Bashir excites Stokes as Eng seal WI series

The spinner claims five-wicket haul in the second innings

England’s Shoaib Bashir (R) celebrates dismissing West Indies No 11 Shamar Joseph to seal a 241-run win in the second Test at Trent Bridge. Photo: afp

NOTTINGHAM:

Ben Stokes said Shoaib Bashir had “showed the world” he belonged in international cricket after the 20-year-old off-spinner bowled England to a series-clinching victory over the West Indies in the second Test at Trent Bridge on Sunday.

Bashir took 5-41 as the West Indies collapsed to 143 all out on the fourth evening, with England triumphing by 241 runs to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in a three-match campaign.

It was Bashir’s third five-wicket haul in just five Tests but first in England after he twice achieved the feat on spin-friendly Indian pitches earlier this year.

His latest exploits were all the more impressive given Bashir did not bowl a single ball and was out for a duck during England’s innings and 114-run thrashing of the West Indies in the first Test at Lord’s.

Bashir removed Kirk McKenzie, Kavem Hodge and Alick Athanaze -- all top-order batsmen -- in quick succession before bowling Jason Holder and last man Shamar Joseph as West Indies, set 385 to win, slumped to 143 all out.

‘Pretty cool’

“I think what Bash has done today is to show the world what he can do,” said England captain Stokes.

“That wicket hardly offered anything for a spinner throughout the whole Test match and look at what he was able to do today.

“The way in which he can change his pace, produce over-spin and under-spin...I think he showed his full bag of tricks. He’s got so much talent and the ceiling is so, so high. He’s got an unbelievable desire and a will to get better and learn.”

Stokes added: “It’s really good for a young guy to come out and put in a performance that wins England a Test match, it’s pretty cool for him.”

For all his success in India, rising star Bashir was unable to break into the Somerset side at the start of the season after the side opted for a more experienced England spinner in Jack Leach.

That led Bashir to go on loan to Worcestershire last month, but England kept faith with him all the same.

“The decisions we make are all based around not only how far we think their talent can take them, but whether we think they’re good enough for international cricket straight away,” explained Stokes.

“I don’t want to sound like it’s an ‘I told you so’ kind of thing but it sort of is.”

Defeat left West Indies with just pride to play for in next week’s third Test at Edgbaston.

They actually managed a much-improved showing with the bat in Nottingham while making 457 in reply to England’s first-innings 416 prior to Sunday’s spectacular slump, which saw all 10 of their second-innings wickets lost in 23 overs.

“The big positive was our first innings, scoring 400 runs was great,” said West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite.

“The two defeats are gone but we still have five Tests matches remaining for this year. So we keep learning and by the end of the year we’ll be better off, once we have that correct mindset.”

English cricket open to IPL investment in Hundred

English cricket chiefs confirmed on Monday they have held talks with Indian Premier League (IPL) owners about acquiring a stake in their domestic Hundred competition.

The fourth edition of the controversial 100-balls per side tournament, which features eight specially created teams -- each with a men’s and women’s side -- rather than the traditional 18 first-class English counties, starts on Tuesday.

Its future remains uncertain, with the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) looking to secure private investment in a bid to cement its position in the global calendar and boost the finances of the domestic game.

The ECB are trying to balance a desire for a cash injection while retaining control of the Hundred by selling off a 49 percent stake in each team to private investors, with host teams retaining the remaining 51 percent of shares.

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