Postpublished at 16:54 British Summer Time 3 May 2015
Andrew Samson
BBC Test Match Special statistician
"England have just beaten their lowest total in Bridgetown: 122, made in 1981."
Windies win final Test to level the series 1-1
Darren Bravo makes 82; Blackwood 47
England only take two wickets after tea
England lost 5 wickets for 84 before lunch
Venue: Kensington Oval, Bridgetown
James Gheerbrant and Jamie Lillywhite
Andrew Samson
BBC Test Match Special statistician
"England have just beaten their lowest total in Bridgetown: 122, made in 1981."
Finlay Malcolm: Buttler must be played higher up the order. He needs to be at the crease for longer.
Richie O'Hara: Wow, seeing the English batting line up utterly nullified by this West Indies attack doesn't bode well for the summer.
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"I don't see it going into tomorrow. If it does it will be for 10 minutes only. The biggest key today is not Anderson it's the two spinners. If they bowl absolute rubbish as they did yesterday then all the good work is gone."
Well, this game is tantalisingly poised now. West Indies will chase 192 for victory and a share of the series. A modest target, but enough to be mighty challenging on this pitch. Will those lower-order runs from Stokes and Buttler be enough for England?
We're about to find out, because it looks like we'll have time to squeeze in one over before lunch...
England 2nd innings: 123 all out from 42.1 overs - lead by 191
Not out batsman: Buttler 35
Fall of wickets: 11-1 (Trott 9), 13-2 (Cook 4), 18-3 (Bell 0), 28-4 (Root 1), 39-5 (Moeen 8), 62-6 (Ballance 23), 95-7 (Stokes 32), 98-8 (Jordan 2), 98-9 (Broad 0), 123-10 (Anderson 2)
Bowling figures: Taylor 11.1-1-33-3, Gabriel 7-4-16-1, Holder 9-3-15-3 Permaul 11-3-43-3, Samuels 4-1-10-0
West Indies 1st innings: 189 (49.4 overs) - Blackwood 85, Anderson 6-42
England 1st innings: 257 (96.3 overs) - Cook 105, Taylor 3-36
Click the audio icon for ball-by-ball Test Match Special commentary
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"Time to nip one out before lunch! That was wonderful cricket, I thought Buttler played beautifully, Stokes played beautifully, you want middle order players to take it to the opposition. I'm a big fan of Buttler, you've got to let him express himself because he does it without throwing the bat. He looks for shots that not everyone can play or even think about."
Anderson is indeed in trouble, and so are England. DRS shows the ball cannoning into the base of middle and leg, and England's sorry second innings is over.
Ed Smith
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"I think Anderson is in trouble here."
Jerome Taylor hits James Anderson on the pad. Is it all over? Umpire says not out, but West Indies want another look...
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"It's an extraordinary talent that Buttler has, it shouldn't take the England coach long to see it. We have this stereotyped view in England that the batsmen must bat and the wicketkeeper comes in afterwards."
Denesh Ramdin is desperate to bring an end to this innings and summons quick man Shannon Gabriel to knock over the last domino. James Anderson does well though, solidly blocking out three deliveries and then rotating the strike with a nudge to fine leg. Buttler - in one-day, guns-blazing mode - smears Gabriel down the ground for four and then batters him back over his head for a towering six. Crucial, crucial runs these.
Will: do you know anyone or met anyone other than the selectors that think this is the right English team?
FenBoy: Australia are a massive 20/1 to win the Ashes 5-0. That could be easy money if the weather stays fine.
Buttler is a dangerous customer in this sort of position - like an action hero backed into a corner by a team of angry ninjas and forced to unveil his full scintillating range of swordplay. He steps away and scythes an overpitched Holder delivery through the covers.
Geoffrey Boycott
Ex-England batsman on BBC Test Match Special
"It was a wonderful yorker by Holder but I'm sorry, Stuart Broad is gone. Once it gets in your head, once you've been hit and there is some fear there it's impossible to bat."
Jos Buttler is once again left at the controls of the nosediving England plane - it's up to him to try and wallop a few more valuable runs, but he's struggling to get the tricky Permaul away. Finally he improvises a clever little shot, reversing his grip and lapping the spinner down to the fine-leg boundary. And then he uses his feet cleverly to chip him down to mid-on for four more. Good over for England.
Merlyn: Broad is no longer a batsman of any sort. Why is he coming out ahead of Jimmy?
Holder's hat-trick ball is speared rather disappointingly down the leg side. James Anderson blocks out the final delivery of the over.
Timothy Revell: I'm not sure that this tail of England's is as long as everyone keeps saying...
Graeme Swann
Ex-England spinner on BBC Test Match Special
"Very, very good Jason Holder, if there was one ball Stuart Broad was expecting it was the bouncer but it was a really good yorker. Now, having said five minutes ago I'd quite happily be in England's camp, it looks very precarious."
Cleaned him up first ball! Magnificent bowling from Jason Holder! The Bajan seamer sends down a perfect yorker, full, fast and hooping in, and Broad is too late jamming the bat down. He watches forlornly as his off stump is sent cartwheeling out of the turf.