3rd Test, England tour of West Indies at Bridgetown, Apr 1-3 2004
Scorecard and Video Highlights
At Bridgetown, April 1, 2, 3, 2004. England won by eight wickets. Toss: England.
England stormed West Indies' once-impregnable fortress of Kensington
Oval, just as they did almost precisely ten years earlier. On that
occasion an overmatched team staged an improbable one-off smash-and-grab
raid. But now the walls of the citadel have been demolished and pigeons
haunt the empty halls. Against a well-marshalled invading force like
Michael Vaughan's England there was no defence. For much of this brief
but compelling Test match, the two teams looked evenly matched. But
England had the inner strength to come through their crises. Their
bowling was effective, disciplined and - at moments - touched by magic.
The West Indian batting, by contrast, was prone to regular outbreaks of
wretchedness.
This was a total reversal of the old world order, and West Indies
capitulated inside three days. England not merely clinched the series
but made sure of their most successful Caribbean tour ever, with the
whitewash still a possibility. As the moon rose over Kensington Oval on
Saturday night, English supporters stood for hours yelling their support
for each of the players in turn, even the reserves. That was an outcrop
of one of England's subsidiary advantages: it felt like a home Test.
The West Indies board's differential pricing system failed to prevent
the ground being entirely dominated by English holidaymakers. Most of
them were too enervated by the heat and tension to do more than applaud
politely at regular intervals. A minority maintained a cacophony of
weird patriotic chants throughout.
Yet the game did not start well for England. Vaughan surprisingly opted
to bowl first on a pitch with some bounce that most observers thought
would play easily most of the game. They put down three slip catches on
the opening day and, although Flintoff did get Lara (who this time
accepted his responsibilities and came out at No. 3) caught in the gully
for 36, Sarwan and Chanderpaul put together a fourth-wicket stand that
took West Indies past tea in some comfort.
However, their batting line-up had become so fragile that it was now
prone to crumple at the slightest touch. Once Harmison found his length
in the evening session and had Sarwan caught at second slip, it was
Flintoff 's turn to collect the pickings - his first five in a Test
innings, as the last seven wickets fell for 57. If England fancied this
set them up for a big lead, they were soon disillusioned. The return of
Edwards to lead the West Indies attack gave their bowling an
old-fashioned feel: a four-man pace attack, all Barbadian, with three of
the four coming from the same small village, Boscobel, and two of them,
Edwards and Collins, being half-brothers. And on a pitch that refused
to calm down as expected, Edwards's skiddy 90mph pace took out the
England top three with only 33 on the board. Steadily, the rest of their
batting succumbed too. With one remarkable exception.
Thorpe, so often the linchpin of the England middle order, produced an
innings of outstanding determination and quality. He held firm in
defence and, when the bowlers dropped short, unleashed a series of
high-class shots square of the wicket, receiving just enough help from
the tail to reach his own century moments after the new ball was taken
at 189 for nine. The last man Harmison stayed with him to add 39, which
inched England into a psychologically vital two-run lead. Thorpe also
had help from a most unexpected quarter: the opposing captain. For 11
overs after lunch, Lara insisted on bowling Gayle's innocuous off-spin,
even though he had four fast bowlers champing at the bit. It gave
England important breathing space, though occasionally the batsmen must
have been distracted by wondering what on earth Lara was playing at.
In theory, the game was now evenly poised. But the theory was quickly
overwhelmed by the dynamic of the series. The third day was cloudy, with
showers lurking. In English conditions, roared on by the English crowd,
the most English bowler on display, Matthew Hoggard, emerged from his
relative obscurity and sealed the game. Sarwan flicked wide outside off
stump and handed a catch to gully. Next ball Hoggard produced a perfect
inswinger to trap Chanderpaul lbw on off stump, then moved one away to
get Hinds caught at second slip. Hoggard became the tenth England bowler
to take a Test hat-trick, the third to achieve the feat against West
Indies after Peter Loader and Dominic Cork. It was not quite his first:
he had taken one as a 14-year-old in the Dales Council third division.
Once the crowd had calmed down, which took a while, the rest was
straightforward. West Indies were all out for 94, the fourth time in
seven Tests England had bowled them out in two figures. The opening
pair, Trescothick and Vaughan, put right one of England's few
irritations of the series by finding a hint of form and scoring most of
the runs between them. Vaughan paid tribute to West Indies' talent but
summed up: "Every time they've got on top of us, we've dug ourselves
out. But when the situation has been reversed, we have nailed the
advantage down." This is the precise opposite of much of England's
recent cricketing history.
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