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Ben Stokes catches in the slips alongside Dom Sibley, coach Chris Read and Zak Crawley at the Ageas Bowl.
Ben Stokes, who will captain England in the first Test, catches in the slips alongside Dom Sibley, coach Chris Read and Zak Crawley at the Ageas Bowl. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images for ECB
Ben Stokes, who will captain England in the first Test, catches in the slips alongside Dom Sibley, coach Chris Read and Zak Crawley at the Ageas Bowl. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images for ECB

Let nerves jangle and adrenaline flow: the first Test of summer is here

This article is more than 3 years old

The ECB and the West Indies deserve praise on the eve of the three-Test series, now it’s up to the players to put on a show

Against the odds, the first Test match of the 2020 summer is upon us. Let us hope that in years to come the six Tests against the West Indies and Pakistan become a quiz question: what was odd about them? The only Test matches in history ever to take place behind closed doors. At the moment it requires a bit of optimism to think that will be the case.

At the outset we should admire and applaud the England and Wales Cricket Board, which has not always been my first instinct in recent times, for making this happen. Naturally a key factor has been the willingness of the touring teams to pitch up, for which the ECB must be truly grateful; this applies especially to the West Indies, who have left a relatively coronavirus-free part of the world to play these matches here.

So far so good in this ambitious project; there have been scares as a chunk of the Pakistan touring squad tested positive prior to the squad’s departure for the UK and there was a tremor when Sam Curran caught a bug last week and had to be tested immediately.

Now for the cricket, and we all hope that the effort will prove worthwhile. It will be for those trying to balance the books. The rest of us crave an arresting, keen contest that is worth watching despite the absence of spectators at the ground. We want to be consumed by the cricket rather than the quirkiness of the contest, which now includes the presence of three English umpires for an England Test match.

West Indies coach Phil Simmons speaks to his team during practice at the Ageas Bowl. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images for ECB

Let the adrenaline flow and the nerves jangle. Both captains, Jason Holder, a veteran of 32 Tests leading the West Indies, and Ben Stokes, in charge of a serious cricket team for the first time, have plenty to be nervous about. Stokes identified the best advice he has received – from Joe Root. A note was pinned on the clothes peg holding Stokes’s England blazer: “Do it your way.” It is a very good thought.

Both captains should be nervous about where the runs are coming from since they possess lineups that have obvious frailties. England’s top four, which will be bolstered by the presence of Root at Old Trafford in the second Test, is comprised of nearly-men, while the West Indies’ lineup is likely to include the unproven (Shamarh Brooks and John Campbell) and the out-of-form (Kraigg Brathwaite has not reached 50 in his past 21 Test innings).

This is England’s fourth Test match at this ground. It may help the batsmen that the Ageas Bowl has usually provided a relatively docile surface. There was a rainy draw against Sri Lanka in 2012 and then defeats of India in 2014 and 2018. In those matches England’s spinner had a major impact. Moeen Ali, surplus to requirements in 2020, took 17 wickets in the two victories. It is understandable (just about) he should be overlooked this time since he has been absent from the team while the Somerset pair of Jack Leach and Dom Bess have made a good fist of taking on the spinner’s role.

However it remains a surprise that the option of playing two spinners is not open to the captain and coach on Wednesdaymorning now that a Test squad of just 13 players has been selected. The evidence of England’s warm-up match suggests another docile track although the groundsman, Simon Lee, an excellent recruit from Taunton by Hampshire CCC, knows how to spice things up a bit. However he is unlikely to do that in his first Test at the ground. Bowlers will have to work hard for their wickets and none of them can be expected to be completely match fit.

The West Indies will ponder whether to include their best off-spinner, Rakheem Cornwall, alongside the all-rounder, Roston Chase. Meanwhile Stokes and Chris Silverwood must decide which of their pacemen to leave out. Stokes admitted, “I’ve been dreading that decision for the last three days but that comes with being captain”. It may be that Chris Woakes (as usual) will be omitted along with Stuart Broad, which would be very unusual since he has not missed a home Test match for eight years.

Whoever is omitted has the right to feel grumpy though they will surely appear before long in such a congested summer. In England’s last Test, the win in Johannesburg, the attack included Mark Wood, who took nine wickets in the match, Curran, Broad and Woakes. Three of these will be absent from the team on Wednesday morning. Jofra Archer, Jimmy Anderson and Dom Bess all took five-fers in their last Test outings. It is a tough choice.

There remains the prospect of Archer and Wood playing together for the first time; their overs would need to be carefully rationed to ensure they strive for maximum pace; meanwhile Anderson is a senior citizen returning from injury and Stokes has plenty on his plate. If the West Indies bat well, admittedly a substantial if, Bess may be busy.

England (probable): Burns, Sibley, Denly, Crawley, Stokes, Pope, Buttler, Bess, Wood, Archer, Anderson.
West Indies (probable): Brathwaite, Campbell, Hope, Brooks, Chase,
Blackwood, Dowrich, Holder, Roach, Joseph, Gabriel.

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