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Friday, May 23, 2025

Da Silva, Joseph rally Windies to overhaul England’s total

by

SPORTS DESK
306 days ago
20240721
West Indies Joshua Da Silva, left, and West Indies Shamar Joseph leave the pitch after West Indies first innings during day three of the second Test between England and West Indies at Trent Bridge cricket ground, Nottingham, England, yesterday. Da Silva scored an unbeaten 82 and Joseph 33 runs. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

West Indies Joshua Da Silva, left, and West Indies Shamar Joseph leave the pitch after West Indies first innings during day three of the second Test between England and West Indies at Trent Bridge cricket ground, Nottingham, England, yesterday. Da Silva scored an unbeaten 82 and Joseph 33 runs. (AP Photo/Rui Vieira)

Rui Vieira

NOT­TING­HAM, Eng­land– Wick­et­keep­er Joshua Da Sil­va un­der­lined a ster­ling West In­dies fight­back with a fifth Test fifty to earn his side a slim first in­nings lead, but Eng­land got half-cen­turies from Ben Duck­ett, Har­ry Brook, and Ol­lie Pope to re­gain con­trol of the sec­ond Test at Trent Bridge on Sat­ur­day.

Re­sum­ing the third morn­ing on 351 for five, the West In­dies re­cov­ered from a slide to post 457 all out at the end of an ex­tend­ed ses­sion and emerge with a pre­cious first-in­ning lead of 41.

They were slump­ing at 386 for nine af­ter four wick­ets tum­bled for 31 runs, but the 26-year-old Da Sil­va stroked a com­posed un­beat­en 82 to re­pair the dam­age in an en­ter­pris­ing 71-run last wick­et stand with Shamar Joseph, who made a cav­a­lier 33 from 27 balls.

Eng­land replied strong­ly; how­ev­er, Ben Duck­ett (76), Har­ry Brook (71 not out), and Ol­lie Pope (51) all got half-cen­turies as the hosts closed on 248 for three in their sec­ond in­ning, giv­ing them a lead of 201 head­ing in­to Sun­day’s penul­ti­mate day.

“I think it was a tremen­dous job. We got a 70-run part­ner­ship for the last wick­et; we got a lead—a 40-plus lead—so that was good to see,” Da Sil­va told re­porters af­ter­wards.

“It wasn’t meant to be for the hun­dred to­day. I’ll prob­a­bly say I would’ve loved it, but it wasn’t to be.”

He con­tin­ued: “To­mor­row is the most im­por­tant day of this match. What­ev­er hap­pens in the morn­ing is go­ing to set it up for the rest of the test,” Da Sil­va told re­porters af­ter­wards.

“For us, it’s how many wick­ets we can get quick­ly, how much we can re­strict them to, and get what they’re go­ing to set us to get the to­tal in the end.”

The West In­dies threat­ened to squan­der their gains from the pre­vi­ous evening when they lost wick­ets steadi­ly, with seam­er Chris Woakes scyth­ing through the low­er or­der with four for 84.

All-rounder Ja­son Hold­er per­ished in the third over af­ter adding on­ly four to his overnight 23, feath­er­ing an edge be­hind off Woakes, and Kevin Sin­clair fol­lowed three overs lat­er for four, edg­ing a dri­ve at Gus Atkin­son (2-107) high to Brook at gul­ly.

Woakes then re­moved Alzarri Joseph (10) and Jay­den Seales with­out scor­ing in suc­ces­sive de­liv­er­ies to leave the in­nings tot­ter­ing be­fore Da Sil­va and Shamar Joseph com­bined to frus­trate the hosts.

Da Sil­va, un­beat­en at the start on 32, faced 122 balls in just un­der three hours and belt­ed 10 fours and three six­es, the first of which—an au­da­cious carve over cov­er off speed­ster Mark Wood—brought up the right-han­der’s half-cen­tu­ry.

The left-hand­ed Joseph en­ter­tained with five fours and two six­es—both au­da­cious pulls in one over from Atkin­son—and played with gay aban­don un­til chip­ping Wood to mid­field to sig­nal the end of the in­nings.

Bowl­ing a sec­ond time, the West In­dies re­moved Zak Craw­ley cheap­ly for three in the sec­ond over, ow­ing large­ly to a stroke of luck, when a dri­ve from Duck­ett clipped Seales’s fin­gers on the fol­low-through and broke the stumps with the right-han­der’s bat in the air.

On eight for one, Eng­land re­built cour­tesy of two part­ner­ships. First Duck­ett, who faced 92 balls and count­ed 11 fours, post­ed 119 for the sec­ond wick­et with first-in­ning cen­tu­ry-mak­er Pope, who struck half-dozen fours in a 67-ball knock.

The part­ner­ship left Eng­land well placed on 116 for one at tea, but the hosts were set back twice on re­sump­tion when Alzarri Joseph (2-58) struck two key blows, re­mov­ing Pope in the fourth over to a low catch by Sin­clair at gul­ly and then hit­ting Duck­ett plumb in front with a york­er.

Any hopes of fur­ther in­roads were then dashed, how­ev­er, as Brook punched eight fours in a 78-ball knock to in­spire an un­bro­ken 108-run, fourth wick­et part­ner­ship with for­mer cap­tain Joe Root (37 not out).

Sum­merise Scores

ENG­LAND 416 (Ol­lie Pope 121, Ben Duck­ett 71, Ben Stokes 69, Chris Woakes 37, Har­ry Brook 36, Jamie Smith 36; Alzarri Joseph 3-98, Kavem Hodge 2-44, Kevin Sin­clair 2-73, Jay­den Seales 2-90) and 248 for three (Ben Duck­ett 76, Har­ry Brook 71 not out, Ol­lie Pope 51, Joe Root 37 not out; Alzarri Joseph 2-58)

WEST IN­DIES 457 (Kavem Hodge 120, Joshua Da Sil­va 82 not out, Al­ick Athanaze 82, Kraigg Brath­waite 48, Ja­son Hold­er 27, Mikyle Louis 21; Chris Woakes 4-84, Gus Atkin­son 2-107, Shoaib Bashir 2-108)

Po­si­tion: Eng­land lead by 207 runs.

Toss: West In­dies.

Um­pires: Adri­an Hold­stock,

Rod Tuck­er; TV – Nitin Menon.

(CMC)


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