Joe Root leads the way with 16th ton as England grind West Indies bowlers

“It’s really pleasing to make a start count,” said England captain Joe Root on reaching his century against the West Indies. Photo: Paul Childs/Action Images via Reuters

“It’s really pleasing to make a start count,” said England captain Joe Root on reaching his century against the West Indies. Photo: Paul Childs/Action Images via Reuters

Published Feb 12, 2019

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GROS-ISLET, Saint Lucia – Joe Root’s 16th Test century highlighted England’s first day of complete dominance by the end of the third day of the third and final Test against the West Indies on Monday.

His workmanlike unbeaten 111 off 209 deliveries included just nine boundaries and typified the tourists’ effort to make amends for previous failures in reaching stumps at 325/4 in their second innings.

That gives England an overall lead of 448 runs with two days still available to push for a consolation victory at the Darren Sammy Stadium in St Lucia, having already surrendered the series and the Wisden Trophy with heavy defeats in the first two matches in Barbados and Antigua.

With the home side short-handed in the bowling department on the day due to an early injury to Keemo Paul, England took full advantage of the situation.

Root had never gone through an entire Test series without at least registering a half-century, and with just 55 runs from the five previous innings against a reinvigorated West Indies team he was due to come good.

It happened on a day when a few others in a suspect England batting order managed to get important runs under their belts.

Successive partnerships of 74 for the third wicket with Joe Denly (69), 107 for the fourth wicket with Jos Buttler (56) and 71 so far for the fifth wicket with Ben Stokes (29 not out) ensured that the captain’s steadying influence was ever-present from the moment he arrived at the crease midway through the morning session.

Eschewing extravagance, he compiled his innings carefully, while those around him showed a bit more aggression against a depleted West Indies attack, which left much of the burden on the shoulders of fast bowlers Kemar Roach and Shannon Gabriel.

“It’s really pleasing to make a start count,” said Root at the end of the day. “I was frustrated in the first innings and I’m glad to make it count after getting in.

“I managed to find ways of scoring runs at times when I didn’t feel great, but it felt like it clicked today.”

A morning of misfortune and misadventure saw England ensuring there was no repetition of the collapses which have defined this Caribbean tour so far, although the early signs were not encouraging.

Here’s how our bench celebrated @root66’s hundred!! 👏

Wait for @MAWood33 at the end... 🎶

Scorecard: https://t.co/cz8o6s2Bys pic.twitter.com/XxOjaIaCRi

— England Cricket (@englandcricket) February 11, 2019

Resuming at the overnight position of 19/0, the tourists suffered an immediate setback when Rory Burns clipped the first delivery of the morning to Alzarri Joseph at square-leg to give Paul immediate success.

However, the young all-rounder, drafted into the final eleven for this match due to the suspension of regular captain Jason Holder for a slow over-rate offence in the previous match, left the field on a stretcher shortly after as he appeared to suffer a serious leg injury chasing a ball to the boundary.

West Indies did not help their increasingly difficult situation when Shimron Hetmyer put down a simple chance offered by Denly off Gabriel. It proved a costly miss.

He lost the other opening batsman, Keaton Jennings, midway through the morning when the left-hander attempted to turn a delivery from Joseph top the leg-side and the ball ricocheted off his body on to the stumps to send him back to the pavilion for 23.

#WIvENG Another hard day for the men in maroon. ENG lead by 448 #MenInMaroon #ItsOurGame pic.twitter.com/4C6ARRGVXS

— Windies Cricket (@windiescricket) February 11, 2019

Denly, mindful about increasing questions over his credentials as a Test batsman, played fluently after his early life with the captain alongside.

However, Gabriel had the last laugh when dismissing the Kent batsman to a catch at the wicket in mid-afternoon.

Buttler played the role of the aggressor in his century stand with Root, until Roach produced an unplayable delivery to breach the batsman’s defences in the final session and claim his 18th wicket of the series.

AFP

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