Key events
An email! “Disappointing team selection for England,” scoffs Tom Stock. ”If ever there was a time for Salt and Pepper this was it…”
Looking at those teams, you wonder how on earth England have won this series. As well as home advantage, West Indies have more experience and even greater firepower. One answer is that England won the first three tosses, opting to chase every time.
Another is that their runs have been distributed very efficiently. Phil Salt won the first game with a rip-roaring hundred; Jos Buttler won the second by shaking off the rust with a beautifully judged 83. When those two big guns went silent in the the third game, Sam Curran and Liam Livingstone rose to the occasion and did just enough to secure the series. Jacob Bethell has been good too, and the quicks have bowled very well, but it’s the senior batters and allrounders who have bossed the chase.
Teams in full
West Indies 1 Evin Lewis, 2 Shai Hope, 3 Nicholas Pooran (wkt), 4 Rovman Powell (capt), 5 Shimron Hetmyer, 6 Roston Chase, 7 Sherfane Rutherford, 8 Romario Shepherd, 9 Akeal Hosein, 10 Gudakesh Motie, 11 Alzarri Joseph.
England 1 Phil Salt (wkt), 2 Will Jacks, 3 Jos Buttler (capt), 4 Jacob Bethell, 5 Sam Curran, 6 Liam Livingstone, 7 Jamie Overton, 8 Rehan Ahmed, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 Jofra Archer, 11 John Turner.
One change for West Indies
After turning the tide last night, West Indies stick with ten of their XI. The only change is Romario Shepherd coming in for Obed McCoy, which shortens the tail.
Two changes for England
England show they mean business by bringing back their two senior bowlers, Adil Rashid and Jofra Archer. They replace Dan Mousley and Saqib Mahmood, so we won’t see Mahmood and Archer sharing the new ball. But we will see Rashid and Rehan Ahmed bowling leg-breaks and googlies – the sorcerer and his apprentice.
Toss: England win and bowl first
Jos Buttler calls right – and goes with the flow of this series. Every game has been won by the side batting second.
Preamble
Evening everyone and welcome to the fifth act of another sporting drama. Some might say it was a dead rubber, but they would be missing the point. In a sport that loves its records the way cricket does, rubbers never die. Any of the 22 players could post a career-best tonight, score a hundred, grab a four-for or do something that hasn’t been done before in nearly 20 years of T20 internationals.
And, as we saw last night, the competitive juices will still flow. England could go home glowing with satisfaction after a resounding 4-1 win, or lose again and leave West Indies on a roll. It’s not all to play for, but there’s still enough: pride, a place in the team, and of course entertainment – the chance to fire up new fans or put a smile on the faces of the older ones.
It’s the last game in charge for Marcus Trescothick, cricket’s answer to Lee Carsley, though he will stay on as an assistant coach when Brendon McCullum becomes the overall supremo. It’s also the final fling with the white-ball squad for two lower-profile England coaches, Carl Hopkinson (fielding) and Richard Dawson (spin bowling).
Both were there in Australia when England won the T20 World Cup two years ago, and Hopkinson had also been part of the group that lifted the 50-over World Cup on home soil in 2019 – when some smart fielding, by Jason Roy and Jos Buttler, played rather a vital role in the dénouement. Dawson and Hopkinson are already guaranteed to go out with a series win, but you suspect Buttler will be itching to give them one last victory to go with their leaving cards.
Play starts at 8pm GMT, and I’ll be back soon after 7.30 with news of the toss and the teams. If you’re on Blue Sky, as the Guardian is now, do send me a skeet! @tim.delisle.bluesky.social