England plunder 313/5 at Edgbaston
BIRMINGHAM: After threatening a run-feast in the first hour, England were restrained by a battling West Indies team through much of the opening day of the second cricket Test yesterday. After being pegged back at 262 for five in the final period, the hosts surged forward against a tiring attack in the last hour to reach 313 without further loss when fading light ended play with 4.4 overs to be bowled. A workmanlike 105 from Marcus Trescothick, his seventh Test century and first against the Caribbean side, proved the foundation of the England effort after the three century-makers of the first Test at Lord’s fell relatively cheaply. Graham Thorpe played a useful hand in getting to 61, but it was the ever-present threat of Andrew Flintoff, unbeaten on 42, and the youthful promise of wicketkeeper-batsman Geraint Jones, not out on 27, that frustrated the visitors in an unbroken 51-run stand just when it seemed the balance might have tilted decisively in their favour.
In just his second Test, Dwayne Bravo again impressed with the ball, claiming the wickets of England captain Michael Vaughan and Trescothick in disciplined spells of bowling that cost 42 runs off 16 overs. Jermaine Lawson did a decent job on his return to the team and snared the first wicket of the match, but it was the other returnee Corey Collymore and fellow Barbadian Pedro Collins who did not live up to expectations. By far the most experienced of the frontline bowling options available to their captain, Brian Lara was again at his wits’ end as the pair failed to deliver in conditions that were generally overcast after a bright morning session. In a combined 34.2 overs, they were hammered for 160 runs in circumstances that demanded they stood up and took the responsibility handed to them by their captain.
Sharing the new ball amid an air of West Indian trepidation after Vaughan won the toss and had no hesitation in choosing to bat first, the worst fears seemed about to be realised when Collins and Collymore were plundered by Trescothick and Andrew Strauss in a 77-run opening partnership at almost a run-a-minute. If Collymore could have been forgiven for lack of work, having arrived in England on Monday, Collins’ inability to recapture the control that brought him seven wickets in the first Test was puzzling. It was left to the back-up bowlers Lawson and Bravo to pull things back and they did a fair job. Vaughan’s run of three consecutive Test hundreds against the West Indies was ended by an alert Bravo, who juggled a firm drive back at him before clutching the chance that sent the England skipper back to the pavilion for 12.
At 150 for three, the visitors were back in the match, but Thorpe joined Trescothick in a determined 60-run, fourth-wicket stand that revived English hopes for a formidable first innings total. The big left-hander (Trescothick) was expecting to go on to even greater things in the final session, but the persistent Bravo struck again, watching for an agonising split-second when Lara juggled an edged slash at first slip before taking the opportunity on the rebound. At that stage, Lara was expecting his bowlers to turn the screws on England, or at least maintain control. But with Bravo off the field tending to a foot injury, the sixth-wicket pairing made easy progress, Jones impressing with his sublime timing, while Flintoff started to find his range before the light was offered, hoisting Banks over square-leg for the only six of the day. (CMC)
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"England plunder 313/5 at Edgbaston"