Australia beat West Indies to retain Frank Worrell Trophy

The Australians, who won the first Test in Hobart by an innings and 212 runs, dismissed the Caribbean tourists for 282 late on the fourth day after declaring their second innings on 179 for three with a 459-run lead.

Published : Dec 29, 2015 11:41 IST , Melbourne

Mitchell Marsh celebrates with team mates after dismissing Marlon Samuels.
Mitchell Marsh celebrates with team mates after dismissing Marlon Samuels.
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Mitchell Marsh celebrates with team mates after dismissing Marlon Samuels.

Australia beat the West Indies by 177 runs in the second Test to win the series and retain the Frank Worrell Trophy in Melbourne on Tuesday.

The Australians, who won the first Test in Hobart by an innings and 212 runs, dismissed the Caribbean tourists for 282 late on the fourth day after declaring their second innings on 179 for three with a 459-run lead.

The final Test of the three-Test series will start in Sydney on Sunday.

> Full scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Earlier, Australia dismissed Darren Bravo, Rajendra Chandrika and Marlon Samuels after lunch to take a firmer grip on proceedings. Bravo, the first-innings top-scorer with 81, was caught behind off Peter Siddle for 21 and Chandrika's 130-ball vigil ended when he was trapped leg before wicket to James Pattinson for 37.

Senior batsman Samuels continued his dismal tour when he prodded at Mitchell Marsh and was snapped up by wicketkeeper Peter Nevill for 19. Blackwood has attempted to play his shots, while wicketkeeper Ramdin is searching for form after being in the batting doldrums for the last two seasons.

> Mahela Jayawardene's column on the decline of West Indies cricket

Australia's no-ball wicket curse had earlier continued when Bravo survived on 12 after he was given out caught behind only to be saved by a front-foot no-ball by Josh Hazlewood.

Pattinson had two wickets denied to him for overstepping on Sunday's third day, and to Australia's frustration it was the wicket-less Hazlewood's turn on the fourth day.

Skipper Steve Smith declared on Australia's overnight second innings total of 179 for three for a 459-run lead.

The Australians removed Kraigg Brathwaite in the 12th over for 31 when he was coaxed to cut spinner Nathan Lyon only to be snapped up by Smith at slip.

Smith remained 70 not out when he made the declaration at the start of the fourth day and finished 2015 with most Test runs of 1,474 at 73.70. Only Joe Root (1,372) was in a position in England's current Test match against South Africa in Durban to overtake him in the final Test of the year.

The longest Test fourth innings in Australia was India's 445 off 1,132 balls at the Adelaide Oval in 1978. The West Indies will need to survive a minimum of 1,080 balls to draw in Melbourne. The tourists have yet to pass 300 in seven Test innings against Australia this year.

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