
West Indies into final after beating England
by Julian Guyer
Wednesday, July 7, 2004
LONDON, England (AFP): Chris Gayle's 132 not
out in his 100th one-day international took West Indies into the Natwest
Series final with a seven-wicket win against England at Lord's here Tuesday.
Not even a total of 285 for seven featuring a record stand of 226 between
all-rounder Andrew Flintoff (123) and Andrew Strauss (100) - the Middlesex
captain's maiden one-day international hundred - could prevent England
extending a losing streak batting first that stretched back to last year's
World Cup. It also meant that every completed
game in this tournament had been won by the team fielding first.
West Indies, who face New Zealand at the Rose Bowl on Thursday, will be up
against the already-qualified Black Caps in Saturday's Lord's final.
Gayle, together with Ramnaresh Sarwan (89), put on 187 in 188 balls for the
second wicket as they took the game away from England.
Left-handed opener Gayle, the
man-of-the-match, faced 165 balls with one six and three fours as West Indies
won with five balls to spare. Ricardo Powell
added late impetus with a dashing 33 not out off 22 balls in an unbroken stand
of 68 with Gayle. Elated West Indies captain
Brian Lara told reporters afterwards: "Winning the toss was very important,
putting England under pressure by taking two early wickets was also very good.
"Hopefully the toss can be in our favour come Thursday and Saturday. We
haven't been to too many finals lately but it's a great feeling knowing we can
play this good on a such a very important occasion."
Lara added: "It was a great effort by Flintoff and Strauss, two brilliant
centuries, but we were always in the game.
Gayle, 24, whose nine one-day international hundreds have all come overseas,
said: "Once myself and Sarwan set up the game, eventually Ricardo came in and
batted really well. He took a lot of pressure off me as well."
Dejected England captain Michael Vaughan, whose exit for eight meant he'd
scored just 47 runs in five series innings, said: "The lads are gutted and I'm
gutted for them." Opener Vaughan, talking
about his own form, added: "I just haven't played well enough.
"If I play like that I'm not going to score
runs at six or seven," said Vaughan, who insisted he was not about to "press
the panic button" and drop down the order. It
was tough on Flintoff who for the second match in a row found himself making a
hundred in a losing cause after his 106, his maiden one-day international
century, in Sunday's six-wicket reverse against New Zealand.
But England were left rueing the fact that the containing all-rounder was
unable to bowl because of an ankle injury.
Paul Collingwood and Vaughan's combined 10 overs cost 68 runs, while fast
spearhead, Stephen Harmison, usually a reliable source of wickets, had an
equally fruitless return of 10 overs for 51.
Left-hander Strauss and Flintoff's stand of 226 rescued England from the
depths of 54 for three against a Windies attack lacking pacemen Jermaine
Lawson (flu) and Ravi Rampaul (shin). It was
an England one-day international record for all wickets surpassing the
previous best of 213 set by Neil Fairbrother and Graeme Hick against the West
Indies at Lord's in 1991. Flintoff faced 104
balls with six sixes and eight fours winth Strauss in for 116 balls with two
sixes and eight fours. In reply, Darren Gough
had man-of-the-match Gayle, 19, dropped in the covers by Strauss before James
Anderson put down Sarwan, on 16, off his own bowling.
England needed to take every opportunity that came their way but saw another
slip away bwhen Strauss only had to lob the ball to bowler Collingwood to run
out Sarwan on 54. But instead he went for the direct hit and missed.
Final scoreboard: England
M. Trescothick b Best 11
M. Vaughan c Jacobs b Best 8
R. Key b D R Smith 19
A. Strauss c Bravo b Gayle 100
A. Flintoff c Bradshaw b Gayle 123
P. Collingwood c D S Smith b Gayle 1
G. Jones run out 1
A. Giles not out 0
Extras (lb6, w10, nb6) 22
Total (7 wkts, 50 overs) 285 Fall of wickets:
1-14, 2-27, 3-54, 4-280, 5-284, 6-284, 7-285
Did not bat: D Gough, S Harmison, J Anderson
Bowling: Bradshaw 10-2-29-0 (1w); Best 10-1-42-2 (1nb, 3w); Bravo 10-2-80-0
(2w); D R Smith 10-0-71-1 (3nb, 2w); Gayle 10-0-57-3 (2nb, 2w);
West Indies
C. Gayle not out 132
D. S. Smith c Jones b Gough 10
R. Sarwan c Jones b Anderson 89
B. Lara c Jones b Anderson 10
R. Powell not out 33
Extras (lb7, w5) 12
Total (3 wkts, 49.1 overs) 286 Fall of
wickets: 1-15, 2-202, 3-218
Did not bat: S Chanderpaul, D Bravo, D R Smith, R Jacobs, I Bradshaw, T Best
Bowling Gough 10-2-48-1; Harmison 10-0-51-0 (1w); Anderson 9.1-0-69-2 (2w);
Giles 10-1-43-0 (2w); Vaughan 1-0-10-0; Collingwood 9-0-58-0;
Toss: West Indies Umpires: Rudi Koertzen (RSA),
Jeremy Lloyds (ENG)
TV umpire: Nigel Llong (ENG)
Match referee: Gundappa Viswanath (IND)
Result: West Indies won by 7 wkts Table in
the NatWest Series triangular cricket tournament (played, won, lost, tied, no
result, points, run-rate):
New Zealand 5 3 0 0 2 22 1.40
West Indies 5 2 2 0 1 15 -0.38
England 6 1 4 0 1 11 -0.59 Remaining fixtures
July 08: New Zealand v West Indies, Southampton
July 10: Final, New Zealand v West Indies, Lord's
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