stluciatimes, caribbean, caribbeannews, stlucia, saintlucia, stlucianews, saintlucianews, stluciatimesnews, saintluciatimes, stlucianewsonline, saintlucianewsonline, st lucia news online, stlucia news online, loop news, loopnewsbarbados

Windies Win A Cracker In Saint Lucia

The West Indies managed the biggest T20 International run-chase ever at the Daren Sammy Cricket Ground, beating England by five wickets in the fourth fixture of their five-match series on Saturday evening. Finally, the top order clicked for the men in Maroon, albeit in a consolation rubber, after England sealed the series 3-0 on Thursday.

On a sunny afternoon in Saint Lucia, West Indies captain Rovman Powell won the toss for the first time this series and elected to bowl first. Sherfane Rutherford and Obed McCoy replaced Romario Shepherd and Terrance Hinds in the XI.

Nicholas Pooran made his 102nd appearance, becoming the most capped player for the West Indies in T20Is, moving past Chris Gayle.

England’s total of 218-5 was built on half-centuries from former Barbados schoolboy cricketers, Phil Salt and Jacob Bethell. Salt, at the top of the order, hit 55 off 35. Bethell, 21 years old and in just his sixth T20I, stroked 62 off 32 balls, with four fours and five sixes.

Jos Buttler added 32, and Will Jacks a rapidfire 25 off 12. Alzarri Joseph and Gudakesh Motie led the bowling, Motie with 2-40 from his four overs, and Joseph 1-33.

By the end of the ninth over, the required run-rate was down to just above 7.5, with Lewis on 68 off 30 balls, inclusive of four fours and seven massive sixes, and his opposite number 54 from 24, with seven boundaries and three sixes.

The following over, during which drinks came, produced three wickets. Both openers fell, and so did the dangerous Pooran. Powell strolled in and smashed 27 from his first 14 balls, hitting two fours and two sixes. Shimron Hetmyer chanced his hand, but was the third scalp for Rehan Ahmed, caught Liam Livingstone.

The blitz did not slow, though, as Powell and the incoming Sherfane Rutherford each cleared the fences to take the asking rate below six. In that over as well, just after smashing Ahmed over long-on, Rutherford went down in a heap, apparently struggling with cramp.

By the time Powell went for 38 (23 balls, 2×4 3×6) in the 17th over, the chase was well under control. Rutherford lofted two sixes to finish things off in style in the 19th over, ending unbeaten on 29 from 17 balls, and sealing the second-biggest chase ever for the Windies.

The West Indies had lost 11 wickets in 18 powerplay overs in the previous three games. Hope noted that that was something they were intent on changing on Saturday evening, especially on a strip that they felt was a good one for batting.

“Well, the first thing we saw was when we were fielding in the first innings, the pitch was a very good pitch. And as long as we could try to contain them as best as we could, give ourselves the best chance, and then before we went out to bat, the key thing was just controlling the powerplay as a batter, not lose any wickets and obviously put pressure on them,” said Hope.

“They’ve been striking with the new ball a lot. So as long as we didn’t do that, we always knew we had the calibre of players in our arsenal to chase down most, if not any score. So the aim was just to get out of the powerplay on top and then continue through the middle.”

The home team’s score of 221-5 was the highest score ever at the venue, surpassing their 218-5 against Pakistan in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup earlier this year. Australia had the previous biggest chase at this ground, 197-7 to beat Pakistan in 2010.

The West Indies also broke their string of five straight losses, having succumbed twice on tour to Sri Lanka last month.

Photo Credit: McAllister Hunt

Any third-party or user posts, comments, replies, and third-party entries published on the St. Lucia Times website (https://stluciatimes.com) in no way convey the thoughts, sentiments or intents of St. Lucia Times, the author of any said article or post, the website, or the business. St. Lucia Times is not responsible or liable for, and does not endorse, any comments or replies posted by users and third parties, and especially the content therein and whether it is accurate. St. Lucia Times reserves the right to remove, screen, edit, or reinstate content posted by third parties on this website or any other online platform owned by St. Lucia Times (this includes the said user posts, comments, replies, and third-party entries) at our sole discretion for any reason or no reason, and without notice to you, or any user. For example, we may remove a comment or reply if we believe it violates any part of the St. Lucia Criminal Code, particularly section 313 which pertains to the offence of Libel. Except as required by law, we have no obligation to retain or provide you with copies of any content you as a user may post, or any other post or reply made by any third-party on this website or any other online platform owned by St. Lucia Times. All third-parties and users agree that this is a public forum, and we do not guarantee any confidentiality with respect to any content you as a user may post, or any other post or reply made by any third-party on this website. Any posts made and information disclosed by you is at your own risk.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

TRENDING

Subscribe to our St. Lucia Times Newsletter

Get our headlines emailed to you every day.

Subscribe to our St. Lucia Times Newsletter

Get our headlines emailed to you every day.

Share via
Send this to a friend