9 Mar, 2022 11:35 AM, Wed
Jonny Bairstow went on from where he left in Australia before the finish of England's unfortunate Ashes mission to by and by lift his side in the clear with a magnificent century against West Indies in the main Test. Bairstow's second sequential century gave England something to applaud before the finish of the first day of the season that started with dismay design to feature their batting hardships. The change up top didn't work for England as debutant Alex Lees endured only nine conveyances prior to ending up at some unacceptable finish of the umpire's call. Floated by the early strike, West Indies struck again in the exceptionally next over as Jayden Seales got Zak Crawley to inside edge a conveyance to the wicketkeeper. Yet again dazed by the early takeoff of their openers, England depended on their captain to rescue them yet his advancement to number 3 didn't work either as Kemar Roach inspired one to nip back in and hit the highest point of off stump. Dan Lawrence, England's freshest number 4, kept it together for 37 conveyances yet a wonderful outswinger from Jason Holder brought about his takeoff as he edged one behind to the slip cordon. With a great deal of spotlight on their batting issues, the last thing England needed was a sad beginning to the visit. With the best four gone inside the initial 16 overs, the onus was on Bairstow and Ben Stokes to rescue their side. The two hitters invalidated a precarious period before the mid-day break however figured out how to return to scoring ways post resumption. Bairstow started the meeting with an optimistic outlook as he pulled Seales for a limit in the first finished. Stirs up then punched Alzarri Joseph on the backfoot through the covers in the extremely next over to get going with a limit too. The way that the development that the seamers found in the first part of the day meeting subsided a touch helped both Stokes and Bairstow as they explored through the meeting no sweat. West Indies tasted achievement ultimately as they figured out how to end the prospering association with Seales castling Stokes yet England simply figured out how to fill in certainty from subsequently. Assuming that the initial meeting had a place with the home side, England certainly stowed the distinctions in the second and the third. Ben Foakes and Bairstow kept West Indies under control to add 99 for the 6th wicket in under 30 overs to switch things around. West Indies figured out how to break the stand yet an unflinching Chris Woakes didn't give the hosts a sniff to bowl them out. Bairstow at the opposite end figured out how to arrive at three figures as England completed the day the more joyful side regardless of the sad morning meeting. Brief scores: England 268/6 (Jonny Bairstow 109*, Ben Foakes 42; Jason Holder 2-15, Jayden Seales 2-64) vs West Indies
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 122 | 5117 |
2 | Australia | 116 | 3936 |
3 | South Africa | 112 | 3357 |
4 | Pakistan | 106 | 2762 |
5 | New Zealand | 101 | 3349 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Babar Azam | 824 |
2 | Shubman Gill | 801 |
3 | V. Kohli | 768 |
4 | H.T. Tector | 746 |
5 | R.G. Sharma | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.A. Maharaj | 716 |
2 | J.R. Hazlewood | 688 |
3 | A. Zampa | 686 |
4 | Mohammed Siraj | 678 |
5 | J.J. Bumrah | 665 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Mohammad Nabi | 320 |
2 | Shakib Al Hasan | 292 |
3 | Sikandar Raza | 288 |
4 | A. Vala | 248 |
5 | Rashid Khan | 239 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia | 124 | 3715 |
2 | India | 120 | 3108 |
3 | England | 105 | 3151 |
4 | South Africa | 103 | 1845 |
5 | New Zealand | 96 | 2121 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.S. Williamson | 859 |
2 | J.E. Root | 824 |
3 | D.J. Mitchell | 768 |
4 | Babar Azam | 768 |
5 | S.P.D. Smith | 757 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R. Ashwin | 870 |
2 | J.J. Bumrah | 847 |
3 | J.R. Hazlewood | 847 |
4 | K. Rabada | 834 |
5 | P.J. Cummins | 820 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R.A. Jadeja | 444 |
2 | R. Ashwin | 322 |
3 | Shakib Al Hasan | 310 |
4 | J.E. Root | 282 |
5 | J.O. Holder | 270 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 266 | 14108 |
2 | Australia | 256 | 10241 |
3 | England | 254 | 9660 |
4 | West Indies | 252 | 11604 |
5 | South Africa | 251 | 8287 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | T.M. Head | 844 |
2 | S.A. Yadav | 842 |
3 | P.D. Salt | 816 |
4 | Babar Azam | 755 |
5 | Mohammad Rizwan | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | A.U. Rashid | 719 |
2 | Rashid Khan | 681 |
3 | P.W.H. De Silva | 674 |
4 | J.R. Hazlewood | 662 |
5 | A.J. Hosein | 659 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | P.W.H. De Silva | 222 |
2 | Mohammad Nabi | 214 |
3 | H.H. Pandya | 213 |
4 | M.P. Stoinis | 211 |
5 | Sikandar Raza | 210 |
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