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England forced to
draw the Lord's Test |
May 21, 2007 (Link to
Scorecard)
Bad
weather forced a draw in the first Test
at Lord's. West Indies batsmen were
complemented by rain and bad light to
spoil England's chances of winning the
opening test match. Required to take 10
wickets on the final day, the English
bowlers could get just the 20 overs to
bowl. Windies ended the test match with
a promising start in their second
innings at 89 for no loss. It was a
return of form for Chris Gayle as he got
an unbeaten 47, his opening partner
Daren Ganga got 31.
The Test Match got to a dull start with
the rain threat always there. England
under their make shift captain Andrew
Strauss won the toss and batted first.
They were given the start by a century
by Alastair Cook, who brought up his
fifth hundred. The first day saw England
dominating a short day at 200/3 in just
the 56 overs bowled. The next day saw
the runs being piled up with England
ending up at 553 for 5 after almost
getting a full day's play. Three more
batsmen got centuries apart from Cook
(105). Paul Collingwood (111), Ian Bell
(109*) and Debutant wicket keeper Matt
Prior (126* from 128 with 19 fours) were
the other centurions.
With
not much time left in the match, England
declared their first innings at the
overnight score on the third day's play.
Windies lost Chris Gayle relatively
early but there was always pocket size
resistance that was coming from the
visitors. England had unfortunately lost
the services of Matthew Hoggard due to a
thigh injury, it was later known that
Hoggard would be missing the rest of the
test match. The rescue act came from
Monty Panesar otherwise the English
attack including their strike bowler
Steve Harmison struggled on the flat
deck. The problem for West Indies was
that none of the batsmen were going on
to get three figures which always kept
them under pressure. At the close of the
third day's play, it was Shiv
Chanderpaul with a dogged 63, who was
carrying the fight to the next day with
West Indies hanging in there at 363 for
7 in a full day's play. Useful half
centuries were registered by Dwayne
Bravo (56 from 59 with 8 fours and a
six) and Denesh Ramdin (60). Like
Chanderpaul, opener Ganga was
responsible in killing out plenty of
time by scoring his 49 runs in 131 balls
having survived nearly 45 overs.
The fourth day saw West Indies stretch
their first innings to another 26.1
overs and score 437 on the board with a
deficit of 116 runs. Chanderpaul could
make only 74 but it was Daren Powell
with 36 and Jerome Taylor with 21, who
could add up some valuable runs. For
Monty Panesar, it was a career best
figures of 6 for 129 in 36.1 overs.
Harmison and Plunkett were also taken
for centuries by the West Indian
batsmen.
In their second innings, England batted
for almost 67 overs to set a target of
401 for West Indies. Kevin Pietersen led
the way with a brisk hundred, 109 from
138 balls with 12 fours. Alastair Cook
got amongst the runs once again, getting
65 but taking 125 balls for his efforts.
For comeback man Owais Shah, it was a
double failure as he got scores of 6 and
4. Matt Prior came up with a cameo of 21
from just the 9 balls with two fours and
two sixes as England showed urgency to
have the opposition in for a few overs
before close. England in their second
essay declared their innings at 284 for
8. The opening pair of Gayle and Ganga
negotiated the two overs before stumps.
Due to bad weather and stubborn
resistance from the West Indian batsman,
England couldn't push on for a victory.
The Man of the Match was given to
Alastair Cook. The second Test Match of
the four-match series starts from the
25th at Leeds.
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