• England's Zak Crawley walks off after being dismissed by Kyle Mayers during the first day of the third and final Test in Saint George's, Grenada. AFP
    England's Zak Crawley walks off after being dismissed by Kyle Mayers during the first day of the third and final Test in Saint George's, Grenada. AFP
  • Kyle Mayers (c), Kraigg Brathwaite and Jermaine Blackwood celebrate the dismissal of Joe Root. AFP
    Kyle Mayers (c), Kraigg Brathwaite and Jermaine Blackwood celebrate the dismissal of Joe Root. AFP
  • Dan Lawrence is out LBW to Jayden Seales. AFP
    Dan Lawrence is out LBW to Jayden Seales. AFP
  • Ben Stokes walks off after being dismissed by Alzarri Joseph. AFP
    Ben Stokes walks off after being dismissed by Alzarri Joseph. AFP
  • Kemar Roach celebrates the dismissal of Alex Lees. AP
    Kemar Roach celebrates the dismissal of Alex Lees. AP
  • Jonny Bairstow is dismissed by Alzarri Joseph. AFP
    Jonny Bairstow is dismissed by Alzarri Joseph. AFP
  • Jayden Seales celebrates bowling Ben Foakes. Getty
    Jayden Seales celebrates bowling Ben Foakes. Getty
  • Craig Overton is bowled by Kemar Roach. Getty
    Craig Overton is bowled by Kemar Roach. Getty
  • Jayden Seales celebrates the dismissal of Chris Woakes. AFP
    Jayden Seales celebrates the dismissal of Chris Woakes. AFP
  • Saqib Mahmood leaves the pitch after being bowled by Jermaine Blackwood to end the day one action. AP
    Saqib Mahmood leaves the pitch after being bowled by Jermaine Blackwood to end the day one action. AP

Saqib Mahmood and Jack Leach rescue England with superb last-wicket stand


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England’s batting flopped on day one of their series decider against the West Indies before a last-wicket stand between Jack Leach and Saqib Mahmood dragged them back from the brink.

After two dead pitch draws in Antigua and Barbados, the tourists had hoped for a livelier surface in Grenada but found their top order wanting when it arrived.

England were suffering at 67-7 in the afternoon session, with opener Alex Lees the only member of the line-up to reach double figures, but recovered to an unlikely 204 all out on the back of the tail-end tenacity.

The 10th-wicket pair batted for almost two-and-a-half hours for a stand of 90, with Leach making a belligerent 41 not out and Mahmood dismissed for 49 in the final act of the day.

Not only was it a remarkable first Test innings for the Lancashire man, it was also 15 more than his career-best first-class score.

Leach’s batting is still best remembered for his famous one not out in the Ashes classic at Headingley in 2019, but without Ben Stokes to lead the way this time he found a less likely accomplice to save the day.

Having earlier lost a clatter of five for 21 either side of lunch, as well as skipper Joe Root earlier for a duck, the pair salvaged a foothold in a game that could easily have disappeared by stumps.

Home captain Kraigg Brathwaite was brave enough to trust his bowlers after winning the toss and the gamble paid off as the bad habits that wrecked England’s Ashes campaign resurfaced.

Lees and Zak Crawley began by blotting out just under an hour, with the lack of new ball chances surely nagging away at Brathwaite.

But the introduction of all-rounder Kyle Mayers, recalled here in place of spinner Veerasammy Permaul, spared him any further recriminations.

Settling in at a modest pace around 75mph he preyed on Crawley’s cover drive cravings, with his first attempt lobbed gently into the hands of the catcher in front of square.

Jack Leach hits a boundary during his defiant last-wicket stand. AFP
Jack Leach hits a boundary during his defiant last-wicket stand. AFP

Mayers followed up with the big wicket of Root, playing in the danger area outside off and nicking through to Josh Da Silva. Mayers signed off after five overs, having yet to concede a run.

A third wicket just before lunch made it the Windies’ session, Jayden Seales roaring back into the attack to pin Dan Lawrence in front of leg stump to leave England hanging in at 46 for three.

With a period of stability badly needed, they instead plunged themselves into strife.

Hopes of a Stokes bailout came crashing down when an attempted pull duffed off his top edge and sailed straight back to Alzarri Joseph as he followed through.

By the time Lees and Jonny Bairstow both succumbed to outside edges, with Joseph and Kemar Roach happily hunting as a duo, England had lost three wickets in 10 balls without adding to the scoreboard.

The West Indies did not allow the intensity to dip and soon had the timbers tumbling as they made the most of some handy movement off the pitch.

Seales thundered in to bowl Ben Foakes through the gate, picking a yawning gap between bat and pad, before Roach performed a similar trick to oust Craig Overton for 14.

The latter had at least shown some care and attention to stem the streak of single-figure scores, with Chris Woakes following suit for 25 before he was cleaned up by Seales’ second ball after tea.

The innings may have reached a much swifter end had Leach’s edge off Joseph been held by Mayers at slip, but it would prove to be a damaging drop.

His partnership with Mahmood began as an irritation and escalated bit by bit as the ball softened and the bowling became weary.

Mere survival gave way to something more ambitious as the sideways movement dried up, with a few overs of part-time spin failing to shift the balance.

Leach clubbed Jason Holder for a boundary with a flourish the bowler will not remember fondly and, after being put down at point on 15, Mahmood brought up the 150 by slugging Mayers for six over long-on.

England had already exceeded their worst fears but the 10th-wicket stand lived on despite the arrival of the second new ball, ticking past 200 when Mahmood crunched Joseph to the ropes.

He was dreaming of a maiden half-century but came undone at the last moment, bowled by Jermaine Blackwood in the closing over.

Updated: March 24, 2022, 10:28 PM