Summary

  • West Indies beat England by 38 runs

  • Tourists collapse from 107-4 to 110 all out (Dottin 4-19)

  • West Indies 148 (won toss); Taylor 56

  • Alex Hartley takes 4-31; Marsh 1-23 from 10

  • Second of five ODIs; series now level at 1-1

  1. National treasures debatepublished at 16:59 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "I've had a lot of support from the girls down on the bench for Joanna Lumley. They've also mentioned Elton John and the Queen."

  2. WI 66-2published at 22 overs

    Dottin takes a fresh guard, and gets a top edge sweeping Hartley but the ball spoons safely out of reach of the fielders. Again, just a couple of singles from the over.

  3. Postpublished at 16:56 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "The game is evenly poised. We could do with breaking the partnership - it could be the difference between chasing 230/240 or chasing 180." 

  4. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 16:56 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    tms@bbc.co.uk

    Taylor and Dottin together, West Indies'  top batters. If both come into form now, today, our batters will have to bat far better than they did in the first ODI.

    David, Spain

  5. WI 64-2published at 21 overs

    Marsh, who took the first wicket today, has a leg slip in place for Deandra Dottin, but an orthodox slip for Stafanie Taylor - a tidy over yields just a single.

  6. Postpublished at 16:53 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "Possibly sliding down leg but it looked good from here."

  7. WI 63-2published at 20 overs

    Alex Hartley, as we thought, is on to replace fellow left-arm spinner Ecclestone, and her first ball is nicked through the vacant slip area for two by Taylor - though when the Windies skipper tries another cut shot, she nearly chops onto her stumps. And off the last ball of the over, there's a huge shout for lbw against Taylor, Hartley looks convinced, Mark Robinson in the TMS box was pretty convinced... but sadly for England, the one man they needed to convince - the umpire - wasn't.

  8. Postpublished at 16:47 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "We've gone away from the game-plan there, which is a little bit frustrating because we are aiming at the stumps. Laura has bowled a great little spell, it's just a shame she dropped the catch which would have set the West Indies on the back foot." 

  9. WI 59-2published at 19 overs

    Taylor 19, Dottin 9

    Marsh wheels away for her sixth over, while Alex Hartley - likely to be England's fifth bowler - is going through warm-up exercises in the outfield, so she could be on soon. Dottin expertly sweeps Marsh for a single, while Taylor unleashes a powerful cut shot for four as Marsh strays with her line a little.

    Laura MarshImage source, Rex Features
  10. Postpublished at 16:46 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "Sophie Ecclestone doesn't get fazed by things. She's young and we think about whether we need to protect her. She looks like she's born to bowl, she's a little bit gangly in the field at the moment but she's got good hands and is going to be a good fielder."

  11. WI 53-2published at 18 overs

    England's fielding is a little sloppy in the first over after drinks, as West Indies move past the 50 mark courtesy of a couple of misfields.

  12. Postpublished at 16:42 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    Was the fact that West Indies are nearly all right-handers, a factor in choosing two left-arm spinners?

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "Yes - we wanted four spinners on the tour because we wanted cover for the two left-armers, as they're inexperienced and they're going to be less consistent than Dani Hazell and Laura Marsh."

  13. Robinson in the TMS boxpublished at 16:40 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

  14. Postpublished at 16:38 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "This is a big partnership for the West Indies. They are going to need one of these two to bat deep into this innings. It's about who holds their nerves and who can execute."

  15. drinks break

    Drinks breakpublished at 17 overs

    WI 49-2

    Marsh into her fifth over, Dottin drills a single back past the bowler, Marsh adjusts her field for the two big hitters, and with a drinks break imminent, Dottin aims a big heave which will probably end up in the sea if she connects... but she doesn't, and keeper Amy Jones takes it low down.

    Once more, there's a frenzy of activity during drinks, with ground staff sweeping the pitch and repainting the creases.

  16. Postpublished at 16:35 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "You'd hope both teams might bat a little bit better than Saturday. Saturday's wicket was worse than this and we didn't realise how good a position we were in at 32-0. Eventually we did brilliantly to scramble 149.

    "I think it's played a little bit lower today and anything between 160 and 180 is going to be competitive. It's a game of attrition."

  17. WI 47-2published at 16 overs

    Taylor 9, Dottin 7

    Dottin drives Ecclestone to long-off - while Taylor guides a fourth through the covers. Will we see West Indies stepping on the gas if these two get set?

    Stafanie TaylorImage source, Getty Images
  18. Postpublished at 16:31 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "That was straight to her. You'd want to catch that 99 times out of 100."

  19. dropped catch

    Dottin dropped on 6published at 15 overs

    WI 41-2

    So, West Indies have their two big hitters in together, but from the reaction of the fielders, it looks like England have dropped a chance as Dottin whacks the ball straight back to Marsh, throat-high - but the bowler can't hang on.

    Next ball, perhaps still seething from that drop, Marsh fields the ball and hurls it straight back at Dottin, who has to take evasive action - the ball flies off her bat past point. Now the umpires get involved, coming to talk to the batters between overs, while England captain Heather Knight comes over to have a word too.

  20. Postpublished at 16:29 British Summer Time 10 October 2016

    England coach Mark Robinson on TMS: "It's an interesting one. We sort of feel it's easier to slog rather than play down the ground."