Postpublished at 17:42 British Summer Time 14 October 2016
Lydia Greenway
Ex-England batter on BBC Test Match Special
She was trying to nurdle that quite fine but on this wicket you have to play straighter. Nat was probably a little lucky there.
England win by 112 runs to take 2-1 series lead
West Indies 108 all out (35.4 overs) Gunn 2-8, Hartley 2-25
England 220 all out (49.5 overs) Winfield 79, Sciver 58
Quintyne 3-36, Fletcher 2-32, Dottin 2-45
Next game of five-match series at Sabina Park on Sunday (15:30 BST)
Alan Jewell and Mark Mitchener
Lydia Greenway
Ex-England batter on BBC Test Match Special
She was trying to nurdle that quite fine but on this wicket you have to play straighter. Nat was probably a little lucky there.
The bowling rotation continues - it's time for teenage opener Hayley Matthews, skipping in to bowl off-spin while wearing a cap. She's West Indies' seventh bowler - Sciver is hit on the pad as she tries a clip off her legs, there's a big appeal... but the umpire shakes his head. A single has added - and it's time for drinks.
Lydia Greenway
Ex-England batter on BBC Test Match Special
England are going nicely, in the last over they showed plenty of intent, coming down the track. From here, it's about sticking to their best shots and rotating the strike but it looks set up for a big total.
It's what Blowers would call "general shufflehouses" in the Windies bowling attack as Dottin gets the hook after just one over of her second spell, and it's Connell back from the Courtney Walsh End. Sciver uses the pace on the ball to blast a four, cross-batted, back past mid-off - then lift the first six of the innings over the bowler's head. A well-run three means it's an expensive over - 16 runs from it.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "It was described in our team meetings as a cabbage patch, which is probably a bit of an exaggeration but it gives our listeners an idea of how slow this outfield is."
Kirtley has now ended his spell of TMS commentary but suggests he'll be ordered back to the box by England coach Mark Robinson...
"As a superstitious coach, we've had a good spell and he will want me to do this again."
Winfield 60, Sciver 25
Connell's off after a brief two-over spell and spinner Quintyne has had a change of ends. If Sabina Park has the Michael Holding End and the Courtney Walsh End, while the Kensington Oval in Barbados has the Malcolm Marshall End and the Joel Garner End, which other cricket ground do you think could benefit from having ends named after big fast bowlers? Perhaps Durham could have the Steve Harmison End at the Riverside, and leave Mark Wood and Graham Onions to fight it out for the other end?
Some fluent sweeping from Sciver and Winfield - despite the slow outfield - brings up the 50 partnership from 79 deliveries.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "You can just see the West indies here, there is the waving of arms. They can clearly see this is an important time in the game."
Now here's a big test for England - Deandra Dottin returns at the Courtney Walsh End. I can't imagine the England players would have enjoyed looking back at the last game on Monday when she took three wickets in an over. But she strays with a high full toss, called as a no-ball, which Sciver forces away for a single.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "I was impressed by the local beer seller selling his wares at 9.31am but that's a bit early even for me."
Sciver is working Connell around well here - the Surrey right-hander comes down the track and guides her for four through mid-wicket, reaching the rope on the second bounce. Eight from the over.
Henry Moeran
BBC Test Match Special commentator
We went to Usain Bolt's bar last night - it's called Tracks and Records, his two loves. It's in a good spot, it's in an warehouse with a huge fan on the ceiling and lots of screens like most sports bars. Last night it was showing an old England Under-21 game, which is quite niche. We asked behind the bar but the manager was not there. I'd recommend it.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "If we think Connell is going to come in and bowl short at the girls, that might be something we practise in the next day or two."
A fourth over of spin from Quintyne, but Winfield keeps picking out the fielders. Still no fireworks being attempted.
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West Indies could do with a breakthrough - and turn back to the pace of opening bowler Shamilia Connell. It puts the brakes on a little - just two singles from the over.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "West Indies clearly went a little bit shorter to Tammy Beaumont and Lauren Winfield and then went a little bit fuller to Georgia Elwiss.
"We're all hatching our plans. All the time the coaches are looking for options. We'd talk a lot about having intent and I think we have showed good intent today, it does put off the bowlers and they do have to change."
Sophie Ecclestone, left out today in favour of Jenny Gunn, is onto the field with a fresh pair of gloves between overs as England push their way past 100 from Quintyne's mixed bag of off-spin, leg-spin and other deliveries.
England coach James Kirtley on TMS: "It's a reflection of the surface we've got at Sabina Park, it changes it for everybody - there is more pace for the seamers, more bounce for spinners and the batters can play their shots. It really gives them a chance to entertain and express themselves."
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Eng 97-3
Anisa Mohammed into her fifth over, Natalie Sciver drills a well-timed single along the ground to long-on - and that's the cue for Lauren Winfield to pull through mid-wicket to reach 50 for only the second time in ODIs. The only previous occasion was when she and Tammy Beaumont both hit centuries against Pakistan at Worcester in June.