West Indies (1) vs (1) England - Fifth Test at Antigua Recreation Ground
West Indies XI
Phil Simmons
Stuart Williams
Brian Lara
Jimmy Adams
Keith Arthurton
Shiv Chanderpaul
Junior Murray
Winston Benjamin
Curtly Ambrose
Kenny Benjamin
Courtney Walsh
England XI
Graham Gooch
Alec Stewart
Michael Atherton
Graeme Hick
Mark Ramprakash
Graham Thorpe
Jack Russell
Phillip DeFreitas
Angus Fraser
Phil Tufnell
Peter Such
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
Quite unhelpfully for the West Indies ahead of a series decider, both Desmond Haynes and Richie Richardson sustained injuries at Barbados, which meant the return of Phil Simmons and the debut of Stuart Williams. For England, a dismal debut for Ilott seems likely to have curtailed his career after just one match - he is replaced by a second spinner in the form of Such. Robin Smith has also been dropped for the first time in his Test career; instead, Michael Atherton returns to the team to bat at number three. As for the conditions, it's the Antigua Recreation Ground.
Yet again, Gooch won the toss and batted first. Although the openers couldn't add to their impressive collections of Test centuries, one man who could was returning number three Michael Atherton. The Lancastrian made a wonderfully controlled 127, overcoming an objectively excellent fast bowling attack to register his second Test century. His main partner in crime was Graeme Hick, who was excellent as usual but fell short of three figures yet again - this time on 81. After that, wickets started to fall - a brief partnership between Atherton and Thorpe notwithstanding. By the time last-man Peter Such arrived at the wicket, Thorpe had reached an excellent half-century but looked likely to be stranded. He... wasn't. Instead, he raced to a superb maiden Test century, dragging his team past 400 in the process.
After losing all their momentum to a last-wicket stand of 61, the West Indies needed to get back into a rhythm. The early loss of Simmons was not promising (though nor was it surprising), but a partnership of high quality between Williams and Lara soon put them back on course. A fine debut innings of 97 fell just short of a century for Williams, but Lara had no such trouble. His century meant that he had scored 393 runs between dismissals. The man to end that streak - Tufnell - had done a long time between wickets himself, and will have been grateful for the breakthrough. Their nemesis finally gone, England set about chasing parity in the game; it still seemed a long way off until a highly unexpected triple-wicket maiden from Angus Fraser changed the game entirely. In ten hectic minutes, the West Indies lost their last five wickets for nine runs in the space of only 12 balls, and DeFreitas finished with another five-for.
A lead of seventeen isn't much to work with, but some aggressive batting from England meant that it grew rapidly. Gooch and Stewart both scored half-centuries in a partnership that came at five runs per over, helping England to start the final day 189 runs ahead. When exactly would they declare? How much was Gooch willing to risk in order to chase the Wisden Trophy that had been in West Indian possession since 1973? The question was somewhat taken out of his hands by a flurry of English wickets, although the fact that he will have instructed batsman after batsman to go out and play their shots is an answer in and of itself.
With a target of 284 to win, and 75 overs in which to do it, everyone present was expecting a thriller. And they were absolutely right to. Aggressive contributions from Simmons, Williams and Chanderpaul, pitted against important wickets from Fraser and Tufnell, helped the West Indies to reach tea 173 for five - with 111 more runs to win, the classic cliché of all results being on the table very much applied. Junior Murray, who had hitherto had a very quiet Test series, set his sights on one result in particular: a West Indian win. His aggressive 88 carried the West Indies almost all the way to the line: with six overs left, the West Indies needed just 14 more runs. England needed three wickets. The draw was still somewhat possible.
DeFreitas (bowling to Murray) - • • • W • • - The crucial wicket of Murray came from the worst ball of the over. Short and wide and top-edged to Angus Fraser.
Such (bowling to Ambrose - 15 to win from 30) - 1 • • • • • - A very tidy over from the off-spinner.
DeFreitas (bowling to Ambrose - 14 to win from 24) - • • • • • W - Full, straight, and reverse swinging into the left-hander! A plumb LBW and a huge moment for England.
Fraser (bowling to Benjamin - 18 balls left to draw) - • • • • • • - An immaculate maiden, well defended by Kenny Benjamin.
DeFreitas (bowling to Walsh - 12 balls left to draw) - 4 • • • W - OUT! Caught by Gooch diving full-stretch to his left in the slips! What a way to win back the Wisden Trophy.
West Indies 1 - 2 England. What a series.
And I'm not entirely sure how it happened, but it looks like Phillip DeFreitas has won another Barrington Medal. In fairness to him, 20 wickets at 26.50 is a very solid return for the series, but Gooch's 571 runs @ 57.10 would seem more deserving. It goes to show that cricket isn't just about your numbers, it's about when and how you earn those numbers, because without DeFreitas' bowling at important times in the Third and Fifth Tests, England couldn't have got near winning that series.
West Indies XI
Phil Simmons
Stuart Williams
Brian Lara
Jimmy Adams
Keith Arthurton
Shiv Chanderpaul
Junior Murray
Winston Benjamin
Curtly Ambrose
Kenny Benjamin
Courtney Walsh
England XI
Graham Gooch
Alec Stewart
Michael Atherton
Graeme Hick
Mark Ramprakash
Graham Thorpe
Jack Russell
Phillip DeFreitas
Angus Fraser
Phil Tufnell
Peter Such
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
Quite unhelpfully for the West Indies ahead of a series decider, both Desmond Haynes and Richie Richardson sustained injuries at Barbados, which meant the return of Phil Simmons and the debut of Stuart Williams. For England, a dismal debut for Ilott seems likely to have curtailed his career after just one match - he is replaced by a second spinner in the form of Such. Robin Smith has also been dropped for the first time in his Test career; instead, Michael Atherton returns to the team to bat at number three. As for the conditions, it's the Antigua Recreation Ground.
Yet again, Gooch won the toss and batted first. Although the openers couldn't add to their impressive collections of Test centuries, one man who could was returning number three Michael Atherton. The Lancastrian made a wonderfully controlled 127, overcoming an objectively excellent fast bowling attack to register his second Test century. His main partner in crime was Graeme Hick, who was excellent as usual but fell short of three figures yet again - this time on 81. After that, wickets started to fall - a brief partnership between Atherton and Thorpe notwithstanding. By the time last-man Peter Such arrived at the wicket, Thorpe had reached an excellent half-century but looked likely to be stranded. He... wasn't. Instead, he raced to a superb maiden Test century, dragging his team past 400 in the process.
After losing all their momentum to a last-wicket stand of 61, the West Indies needed to get back into a rhythm. The early loss of Simmons was not promising (though nor was it surprising), but a partnership of high quality between Williams and Lara soon put them back on course. A fine debut innings of 97 fell just short of a century for Williams, but Lara had no such trouble. His century meant that he had scored 393 runs between dismissals. The man to end that streak - Tufnell - had done a long time between wickets himself, and will have been grateful for the breakthrough. Their nemesis finally gone, England set about chasing parity in the game; it still seemed a long way off until a highly unexpected triple-wicket maiden from Angus Fraser changed the game entirely. In ten hectic minutes, the West Indies lost their last five wickets for nine runs in the space of only 12 balls, and DeFreitas finished with another five-for.
A lead of seventeen isn't much to work with, but some aggressive batting from England meant that it grew rapidly. Gooch and Stewart both scored half-centuries in a partnership that came at five runs per over, helping England to start the final day 189 runs ahead. When exactly would they declare? How much was Gooch willing to risk in order to chase the Wisden Trophy that had been in West Indian possession since 1973? The question was somewhat taken out of his hands by a flurry of English wickets, although the fact that he will have instructed batsman after batsman to go out and play their shots is an answer in and of itself.
With a target of 284 to win, and 75 overs in which to do it, everyone present was expecting a thriller. And they were absolutely right to. Aggressive contributions from Simmons, Williams and Chanderpaul, pitted against important wickets from Fraser and Tufnell, helped the West Indies to reach tea 173 for five - with 111 more runs to win, the classic cliché of all results being on the table very much applied. Junior Murray, who had hitherto had a very quiet Test series, set his sights on one result in particular: a West Indian win. His aggressive 88 carried the West Indies almost all the way to the line: with six overs left, the West Indies needed just 14 more runs. England needed three wickets. The draw was still somewhat possible.
DeFreitas (bowling to Murray) - • • • W • • - The crucial wicket of Murray came from the worst ball of the over. Short and wide and top-edged to Angus Fraser.
Such (bowling to Ambrose - 15 to win from 30) - 1 • • • • • - A very tidy over from the off-spinner.
DeFreitas (bowling to Ambrose - 14 to win from 24) - • • • • • W - Full, straight, and reverse swinging into the left-hander! A plumb LBW and a huge moment for England.
Fraser (bowling to Benjamin - 18 balls left to draw) - • • • • • • - An immaculate maiden, well defended by Kenny Benjamin.
DeFreitas (bowling to Walsh - 12 balls left to draw) - 4 • • • W - OUT! Caught by Gooch diving full-stretch to his left in the slips! What a way to win back the Wisden Trophy.
West Indies 1 - 2 England. What a series.
I'm also adding a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Standings
1. Phillip DeFreitas - 8 points (+5)
2. Angus Fraser - 7 points (+2)
3. Graham Gooch - 6 points
4. Alec Stewart - 4 points
=5. Michael Atherton - 3 points (+3)
=5. Mark Ramprakash - 3 points
=5. Peter Such - 3 points
=8. Graeme Hick - 2 points
=8. Phil Tufnell - 2 points
=10. Chris Lewis - 1 point
=10. Graham Thorpe - 1 point (+1)
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Phillip DeFreitas - 8 points (+5)
2. Angus Fraser - 7 points (+2)
3. Graham Gooch - 6 points
4. Alec Stewart - 4 points
=5. Michael Atherton - 3 points (+3)
=5. Mark Ramprakash - 3 points
=5. Peter Such - 3 points
=8. Graeme Hick - 2 points
=8. Phil Tufnell - 2 points
=10. Chris Lewis - 1 point
=10. Graham Thorpe - 1 point (+1)