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Kemar Roach celebrates a wicket for the West Indies against England
Kemar Roach celebrates a wicket for the West Indies against England

West Indies v England first Test: Kemar Roach takes five-for on home track as England dismissed for just 77 on day two


England suffered a calamitous Caribbean collapse as they were bowled out for 77 on a day of 18 wickets falling that ended with them trailing the West Indies by 339.

Kemar Roach took 5-17 as England managed their meagre total of 77 in response to the West Indies' first innings score of 289, but the hosts declined the follow-on and instead opted to try and bat the tourists out of the game.

Wickets continued to fall as the host batted again, but even when being reduced to 127-6 that still gave them a formidable 339-run lead after just two days of play in Barbados.

Nostalgia for the halcyon days of Caribbean cricket is equal parts inspiration and burden for the current generation but this was a classic display of fast bowling worthy of its place in the pantheon.

England, memorably skittled for 46 in Trinidad in 1994 and 51 in Jamaica a decade ago, added a third famous collapse on these islands as they tumbled to the lowest ever Test total at the storied Kensington Oval.

Ten months have passed since England's last batting debacle, 58 all out in New Zealand, and although six of the team have changed since that humiliation the fragility of a batting line-up lauded for its depth was all too familiar.

Following in the footsteps of Curtly Ambrose at Port-of-Spain and Jerome Taylor at Kingston, Roach played the role of destroyer with figures of five for 17.

Roaring in from the Joel Garner End with considerably more ferocity than the speed gun gave him credit for - 85mph was his top recorded pace - he wiped out Rory Burns, Jonny Bairstow, Stokes, Jos Buttler and Moeen in a glorious spell after lunch.

After an exploratory stint with the new ball, the 30-year-old's second burst saw him wreak havoc across eight overs - with each of his wickets concentrated in the space of 27 deliveries.

England had emerged for the afternoon on 30 for one, Keaton Jennings the man to go after spraying Jason Holder to gully.

Jennings' continued struggles against seam are a lingering concern but it would not be long before his team-mates were looking enviously at his 17 runs, incredibly the top score of the innings.

Burns added only two before he pushed forward at his first ball after the restart, allowing it to skim off the bat and into off stump, and Bairstow was next to succumb to one that spat off a length, grazed his elbow and dislodged the bails.

Holder chipped in from the other end to remove rival captain Joe Root, following up 11 successive dots with a plumb lbw.

Roach soon reclaimed the spotlight, revving up to strike with consecutive balls. Stokes was given lbw on the back foot, unsuccessfully reviewing a marginal decision, but Moeen's shot - a curious flap top-edged to fine leg - spoke of a scrambled mind.

Roach's fifth was probably the best of the lot, Jos Buttler forced on to the back foot by a brutish steepler and feathering behind.

The paceman's business was all but concluded but his colleagues finished the job, Shannon Gabriel bouncing out Sam Curran and Alzarri Joseph teasing edges from Ben Foakes and Adil Rashid.

Holder opted not to send the shellshocked tourists back in despite a lead of 212, which was built on by a 52-run opening stand between John Campbell and Kraigg Brathwaite.

The Windies managed a wobble of their own, losing five for nine once Moeen picked off Brathwaite lbw.

Stokes held smart, pressure slip catches as the off-spinner removed Darren Bravo and Roston Chase in the same over and followed with two quick wickets of his own in a gutsy shift. Campbell produced a dire shot to a poor ball but Shai Hope was cramped for room and well caught by Jennings at short leg.

There was time for one more before stumps, Curran removing the dangerous Shimron Hetmyer, but the target already looked formidably steep.

The day had started with England taking the last two first-innings wickets for 25, James Anderson completing his 27th five-wicket haul to equal Sir Ian Botham's England record.


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