still hurts you if you play badly. Whether it's one-day cricket or Tests, you're an England player and England cricket is under the cosh. There's that relief and hopefully they can go to Barbados on top of the world and, in the nicest sporting way, crush the West Indies." |
That was the only low point of an England day that was dominated by Anderson's brilliance with the ball and in the field.
As the home side resumed 37 ahead, the tourists were relying on the second new ball to create opportunities and Anderson, a week on from becoming England's leading wicket-taker in Test cricket, provided the catalyst through an exhibition of aggressive swing bowling.
Fourth-day centurion Kraigg Brathwaite could only fend a vicious short ball to gully before Shivnarine Chanderpaul was superbly caught by a diving Cook at first slip after Ian Bell parried the initial chance.
And, when Marlon Samuels failed to withdraw his bat from an away-swinger, Anderson had 3-1 with the new ball in overall figures of 4-43.
As pressure on West Indies increased, Anderson was barely out of the game, first holding a loose drive from Jermaine Blackwood at mid-off from the bowling of Chris Jordan, then doing the same at mid-on to dismiss Kemar Roach off Moeen Ali.
In between was perhaps the most spectacular of the lot, a direct hit at the non-striker's end from mid-off to defeat Holder's lazy attempt to return to his ground.
Home captain Denesh Ramdin briefly halted England's charge, but missed a Moeen full toss to be lbw, with Gabriel pinned in front two balls later to complete a much-improved display by the England off-spinner.
Fewest innings to reach 1,000 England Test runs |
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12: Herbert Sutcliffe 16: Len Hutton 17: Gary Ballance 18: Wally Hammond |
Though Trott went in the second over, England's chase was never in doubt as Cook and Ballance shared an unbroken stand of 142.
Cook scored almost exclusively square of the wicket to notch his fifth half-century in eight Test knocks, looking much more fluent than his first-innings 76.
Ballance accelerated towards victory, finding the boundary through 360 degrees and becoming the third-fastest England batsman to 1,000 Test runs.
He was dropped on 15 at slip from Samuels' off-spin, but, even by then, West Indies were beaten.
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