1st Test, England tour of West Indies at Kingston, Mar 11-14 2004
Scorecard and Video Highlights
At Kingston, March 11, 12, 13, 14, 2004. England won by ten wickets. Toss: West Indies.
The denouement came like a bolt from the clear blue Kingston skies. For
three days this was a gritty arm-wrestle of a match; then, on the fourth
morning, West Indies collapsed for 47, their lowest total ever. Steve
Harmison, bowling with cold-eyed purpose, finally came of age, taking
the cheapest seven-wicket haul in Test history in a performance
described by his captain Vaughan as "one of the greatest spells by an
England bowler."
This was an exaggeration: only one batsman, Jacobs, got a real snorter.
And Harmison himself felt he was to bowl better in Port-of-Spain five
days later. No one played any truly appalling shots either, but the
chips fell exactly where England wanted. The exception was the
last-wicket partnership that inched West Indies past the symbolic mark
of 46 - England's total when they were terrorised by Curtly Ambrose in
Trinidad ten years earlier. Harmison's success, though spectacular, was a
reward for getting the fundamentals right rather than sudden
inspiration. After getting carried away and underpitching in the first
innings, he simply increased his length, cut his pace a fraction, and
concentrated on the basics. It worked, probably beyond his wildest
dreams. Only two bowlers in Test history have taken more wickets in an
innings more cheaply: George Lohmann and Johnny Briggs, with eight for
seven and eight for 11, both for England in South Africa in the 19th
century. The previous best seven-fors cost 17, a record shared by
Briggs, Monty Noble and Wilfred Rhodes. The most recent of these feats
came in 1902.
England made three changes from the side pulverised in their last Test
in Sri Lanka. Simon Jones, after 16 tortuous months, and Harmison
returned from injury to play a Test together for the first time, while
Hoggard's greater sobriety earned him the final place ahead of Anderson.
With the possible qualification that Caddick was missing, this was the
first time England had been able to select their best eleven since the
successful tour of the subcontinent in 2000-01. West Indies' team
selection centred around the Smiths: Devon returned in place of Ganga,
while Dwayne dislocated a finger in the nets and was replaced by Ryan
Hinds. Dillon and Drakes, their underachievement tolerated no longer,
made way for another underachiever, Sanford, and the in-your-face Best.
The first day, as is customary for a series between these sides in the
Caribbean, had a pack of virile young fast bowlers pummelling a bouncy
castle of a pitch. But even this went against expectations: the bowlers
were white and the pitch, by common consent, was the fastest and
bounciest seen in the Caribbean for some time. When an emotional Jones
snared Lara with his 13th ball back in Test cricket, England were on
top. But Devon Smith and Hinds, a study in contrasts, took on the
bullies in a fifth-wicket partnership of 122 in 25 overs. Smith, short
and spiky, scythed at anything full and wide in the course of a mature
maiden Test century; Hinds, tall, domineering and oozing machismo,
simply planted his front foot and gave it some humpty. Giles eventually
accounted for both - his only wickets of the series - and West Indies'
final total of 311 felt like par.
Then England were introduced to the sheer, paint-stripping pace of
Edwards: the openers were swept aside, and Butcher and Hussain could
both have been out first ball. Butcher was then dropped on four by
Sarwan at short leg, but slowly, surely, he and Hussain used their
experience to weather a furious storm in a compelling passage of play.
Life became easier after the Kookaburra ball lost its zing, and this odd
couple became the most productive non-opening partnership in England's
history, overtaking Graham Gooch and David Gower's 2,271 during a stand
of 119. Butcher eventually fell in a manic mini-session after tea -
three overs squeezed out between lengthy rainbreaks - but a more
decisive blow came two balls earlier: he was dropped at first slip by
Lara, who dislocated his finger in the process.
Lara was off the field on the third morning, when his deputy Sarwan
allowed the game to drift. Despite that, run-scoring was never easy on
another day severely interrupted by rain - except for Flintoff, who
breezed emphatically to 46 off 50 balls until he was exasperatingly
suckered by the leg-spin of Sarwan, inventively introduced by Lara on
his return. With Edwards off the field nursing a side injury, Best
bounded hyperactively into the role of attack leader, but useful
contributions from the tail meant a lead of 28. Wayward bowling aided
the cause: England's total was the highest in Test history in which
Extras top-scored.
On the Sunday, that insignificant lead soon became mountainous. By the
time West Indies restored parity, they had lost five wickets in seven
overs and the game was up. Thorpe in the slips held a hot one from
Gayle, a borderline lbw gave Sarwan a pair, Chanderpaul nutmegged
himself, an uncomfortable Lara lasted only five balls and Hoggard
clutched a scorching return catch from Smith that threatened to
rearrange his face. By contrast, West Indies could not save their
collective face: the second wave of five went down for six runs, and
England danced giddily to victory inside three overs. Soon after the
game had finished, though, some of the West Indies players were the ones
dancing giddily in the stands, partying with their supporters as though
ten-wicket defeats by England were all in a day's work.
Towards the end of the match, with eight in the cordon and Hussain at
short leg, there was not one fielder in front of the bat. It felt quite
absurd but, after totals of 54 and 61 in England in 2000 and now this,
bowling out West Indies in double figures was in danger of becoming
passé.
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