North Sound (Antigua), April 15:
England’s dogged perseverance paid off in two gritty sessions of play with the West Indies restricted to 155 for four in reply to the tourists’ first innings total of 399 at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium in Antigua on Tuesday.
Despite the capitulation of their lower-order in the morning’s play when only 58 runs were added to an already formidable overnight position of 341 for five, the English bowlers worked hard for their reward on an unresponsive pitch and should have had more success in the final hour to claim a potentially decisive advantage.
Jermaine Blackwood, who resumes on the third morning in partnership with the evergreen Shivnarine Chanderpaul, edged a lifting delivery from Ben Stokes to Alastair Cook at a wide first slip position. However the batsman, on 21 at the time, was called back to the crease when television replays showed clearly that the all-rounder had delivered a no-ball.
Chastened by the let-off, the attacking right-hander, who got off the mark by hoisting his second delivery off spinner James Tredwell for six over long-off, crawled into a defensive shell to be unbeaten on 30 at the close.
Chanderpaul, whose often ultra-defensive occupation of the crease has defined most of his 21 years at international level, was at his most phlegmatic in getting to 29 off 98 deliveries by the end of the day.
Their fifth-wicket partnership of 56 has been vital to keeping the West Indies in with a fighting chance as they came together with the home side listing dangerously at 99 for four half-an-hour into the final session.
Stuart Broad broke a promising 47-run third-wicket stand between Kraigg Brathwaite and Marlon Samuels by having Samuels caught at the wicket — Jos Buttler’s third dismissal of the innings — for 33.
Chris Jordan then held a superb catch at slip, diving low to his right to get rid of the obdurate Brathwaite off Tredwell. His knock of 39 occupied 163 minutes.
Earlier, Brathwaite’s opening partner Devon Smith became James Anderson’s 381st Test wicket, touching a delivery through to Buttler to depart for 11. In his 100th match at this level, the veteran seamer needs three more scalps to become the leading wicket-taker in Test history for England.
Jordan, who had featured in a 38-run last-wicket partnership with Anderson in the morning, then disposed of Darren Bravo for just ten, the left-hander caught in two minds and offering a simple catch to the wicketkeeper. (Agencies)