Southampton, England
The maverick that is Jermaine Blackwood drove the West Indies to a famous victory; he also flicked and cut impishly in pursuit of the 200 runs that were required, while hitting a magnificent 95. As a consequence Jason Holder’s tenacious team, who seem to be bonded ever closer by the lockdown experience rather than driven to distraction, prevailed by four wickets in a game that got better and better as the days went by.
For those following from afar the intensity and commitment of the players of both sides made for a fine contest. Given the weirdness of the preparations there were bound to be aberrations, caused by rustiness along the way. Yet the event was a clear success for the ECB, notwithstanding the outcome.
How the West Indies deserved their win; they were resolute, disciplined and skilful throughout. We knew they could bowl but their batsmen came up with the goods under pressure with Blackwood a surprising hero. In the tourists’ first innings he had been the sole batsman to give his wicket away wantonly when he cracked a drive against Dom Bess straight to mid-off.
That was the Blackwood of old, the 28-year-old Jamaican who so often exasperates. This was his 29th Test match and he has already been dropped six times. He may have been the last choice here. Should they play Blackwood or the off-spinner Rakheem Cornwall? Well, despite the profligate dismissal in the first innings they made the right choice and he won’t be dropped for Old Trafford.
He was dropped on Sunday afternoon, however, by England cricketers who had a nightmarish half-hour after lunch when a few chances from Blackwood’s bat went begging. The size of the target was such that there was no room for such errors, a notion that was supported by the startling fact that the West Indies have now been set targets of 200 or less on 61 occasions in Test cricket, winning 55 times and drawing six.
The chances were all tricky. Jos Buttler spilt a catch down the leg-side off Ben Stokes, which he would expect to take when Blackwood was on 20. Rory Burns did not see a ball flying past him in the gully and Stokes himself anticipated at slip when Bess was bowling – in the wrong direction. There was also an opportunity for a run-out spurned by Zak Crawley.
England were heavily dependent upon Jofra Archer, the likeliest source of a last-day victory. He bowled with venom, taking two early wickets to raise home hopes and before that he batted better than ever before in an England shirt. He scored only 23 but after the departure of Mark Wood he may have felt stranded. Shannon Gabriel took the final two wickets to end with five in the innings and nine in the match.
The lead of 199 looked as if it might be enough after Archer’s first spell. His first delivery to John Campbell struck the foot of the batsman, who limped off soon after. Then Archer dispatched Kraigg Brathwaite and Shamarh Brooks in consecutive overs with full-length deliveries, the former bowled off the inside edge, the latter nowhere near making contact with the ball and palpably lbw.—AP