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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Sport
Will Macpherson

England suffer agonising moments in the field in frustrating day against West Indies

On a long, hot day in the field, there were two agonising moments of missed opportunity for England on a pitch that remains as flat as it was when they racked up 500 runs for just the fourth time in five years.

The first was in the morning session. Ben Stokes had just picked up Nkrumah Bonner, immovable in Antigua, with a controversial lbw (did he hit it?), their second wicket of the day after Jack Leach had Shamarh Brooks caught lazily at backward point.

Stokes, with the old ball in his hand, was finding a little reverse swing. Jermaine Blackwood was new to the crease, and still scoreless. Stokes cannoned a ball into his back pad, and every England fielder went up in appeal. Umpire Nigel Duguid, on Test debut, said no.

Stokes settled for the decision, turning back to his mark. He thought it was sliding down the legside, and had no interest in DRS, even though his team-mates – including the captain Joe Root – seemed keen to use one of their three available reviews. As is so often the case, Stokes won the argument. The ball was crashing into leg-stump.

The second came after tea. By now, Blackwood had 65 and his partnership with Kraigg Brathwaite – nearing his 10th Test ton – was worth 128. England were into their 96th over in the field.

Saqib Mahmood, one of two England debutants, produced a beautiful yorker that slipped under Blackwood’s bat, and into the stumps. England wheeled off in celebration.

Duguid, though, had received a message from the third umpire, and held out his arm: no ball.

The moment was agony for Mahmood and his team-mates. But, for many of them, it was familiar. Mahmood is just the latest England bowler to be denied his maiden Test wicket by an overstep: think Stokes in 2013, Mark Wood in 2015, Tom Curran in 2017, and Mason Crane in 2018. Even in the Ashes this winter, Stokes, Ollie Robinson and Chris Woakes all had wickets chalked off for this reason.

It is an inexcusable mistake that no longer goes unnoticed. Mahmood had been pushing the line, and this was his fifth no ball of the innings. Every time this has happened, England earnestly say they will address it in training, but elementary mistakes continue to be made.

By stumps, with the West Indies 288 for four (these errors felt so costly. Blackwood had followed Brathwaite in reaching his hundred, his third in Tests and second against England, for whom he has always saved his best, before falling in surprising fashion. With Dan Lawrence, the specialist partnership breaker, brought on for a speculative late spell, Blackwood simply shouldered arms. He reviewed in disbelief, but was not saved.

Plenty of damage, though, had been done. The captain and vice-captain played with calm and control in sharing 183, a stand that sucked a lot of air from England’s hopes of a win. England showed their frustrations, with Stokes and Blackwood exchanging words, which required the intervention of the umpires.

With England’s seam-bowling resources stretched to breaking point (two legends have been willfully ignored, while six are injured or ill), England’s limitations were on show.

Chris Woakes, nominally the leader of the attack, was impotent and overlooked, bowling just 16 of the 117 overs. Matt Fisher bowled nicely, but is raw. With Mahmood and Stokes bowling well, there were threatening spells, but it never quite happened. Leach was not quite at his best, but had little assistance from the pitch.

There were no grievous fielding errors, but things did become a little flat, and Ben Foakes missed a very tough stumping chance off Brathwaite late in the day. With the final ball of the day, they got their reviews wrong again, for a bat-pad shout off the nightwatchman Alzarri Joseph.

It remains possible that on the final day the pitch and the match spit into life. If that is to happen, they will have to start brilliantly on day four to keep the door – which remains ajar – open.

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