West Indies vs England: Rovman Powell and Brandon King step up as the West Indies take a 2-0 lead.

Rovman Powell and Brandon King step up as the West Indies take a 2-0 lead.
West Indies vs England  Rovman Powell and Brandon King

England destroyed by heavy hitting, and the match is concluded by spinners and Alzarri Joseph.

With a victory in Grenada that was far more decisive than the final 10-run margin would have you believe, West Indies romped to a 2-0 series lead. Brandon King and Rovman Powell created the power burst that England’s famous white-ball hitters couldn’t even come close to emulating.

A collapse of 4 for 11 in 16 balls that left West Indies reeling at 54 for 4 in the ninth over of the match gave England’s twin-spin attack of Adil Rashid and Rehan Ahmed total control of the game, so such a result didn’t seem likely.

 

However, West Indies unexpectedly turned the tables, first through a pair of half-centuries from Powell, who hammered thirty runs from Sam Curran’s second and penultimate over, and King, whose outstanding unbeaten 82 from 52 included four fours and three sixes off Rehan’s final twelve deliveries.

 

The West Indies then delivered a spin grip of their own, needing to defend a firm but manageable 177, as the Left-handers From the Pavilion End, Akeal Hosein and Gudakesh Motie locked down the match for eight straight overs. Despite Curran’s bravery in topping the scoring with 50 from 32 balls following his chastening bowling showing, they managed to deliver the combined figures of 3 for 33. However, Rehan and Moeen Ali were unable to meet the last over’s requirement of 28.

In powerplay, dot and bash

The triumph over England in the first Twenty20 International was due to a well-known characteristic of the West Indies batsmen, who outspattered England with 14 sixes to just six. Similar circumstances prevailed today as 13 players ultimately played eight, including Rehan’s penultimate-ball smash over point after the game was already lost.

 

In the initial portion of their bowling attempt, though, England seemed to have countered that menace. As expected, three of West Indies’ sixes came during the powerplay. However, they also scored eighteen dot-balls, or half of their allotted points, during the opening over, which was commandeered by the recalled Moeen. Chris Woakes’ deft usage of the cutter earned him the upper hand in a close battle with Kyle Mayers.

 

Keeping in mind the historic 46-six ODI on Knowing that a substantial chase was likely, Jos Buttler had no qualms about bowling first after winning the toss on this same pitch in 2019. As it happened, their eventual aim wasn’t nearly as tough as he could have hoped for, but England was still well behind.

Rehan and Rash tear apart the top-order

An apparent heir, a master and an apprentice, and all that Rehan’s ascent to the position of England’s premier legspinner across all formats was always inevitable, even after he spun the country to victory in the Under-19 World Cup two years prior.

 

Less evident was the fact that there would come a time when Rashid’s incredible career was coming to an end and Rehan was just starting out internationally, making the two of them an envied twin-spin combination. And based on their exhilarating post-powerplay burst, it looks like that time could be here, even with the gap that eventually developed between their final figures.

 

Three balls into his spell, Rashid struck first after coming on to take the attack for the seventh over, when Nicholas Pooran was baffled by a diet of loopy googlies and gave up to long-on with a loose hack. After that, Rehan went one better. Shai Hope was dismissed for 1 from 3 after his second delivery tore through his defenses and sank and tore into off stump.

 

Not to be outdone, Rashid regained the upper hand and baffled Shimron Hetmyer with a delightful double-whammy in his very next over. First, he launched a massive air ball that landed on a middle-and-leg line, and then, off his next over, he flipped the ball flatter outside, which Hetmyer could only hesitantly prod to Moeen at slip.

 

West Indies were languishing at 68 for 4 after 11 overs when their five-over alliance was over, and their solitary boundary came from King’s strong thump through the line off Rehan.

Powell and King deliver the smackdown

 

Whether intentional or not, Rehan’s switch of ends signaled the beginning of the West Indies’ onslaught. King climbed through the line with style, his first ball being too full and receiving the treatment. Following a blunder from Woakes at long-on, King struck for his fourth six and a half-century off 33 balls. Powell then hit Tymal Mills with a powerful blow to reach the hundred within the 14th over.

 

Returning, Rashid tried to impose some temporary order. Powell was barely getting started, but his fantastic statistics of 2 for 11 after three singles in his final over were impressive. For several months now, Curran’s delicate shape has been a source of anxiety; suddenly, he was completely exposed.

by far the most costly in his professional life.

 

It began, as these things sometimes do, somewhat unluckily, with Powell’s under-edge evading Buttler’s dive as well as his stumps. But after that, there was chaos. Curran lost speed twice and was killed far above the ropes both times. Twice he took a fuller aim and was violently hurled to the ground. He attempted to hide the ball in between whiles, but was unable for two wides.

 

Powell reached his 27-ball fifty with his fourth six, and if Brook hadn’t made a magnificent full-stretch dive to intercept him at long-on, he could have made it five in the over. However, the West Indies’ assault continued unabated after his departure. As King waited for Rehan to come back, he made With three fours and a powerful slog over deep midwicket, it reached 48 in two overs, and the debutant was dismissed with 1 for 47, his most battered stats of the tour thus far.

 

Mills, at least, had the expertise to bring some order back. Using his astonishing range of pace in both on and off deliveries, he had been surprisingly effective in his opening two overs and restricted King and Andre Russell to a four-ball exchange in his third over. Before the innings ended, Russell unavoidably hit two sixes, including an amazing leaping uppercut off long-off. However, Mills responded with a precision slower ball and made two in two to end the 20 overs, with Jason Holder holed out to cow corner.

Speed and spin separate England

 

A series of eager right-handers had their aspirations curtailed by a left-arm ball that was wide on the crease and angled toward the body. Hosein and Motie, who were only playing because Romario Shepherd was experiencing knee pain, executed a basic yet deadly combination.

 

The powerplay consisted of three overs for Hosein, four overs for nine runs by Motie, and one more over for Hosein, during which the dangerous Harry Brook became the third and last victim of their combined efforts. There was a noticeable lack of courage in England’s strategy, especially from the listless Buttler, whose attempt to give Hosein the ball ended with a feeble push to short cover or an admission that he was going to be stumped by a mile.

 

And Alzarri Joseph was free to turn it up from the far end while the lockdown was in place. In the previous matches of this tour, his extra pace had been a bit of a liability, but now, all West Indies needed to do to put the pressure on their opponents was to pound the pitch from just back of a length, with an awkward lift into the body and a series of catchers lined up on the leg-side.

 

Within the first 10 overs, his approaches worked for both Will Jacks and Phil Salt, who fell in their mid-20s after failing to convert their proactive purpose into anything significant. And even if Curran, who was moved to No. 5, damaged Joseph’s numbers in his third over Then answering with an astonishing first-ball fifty from his T20I career in 31 balls; the first ball of his fourth ball effectively completed the deal as Hosein held onto a wayward drive to point.

 

Until then, Andre Russell’s bad day with the ball had posed the only serious challenge to the West Indies’ reign. He was 3 for 19 on Tuesday, but went wicketless for 66 this time, featuring an all-too-rare sighting of Liam Livingstone in power hitting gear during a 22-run second over. Motie was there to see him off before he could do anything meaningful with his 17 out of 7.

Scroll to Top