2nd Test, England tour of West Indies at Port of Spain, Mar 19-23 2004
Scorecard and Video Highlights
At Port-of-Spain, March 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 2004. England won by seven wickets. Toss: West Indies.
Less than a fortnight after the start of the series, England secured
their main objective of the tour when they retained the Wisden Trophy, a
prize they had barely sniffed for 27 years until 2000. The triumph
could have come even quicker: they won after 23 minutes on the final
morning of a match in which the equivalent of a whole day's play was
lost to rain and bad light.
Once again Harmison was the dominant figure in England's success, and
was responsible for perhaps the crucial moment of the series. This came
after West Indies had made an excellent start, with Gayle leading the
charge in hot, sunny conditions on a pitch with far less pace than its
Sabina Park predecessor. His century opening stand with Devon Smith,
containing 82 in boundaries, came up in the 25th over. But at that
point, clouds filled the blue sky and light rain started to fall.
Harmison, whose first spell of six overs had gone for 27, had just
changed ends and he got immediate results, dismissing Gayle, then Smith -
and made it three in eight deliveries with the vital wicket of Lara. He
hit him on the right hand with one that rose sharply from short of a
length, then bounced him next ball: Lara could only fend towards gully
as he took his eyes off it.
It was the first time in his career that Lara had made successive Test
ducks. More significantly, it showed Harmison's earlier success was no
fluke. Expectation might have lain heavily on his shoulders, but they
were now broad enough for that; and he had a mental edge that enabled
him to come back from a trying start to vanquish even his most
formidable opponent. West Indies lunched uncomfortably on 110 for three
and, after a couple of rain-breaks, Harmison completed his second
five-wicket haul of the series; when he finished them off next morning,
he had taken 13 in two innings. Arguably, this less bouncy, more uneven
pitch was helpful to him since he had the ability to extract life from
it in a way lesser bowlers could not.
England's reply followed the same pattern as the First Test. Both
openers went cheaply, leaving Butcher and Hussain to repair the damage.
West Indies were without Edwards, their most hostile bowler at Sabina;
he was replaced by his half-brother, Collins, who took four wickets
including Vaughan's second ball. But West Indies badly missed Edwards's
skiddy relentlessness to back up Best's more intimidatory approach and
Hussain, especially, revelled in conditions most players would have
found difficult. Butcher was dropped on 20 by Chanderpaul at second slip
off Collymore, as the two battled through the remaining 20 overs that
survived the rain on the second day and kept on until the fourth over
after lunch on the third, when Butcher was - wrongly, TV replays
suggested - given out caught behind by umpire Bowden.
That brought in Thorpe, who emerged as the most fluent of England's
three experienced middle-order batsmen, the "100 Club" as Hussain called
them, a reference to their combined ages rather than their average.
Having been seduced by a bouncer in Jamaica, Thorpe was peppered with
short balls. But he pulled and hooked majestically, even with two men
back on the leg-side boundary. One pull for four off Collins gave
England first-innings lead shortly after tea. Thorpe's air of authority
was punctured only when he was hit on the right hand by a beamer from
Best. He was later struck on the head by a Sanford bouncer just after
turning down an offer to go off for bad light. To Lara's annoyance, the
light was offered again at the end of the over. His annoyance was
obvious enough to cost him half his match fee. England had scored 103 in
36 overs in the last session to lead by 92 and, although they added
only 19 more on the fourth morning, they were in complete control.
After a week in Harmison's shadow, Jones now took centre-stage, ripping
out West Indies' top three in his first four overs. Coming on first
change for Hoggard in the 13th over, he sent his first ball wide down
the leg side, and it disappeared to the boundary. His second ball kept
low and hit Gayle's off stump, and in his next over he had Devon Smith
held at mid-off. When he trapped Sarwan leg-before playing back, Jones
celebrated in confrontational clenched-fist style, which cost him, too,
half his match fee. Lara dropped himself down the order, promoting
Jacobs to No. 4. While hardly sending out a message of confident
defiance, the ploy worked to a degree, Jacobs and Chanderpaul adding 102
in 32 overs to put West Indies in front. Then Jones, in his second
spell, removed Jacobs, and Lara emerged at No. 6, on a pair. He reached
eight before Harmison was recalled and pinned Lara to his crease with
his first ball, which swung back into the batsman. Umpire Harper took
his time before giving a marginal - and momentous - lbw decision in
England's favour. West Indies added only 38 more for the remaining five
wickets; by dismissing Collins, Jones completed his first Test
five-wicket haul
England's target was 99, with 21 overs of the fourth evening to go.
After losing Trescothick to the third ball of the innings, Vaughan and
Butcher attempted to finish the job before the close, racing to 59 in
the ninth over. But after Vaughan's dismissal, and much fractious
discussion about the state of the light between batsmen, Lara and the
umpires - this time, Lara seemed more enthusiastic about going off -
England had to return on the last morning. Hussain was out to the second
ball of the day and Thorpe dropped by Jacobs off the fifth, but victory
was completed with ease as Butcher smashed three fours in five
deliveries.
It was West Indies' sixth defeat out of seven on their captain's home
ground. Immediately afterwards, Ricky Skerritt, the team manager for
four years, announced his resignation, citing an inability "to instil in
the entire team the fullest understanding of their obligations on and
off the field to the people of the West Indies".
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