2nd Test: Alastair Cook closes in on England's batting record

England skipper and opener Jonathan Trott negotiated 26 overs without real alarm against West Indies


Afp April 23, 2015
England's team captain Alastair Cook plays a shot during day two of the second Test cricket match between the West Indies and England at the Grenada National Stadium in Saint George's on April 22, 2015. West Indies scored 299/10 at the end of their first innings. PHOTO: AFP

ST GEORGE'S: Alastair Cook closed in on becoming England's highest Test run-maker on Wednesday as his team began their pursuit of West Indies' 299 all out on the second day of the second Test.

England skipper Cook and fellow opener Jonathan Trott negotiated 26 overs without real alarm as the visitors reached 74 without loss at the National Cricket Stadium.

Cook achieved a milestone during his unbeaten 37, going past former player Alec Stewart as his country's second-highest run-getter in Test history with a tally of 8,484.

Only Graham Gooch, the former opening batsman and captain, remains ahead of him in the list of prolific English batsmen with an aggregate of 8,900.

Earlier, England's bowlers eventually overcame the determination of Marlon Samuels and an entertaining last-wicket partnership to dismiss the West Indies for 299 in their first innings on a rain-affected second day.

Devendra Bishoo (30) and Shannon Gabriel (20) got their Test-best scores in lifting the home side from 247 for nine after Samuels' dismissal for a determined 103 triggered a lower-order collapse as the tourists' seamers made effective use of the second new ball.

Stuart Broad led the English effort, taking four for 47, while James Anderson and Chris Jordan claimed two wickets each.

It was left to Moeen Ali to close off the West Indies innings however, trapping Bishoo leg-before to end the visitors' frustration and still leave them reasonably satisfied with the day's work.

Persistent morning showers restricted the pre-lunch session to just 40 minutes' play with the hosts resuming at the overnight position of 188 for five.

When the action eventually resumed in mid-afternoon, Samuels, 94 not out at the start of the day in partnership with Denesh Ramdin, reached his seventh Test hundred with his 14th boundary off 226 deliveries shortly after the second new ball was taken.

However the 34-year-old, who was dropped on 32 by Cook at first slip off Jordan on the first afternoon, seemed to lose concentration upon reaching the treasured landmark in his 100th Test innings.

He missed a big drive at the next delivery from Anderson before edging the following one to Ian Bell for 103.

His effort in a 94-run sixth-wicket stand with Ramdin appeared to be in vain with the West Indies losing four wickets for 24 runs.

The captain fell to a catch at the wicket off Broad for 31. He added the scalp of Jason Holder, who perished in a similar manner in a rush of attacking strokeplay.

When Broad had Kemar Roach caught by Joe Root at slip from an inside-edge off his pads, a swift end to the innings seemed inevitable.

However England's bowlers lost their discipline and the pair of Bishoo and Gabriel capitalised in taking their team to within a single of the 300-run mark.

On a pitch as benign as the one in Antigua for the drawn first Test last week, the West Indies bowlers could suffer heavily should they depart from the fundamentals of line and length on the third day.

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