West Indian cricket team in England in 2009
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| West Indian cricket team in England in 2009 | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| England | West Indies | ||
| Dates | 6 – 26 May 2009 | ||
| Captains | Andrew Strauss | Chris Gayle | |
| Test series | |||
| Result | England won the 2-match series 2–0 | ||
| Most runs | Ravi Bopara 251 | Ramnaresh Sarwan 136 | |
| Most wickets | James Anderson 11 | Fidel Edwards 7 | |
| Player of the series | Ravi Bopara (Eng) and Fidel Edwards (WI) | ||
| One Day International series | |||
| Results | England won the 3-match series 2–0 | ||
| Most runs | Owais Shah 113 | Shivnarine Chanderpaul 95 | |
| Most wickets | Stuart Broad 6 | Jerome Taylor 4 | |
| Player of the series | Stuart Broad | ||
The West Indies cricket team toured England for a two-match Test series and a three-match ODI series from 6 to 26 May 2009.[1] They toured in place of Zimbabwe following the British government's decision to cut bilateral ties with Zimbabwe.[2]
At the start of the summer, the English players at a meeting identified this West Indian visit as pivotal to their momentum-making efforts for the Ashes later that season.[3]
Squads
1st Test
Day 1: Ravi Bopara made his second century (at 207 balls), and England closed the day with 289/7. Fidel Edwards took 4 wickets for 53 runs.[7]
Day 2: England closed the first innings with 377 runs. West Indies only scored 152 runs in their innings, and Strauss enforced the follow on. West Indies closed the day with 39/2. Graham Onions, on his Test debut, took 5 wickets for 38 runs.[8]
Day 3 The West Indies finally ended their second innings with a lead of 31 runs. England quickly reached this target, and won the first Test in a series for the first time in 15 attempts. This was also the first win at Lord's since 2005.[9] Chanderpaul ended the match with only 4 runs and a duck, his lowest match total in his career.[10]
2nd Test
Day 1: England won the toss and elected bat. Bopara and Cook scored centuries (108 & 126* respectly). Bopara scored his third consecutive century (all vs West Indies); he is the first Englishman since Graham Gooch in 1990 to achieve this feat. England closed the day on 302 for 2.[11]
Day 2: There was no play on the second day because of rain.[12]
Day 3: Alastair Cook closed his innings with 160 runs, his highest test score, and led to England to 569 for 6, before the declaration by Strauss. West Indies closed the day on 94 for 3, Anderson took 3 wickets for 28 runs.[13]
Day 4: After tea, West Indies ended their second innings with 310 runs and Strauss enforced the follow-on, for the second time in the series. In 22 overs, West Indies scored 115 runs for 3 wickets.[14]
Day 5: After showers limited play at the beginning of the day, England bowled the West Indies out for 176 by the third over after lunch. Paul Collingwood replaced the injured Matt Prior as wicketkeeper, and Anderson took 4 wickets while conceding just 18 runs.[15]