Blackwood's gritty 95 steers Windies to victory in first Test

Jermaine Blackwood's fighting 95 in the second innings helped West Indies seal a four-wicket win over England in a gripping final day action of the first Test.

Published : Jul 12, 2020 22:57 IST , Southampton

Ben Stokes reacts as Jermaine Blackwood and Roston Chase run between the wickets on day five of the first Test.
Ben Stokes reacts as Jermaine Blackwood and Roston Chase run between the wickets on day five of the first Test.
lightbox-info

Ben Stokes reacts as Jermaine Blackwood and Roston Chase run between the wickets on day five of the first Test.

West Indies beat England by four wickets on the final day of the first international Test since the coronavirus break on Sunday, taking a 1-0 lead at the Ageas Bowl in a three-Test series thanks to a 95-run knock by Jermaine Blackwood.

England made early inroads into the West Indies batting lineup on day five as the visitor targeted 200 to win, reducing them to 27-3 before Blackwood began to set the foundations for a big win for the Caribbean side, albeit behind closed doors.

When opener John Campbell retired hurt following a toe-crushing yorker from Jofra Archer, Blackwood came in before lunch and began to anchor the innings, sharing a 73-run stand with Roston Chase (37).

“It was a nerve-wracking start after losing quick three wickets and Campbell to injury,” Windies captain Jason Holder told BBC. “But Roston and Jermaine put on a good partnership and settled the nerves. From there we could build on.

ENG vs WI: Day 5, highlights

“I missed the Barmy Army but it was a level playing field without the crowds. It's been a good start back to international cricket, it sets the series up quite nicely.”

The Barbados-born Archer, who finished with 3-45, troubled the batsmen throughout with his pace and bounce but England was unable to dismiss the dangerman Blackwood.

In the end the 28-year-old Jamaican narrowly missed out on his second Test century when he tried to lift a Ben Stokes delivery over the infield, only to gift James Anderson a catch.

Campbell then returned to the crease with West Indies six wickets down to join Holder, who played a patient knock of 14 off 36 balls, to guide the West Indies home in the final session.

Earlier, England was bowled out for 313 in its second innings after resuming on 284-8, with the overnight pair of Archer and Mark Wood failing to offer much resistance.

READ:

 

Shannon Gabriel finished with figures of 5-75 - his sixth five-wicket haul in Tests - while Chase and Alzarri Joseph picked up two wickets apiece.

“Ideally we would have liked to have got more runs in the first innings,” England captain Stokes said, adding that he stood by his decision to bat first.

“We got ourselves into great positions at times with the bat to kick on and get 350 or 400, and we weren't ruthless enough. We didn't manage to grasp the game as we would have liked.”

The second and third Tests will be held in Manchester, also without fans in attendance.

 

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment