Almost two years have passed since Alastair Cook scored his last Test century. Another pair of failures here – 11 and 13 – has made it look as though his dire run is interminable.
Cook, drawn half-forward to cover-drive, stabbed a low catch when England began their second innings 104 runs ahead. Opponents know exactly where and how to bowl at him, unlike in his golden youth when he reeled off Test centuries, 25 in all, the most for England.
In this Test, however, there has been a very extenuating circumstance. The balls are of a peculiar manufacture at Test level, and the new ones in West Indian hands have boomeranged round corners. The finest Dukes ball has a recommended retail price of £85. On the verge of bankruptcy, the West Indies board opted for a cheaper version that swings wildly for 15 to 20 overs and then expires.
Darren Bravo was standing innocently at first slip when Gary Ballance faced up to a straightish ball from Jason Holder. It swung so much after pitching that Bravo caught it at first slip without the West Indian wicketkeeper moving. If a ball swings like that, opening the batting is nigh impossible.
The same extenuating circumstance applies to Jonathan Trott, who scored nought and four. It may not be possible to convert him at the age of 33 into an opening batsman – he is curently moving around too much to keep his head steady – but no judgment should be passed on the basis of this Test and this batch of balls. Certainly James Tredwell was unconcerned. Asked if the opening air’s failures were a worry he responded: “Not at all.”
China built this Sir Vivian Richards stadium, where England laboured through much of the third day of the opening Test, at the end of which they had extended their lead to 220. Building this stadium, and the one in Grenada where the second Test will be staged, is a manifestation of China’s soft power.
Unfortunately for James Anderson, who was desperate to beat Sir Ian Botham’s record of 383 Test wickets but finished one short, soft power in cricket seems to come with a string attached: soft pitches. Almost every delivery has kept low after the initial hardness has gone.
So it was a far cry – or rather one long howl of frustration – from traditional West Indian pitches. They used to be rolled and rolled, and not just up and down, as the roller was twisted from side to side so the superficial grass was ripped out and the surface turned into a matt sheen.
Given what Tredwell called “a pretty turgid wicket at times”, a batsman who dropped roots after the new ball had lost its hardness was impossible to excavate unless he made a mistake. Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Jason Holder did make fatal errors, trying to drive Tredwell through the covers. Jermaine Blackwood did not, batting through the innings for an unbeaten 112 off 220 balls.
Blackwood comes from St Elizabeth, the same south-west Jamaican parish as Jerome Taylor, who is in this West Indian side, and Andre Russell, who could have been but preferred to play in the Indian Premier League with Kolkata Knight Riders. Blackwood and Russell share a house in Jamaica and, if a mortgage is involved, it can be assumed to be in Russell’s name.
Blackwood, 23, played a sparky innings for one in his sixth Test and a previous highest score of 66 not out. His signature shot is a lofted off drive for six, as played to second ball of his innings from Tredwell. When he tried the shot against Anderson he just sliced it into no man’s land – such was Anderson’s luck on what might have been his day of celebration.
Three centuries in consecutive games – the only three before yesterday in Blackwood’s first-class career – had propelled him into the West Indian team last season. But the formative phase seems to have been his two years in the regional Under-19 tournament, something which England lack, when he made a double-century for Jamaica.
England might have – would have – dismissed West Indies sooner if Cook had not taken so many defensive options. Here he could be criticised. They were conservative options, to be precise: ones designed to conserve runs rather than take wickets.
Chanderpaul would have gone first ball on Tuesday if Cook had posted a third slip. He might argue he had two slips and a gully (no short leg), but Chanderpaul is 40, in the twilight of his distinguished career, and Wisden is not required to confirm he has yet to run down the pitch to his first ball from a pace bowler and welly it straight at mid-off or mid-on.