
England v West Indies
The Final, April 3rd, Kolkata: A night made for Marlon
West Indies in control.
Batting at three, Joe Root steadied the ship. He played a sensible knock of 54 off 36 but got out just as he was accelerating, falling to Carlos Brathwaite.
Jos Buttler helped with 36 off 22 and David Willey slogged 21 off 14 at the death to give them something to defend. But was 155 enough?
Then England did something very odd indeed. They handed the second over to Joe Root, a part-time spinner at best. This was a crucial over in a World Cup final and Root was there for the taking.
Or so Johnson Charles and Chris Gayle thought. Both went after Root in search of cheap runs, both were caught by Ben Stokes on the boundary.
Lendl Simmons, the hero from the semi, was out for a duck. He wasn’t going to win it for them.
All of a sudden that total wasn’t looking so straightforward anymore. They were 13/3.
Enter Marlon Samuels. The moody Jamaican had had an up and down tournament and had been on the receiving end of plenty of criticism after a soft dismissal in the semi.
But Samuels stuck to his gameplan. Cautious towards good balls, brutal on bad balls.
Big-hitters Dwayne Bravo, Andre Russell and Daren Sammy came and went. Samuels was still there.
ing him at the crease was Brathwaite, who had already had a good game with the ball, taking three wickets.
The Windies had a quiet 19th over, bowled by Chris Jordan. It went for just seven. Crucially, it was to be Brathwaite on strike for the first ball of the 20th; Stokes to bowl it. They needed 19 off it.
The next five minutes or so are some of the most-watched cricket footage ever. Stokes bowled too full first up and Brathwaite hit him for six. And then another. And then yet another.
Stokes was down on his haunches, England were about to go down in a final they’d looked like winning for the last hour. He only needed one to win it but Brathwaite hit the fourth ball for six anyway.
‘Carlos Brathwaite. the name.’ roared West Indian commentator Ian Bishop. We did.
Brathwaite ended on 34 off 10 but it was Samuels who had done most of the heroics. 85 off 66 in the tensest and most trying of circumstances.
Stokes is consoled by his team-mates after bowling an over he’ll never forget. The Windies players aren’t consoling anyone. They’re World Champions for a second time, Samuels and Stokes couldn’t stand each other and there’s going to be one hell of a party in Kolkata that night.
England are second-favourites to win the 2021 World Cup with Betway.
However, we don’t like the odds for England to win and much prefer the Windies to make it three.