West Indies vice-captain Kraigg Brathwaite points to the second morning of the third and decisive Test against England as being crucial after a partnership between Ollie Pope and Jos Buttler wrested their early advantage on Friday at Old Trafford.
England are in a good position, having ended the day on 258-4, a far cry from the 122-4 they were in when Buttler came to the crease.
Before that, Kemar Roach had removed second-Test century-maker, Dom Sibley, for a duck, trapping him leg before wicket in the first over of the day.
Then came the run out of Joe Root for 17, Roston Chase clipping the bales.
Ben Stokes and opener Rory Burns tried to fashion a recovery before the latter was pushed back with some short deliveries before being bowled by Roach for 20.
The West Indies were looking good with England at 92-3, and when Burns was caught brilliantly at slip by Rahkeem Cornwall off the bowling of Roston Chase for 57, the West Indies were in great shape with two new batsmen and England teetering at 122-4.
But that’s where it ended as Pope, 91, and Buttler, 56, saw out the day in relative comfort, their partnership now worth 136.
“I thought we started very well. Obviously Buttler and Pope had a good partnership, they batted well and so we know we have some hard work come tomorrow,” said Brathwaite in a press conference following stumps.
While Pope and Buttler have rescued England from a precarious position, Brathwaite does not believe the game has gotten away from the West Indies and tomorrow brings a fresh opportunity.
“We had a plan and obviously to bowl first but it’s been a pretty even day and obviously good from the two at the crease but I think tomorrow we have to start well and look to limit them to as few as possible,” said Brathwaite.
While tomorrow’s morning session is important, Brathwaite says the West Indies won’t panic and will stick to their plans and be patient.
“We have to start well and by that I mean we don’t have to rush wickets. I think if we build pressure by bowling a lot of dot balls and no boundary balls, that will create pressure to bring wickets. We don’t have to rush it in the morning session, I believe once we keep it tight, the tightness will bring wickets,” he said.
LATEST STORIES
West Indies complete series sweep despite Mahmudullah efforts
- 2024-12-12 18:17:59
- Hits 1423
Carty becomes joint-fifth fastest West Indian to 1000 ODI runs
- 2024-12-14 13:34:56
- Hits 520
Johnson Charles returns to West Indies squad for T20I series against Bangladesh
- 2024-12-12 12:14:28
- Hits 381
Developing West Indies cricketers benefitting from Chennai training camp: "it's been good so far..."
- 2024-12-12 07:12:18
- Hits 220