Tuesday, January 19, 2010

West Indies v India - Fifth Test


Antigua Recreation Ground, St John's

West Indies: CG Greenidge, LG Rowe, GA Headley, IVA Richards, CL Walcott, *GStA Sobers, +PJL Dujon, MD Marshall, AME Roberts, MA Holding, CEL Ambrose.
India: SM Gavaskar, M Prabhakar, DB Vengsarkar, VL Manjrekar, PR Umrigar, *MAK Pataudi, Kapil Dev, +SMH Kirmani, J Srinath, EAS Prasanna, BKV Prasad.

Debuts: Nil
Umpires: Mahboob Shah (PAK) & RS Dunne (NZL)
Toss: West Indies

Having started the tour so well it all came down to a case of do or die for India in Antigua, but the momentum was now firmly with West Indies, a draw being enough to secure an eighth successive series victory. Injury meant that Worrell, Garner and Griffith all remained in Barbados, but the selectors were able to call on the handy trio of Walcott, Marshall and Roberts as replacements, and Pataudi's incorrect call at the toss allowed Garry Sobers' team first use of a hard, glistening surface at the ARG.


Lawrence Rowe's 80 turned out to be
the highest innings of a low scoring match


The strokemakers were expected to be favoured on such a pitch, but 13 wickets fell on a dramatic first day as West Indies were bowled out for 314 and then responded by reducing the Indians to a precarious 13-3 by the close. The early part of the hosts' innings was built around Lawrence Rowe's first ATG fifty, and when he was out for 80, bowled by one that Prasanna held back a touch, two further fifties from Sobers - his first of the series - and Dujon combined with a boisterous 31 from Roberts to steer the innings past 300.

India's bowlers had performed well although the tail somewhat gifted Prasanna a five wicket haul, but their fielding had again been poor. Both Rowe (on 66 at the time) and Dujon (on 28) were given lives when Prasad and Kirmani respectively grassed a pair of simple catches - Kirmani's fumble off the bowling of Prabhakar was a real howler - and this profligacy was compounded when Marshall removed both Gavasakar and Manjrekar with what turned out to be the last two balls of the day, leaving the tourists deep in the mire. Vengsarkar and Umrigar threatened to stage a recovery on day two, but from the relative heights of 60-3 the innings fell apart as the spin of Sobers picked apart a batting order that was being traumatised by pace from the other end, and West Indies' skipper finished with the eyebrow-raising figures of 5-11 from 9.5 overs as India crumbled to 101 all out, equalling their lowest ever total in the process.


Sobers' bowling came off the sidelines
to devastating effect on the second day

India had batted very poorly and were asked to follow-on some 213 runs in arrears, but led by a confident innings of 79 from Vengsarkar they made a much better fist of things second time round, and had progressed to 174-4 when Vengsarkar lost his middle stump to Marshall late on the second evening. There were no further casualties before the close, but on the third morning the rampaging Marshall simply tore through the lower order like a tornado through Texas, and when hostilities ceased the Indians had been bowled out for 196 to hand West Indies victory by an innings and 17 runs before we had even reached lunch.

Marshall's analysis of 5-12 from 16.3 overs ensured that most onlookers now had both eyebrows firmly elevated, and at the hastily arranged presentation ceremony the Indian players milled around in a near catatonic state as the magnitude of their defeat began to sink in. After starting the series in such positive fashion they had been bowled out for under 200 in each of their last four innings, and the final two Tests were completed in less than five days put together. The four-pronged pace attack fielded by West Indies after their shock defeat in the first Test gradually wore down the Indians' resolve, and the denouement here in Antigua tightens still further West Indies' grip on the number one position in the ATG world.


Malcolm Marshall and Jeff Dujon, two of the main
architects of West Indies' victory in both match and series

Score Summary
WI 1st Inns 314 (Rowe 80, Sobers 62, Dujon 50; Prasanna 5-55)
IND 1st Inns 101 (Sobers 5-11)
IND 2nd Inns 196 (Vengsarkar 79, Gavaskar 46; Marshall 5-12, Ambrose 4-47)

WEST INDIES WON BY AN INNINGS & 17 RUNS

1st & 2nd innings scorecards (click to enlarge)

Close of play
Day 1 - India 1st innings 13-3 (Vengsarkar 4*; 5 ov)
Day 2 - India 2nd innings 179-5 (Pataudi 18*, Kapil Dev 4*; 48 ov)
Day 3 - India 2nd innings 196 (62.3 ov) - end of match

Notes
▪ India's 101 in the first innings equals their lowest ever total
▪ Ambrose passed 100 career wickets
▪ This was the shortest ever completed Test match, both in terms of time (14 hours and 19 minutes) and of overs bowled (189.3)
▪ West Indies have now won eight successive series


Man of the Match: MD Marshall

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