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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Ben Duckett 76, Harry Brook 71* hand England solid advantage over West Indies

Harry Brook's fifty drove England Getty Images

England 416 and 248 for 3 (Duckett 76, Brook 71*, Pope 51, A Joseph 2-58) lead West Indies 457 (Hodge 120, Da Silva 82*, Woakes 4-84) by 207 runs

Half-centuries to three of their top five allowed England to wrest back control of the second Test after West Indies' spirited lower-order resistance had given the tourists a narrow first-innings lead on an enthralling third day at Trent Bridge.

Twin fifties from Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope - the biggest contributors in England's first innings - steadied the hosts after the loss of Zak Crawley just ten balls into their second innings, a 119-run partnership for the second wicket overhauling West Indies' 41-run lead and pulling them 86 ahead.

Then fifty to Harry Brook during another century stand for England - worth 108 so far with Joe Root - left West Indies frustrated. At stumps on day three, Brook was unbeaten on 71 and Root was 37 not out.

Crawley, dismissed for a duck in the first innings, managed 3 in the second before his freak run-out at the non-striker's end. Duckett drove heartily back towards the bowler Jayden Seales, who thrust out a hand on his follow through and the ball deflected off his fingers as Crawley was backing up, his bat still in the air when the stumps were broken.

Duckett raised his second fifty of the match in 55 balls with a trio of sweeps off consecutive deliveries in front of square off Kevin Sinclair, top-edged through fine leg and then behind square to add to his quick-fire 71 in the first innings.

The day's overcast conditions grew heavier at tea with a very light rain shower sweeping through around the scheduled resumption. Pope, England's top-scorer in the first innings with 121, brought up his fifty soon after the interval with a single off Alzarri Joseph, but immediately after the misshapen ball was replaced, the same bowler lured Pope into a drive, the outside edge sailing to Sinclair at gully.

Alzarri Joseph then pinned Duckett lbw with a toe-crusher of an inswinging yorker, the batter failing to overturn a straightforward dismissal on DRS, and England went from 127 for 1 to 140 for 3.

Brook and Root steadied things again, though. Brook was hit in the midriff by one that nipped back from Alzarri Joseph, but pulled the next for four through midwicket to move within one boundary of his half-century; and he got there punching the first ball of Alzarri Joseph's next over to the boundary through wide long-off.

Brook raised the century partnership with back-to-back fours through the cordon off Seales, who was clearly fuming at the end of the over. When Brook and Root strode off the field after the next over, they had every reason to look pleased.

Earlier, Joshua Da Silva's resolute half-century, and Shamar Joseph's big-hitting cameo from No. 11 took West Indies into the lead. Da Silva remained unbeaten on 82, having added fifty runs to his overnight score, when Shamar Joseph fell on the final ball of an extended first session for 33 off 27 balls, the pair putting on 71 runs off 78 for the tenth wicket.

Chris Woakes found plenty of swing to lead the bowling for England with three wickets for the day, including two in as many balls, to finish with 4 for 84.

West Indies would have been thrilled with an improved batting performance, led by a century for Kavem Hodge, and Alick Athanaze's 82 on the second day, which gave them some hope of levelling the series after an innings defeat at Lord's. But after further encouragement with Crawley's dismissal, they may be disappointed with their failure to capitalise.

England bowled just one over with the second new ball on Friday evening, but under far cloudier skies, it took just 15 deliveries on Saturday morning for Woakes to break through, Jason Holder prodding at one outside off stump and getting caught behind. Sinclair survived a run-out chance when Pope's shy at the stumps from short cover went wide, but he was gone soon after, thanks to Brook's lightning reflexes at gully, off Gus Atkinson.

Alzarri Joseph was put down by Ben Stokes, running in from cover, on 7, off the bowling of Atkinson, but Woakes claimed two wickets in as many balls when he had Alzarri Joseph chasing a wide one outside off stump and feathering behind to Jamie Smith, and then bowled Seales for a first-ball duck.

Shamar Joseph survived the hat-trick ball to support Da Silva, who had taken it slowly through the first 90 minutes of the day but brought up his fifty in emphatic style, using Mark Wood's pace to guide the ball over the fence at deep extra cover.

Da Silva took another six off Wood over deep third to move West Indies past the 400-mark, then Shamar Joseph drew his side level with England's first-innings 416 by thrashing Atkinson for six in front of square. He sent broken roof tiles raining on to spectators sitting in the stands below at backward square leg next, and threaded four through fine leg to take 16 off the over.

Da Silva amassed 18 runs off one Joe Root over with three consecutive fours followed by a heave over long-on for six, his third maximum of the innings.

Wood, who had left the field late on day two suffering cramp after a lightning fast four-over spell in the morning followed by ten more overs of hard, fast graft, snared the wicket that had eluded him when Shamar Joseph sent a leading edge high to mid-on, Atkinson snaffling the catch.

West Indies 4th innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st61KC BrathwaiteM Louis
2nd5KC BrathwaiteKSA McKenzie
3rd8KC BrathwaiteA Athanaze
4th1KAR HodgeA Athanaze
5th7JO HolderA Athanaze
6th9JO HolderK Sinclair
7th22JO HolderJ Da Silva
8th0JO HolderAS Joseph
9th16JO HolderJNT Seales
10th14JNT SealesS Joseph