106th over: England 356-8 (Bess 16, Broad 62) Jason Holder is so bemused by all this that he feels like trying spin from both ends. Roston Chase comes on but Broad goes on his merry way, thwacking him past extra cover for four.
105th over: England 349-8 (Bess 14, Broad 58) Now they’re even having fun against Cornwall, who goes for four as Broad’s sweep eludes the man at short fine leg. Tail-end runs do tend to demoralise the fielding side.
“I guess the other response to Martin Laidler [97th over],” says Brian Withington, “is that who needs to protect the tail when it means that we get to see Stuart Broad clumping it to all quarters. Quick runs and a useful work out before bowling – what’s not to like!”
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104th over: England 342-8 (Bess 14, Broad 50) Another grown-up single from Bess off Holder, another gleefully immature four from Broad, who plays a pull and goes to fifty off 33 balls. That’s the equal-third-fastest fifty in England’s Test history, level with Flintoff and Lamb, behind only Botham (twice).
103rd over: England 337-8 (Bess 13, Broad 46) A couple more singles off Cornwall, who again gives the live-bloggers of the world no mercy.
102nd over: England 335-8 (Bess 12, Broad 45) Bess has been playing a shrewd second fiddle while Broad gets on with his heavy-metal guitar solos. It’s Bess who brings up the fifty partnership with a sensible single off Holder, leaving Broad to wallop another four.
101st over: England 329-8 (Bess 11, Broad 40) Holder, wisely taking The Guardian’s advice, turns to spin, though it’s Rakheem Cornwall when I would have gone for the more successful Roston Chase. Cornwall imposes some order, conceding only two singles, and getting through his over in ludicrously little time.
100th over: England 327-8 (Bess 10, Broad 39) Broad nicked the strike with that three, so he’s again facing Holder, his bunny. He top-edges a hook for four and slogs down the ground for four more. If there was a crowd in, they’d be loving this. Michael Holding can’t understand why they’re not bowling yorkers at him.
“Before everyone starts crowing about Broad having the potential to be a real all-rounder and bat at 7 or 8 – he can’t, he’s scared of the ball, he’s just a tail-end Charlie occasionally connecting. Like Trump occasionally getting it right, Broad will occasionally get lucky.” So that’s his reward for a rapid counter-attack – to be compared to the worst president of all time?
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99th over: England 318-8 (Bess 10, Broad 29) Roach keeps Broad quiet for five balls but then there’s a straight whack for three. Time for a rest for Roach – come on Jason, let’s have some spin.
“Wow, that went bad quickly,” wrote David Wall, 20 minutes ago. “Could this be a cunning plan from Root to move the game along quickly to ensure a result, knowing they need to win the match? it seems like ideal bowling conditions right now so perhaps they’re planning to get the W.Indies in as soon as possible to knock them over for a really low total. It’s a line to use in the press conference at the end of the day at least.” Or even the virtual media conference, as the ECB now calls it.
98th over: England 315-8 (Bess 10, Broad 27) Holder changes the bowling, a touch belatedly, by bringing himself on to replace Gabriel. Broad’s boundaries have spread the field, which means there’s nobody at third slip when he edges at catchable height. He gets four for that and four more, in the same direction, from a much better shot, a cut played with a fancy follow-through. Then he mows over extra-cover for yet another four. His 27 runs have come off only 14 balls. Ebb and flow!
97th over: England 302-8 (Bess 10, Broad 14) Bess gets a leading edge off Roach, but it lands safely in the covers. These two have been so purposeful, adding 22 off 25 balls.
“So,” says Martin Laidler on Twitter, “is that Buttler locked down for the next 12 months in Ed Smith’s eyes? England really needed a senior player, which were constantly being told Jos is, to stick around and manage the tail this morning.” Yes, but you can’t blame someone for getting out to a good ball, can you? The point about Buttler’s innings here is that he got runs when he badly needed them and, more importantly, so did England.
96th over: England 300-8 (Bess 9, Broad 13) Broad’s technique these days consists of stepping away to the leg side, like Bob Willis, and then swinging the bat merrily, like Devon Malcolm. it brings him a single off Gabriel via the Harrow drive. But then he block-drives into the covers for four, like the young Stuart Broad – a good way to bring up up the 300, which just could be a winning total in these conditions. And that’s drinks, with the first hour belonging unmistakably to Gabriel and Roach.
And here’s Brian Withington. “Your preamble about Manchester weather has me reminiscing about the old anecdote (a David Lloyd favourite) that the key to prediction is whether or not you can see the Pennines. If you can, then it’s going to rain. If you can’t, then it’s already raining.”
95th over: England 293-8 (Bess 7, Broad 8) Bess keeps Roach out, gets away with a swish at a wide one and takes a leg bye, which gives Stuart Broad the chance to remind us that he used to be able to bat. He pulls Roach for six!
“I’m heading home on the tram from town,” says Guy Hornsby, “and was going to get out at Old Trafford to peek through the gates. I set off at start of play. At this rate we’ll be all out before I make it. You couldn’t get more England than that.”
94th over: England 286-8 (Bess 7, Broad 2) Gabriel, perhaps feeling a little sorry for England now, gives Bess a full toss outside off, which he gratefully drives past gully. It only goes for two as the outfield has been slowed up by the morning rain.
And here’s John Starbuck, writing from another age, about half an hour ago. “When Ollie Pope has his helmet on and his face a mask of suncream, he looks as if he should be called the Mallet of Eternal Justice. On the other hand, Dom Sibley looks rather like Jack Whitehall doing his screw-up face.”
93rd over: England 281-8 (Bess 4, Broad 1) Another excellent over from Roach, who reached 200 Test wickets when he dismissed Woakes. “I like the way he plays with a smile on his face,” says Nasser Hussain, showing that it doesn’t always take one to know one.
Wicket!! Archer c Holder b Roach 3 (England 280-8)
Yet another one! Roach goes wide of the crease and puts the ball in the right place, as West Indies have all morning. Archer’s edge, and Holder’s bucket hands, do the rest. That’s 22 for four today: the match is moving along at breakneck speed.
92nd over: England 278-7 (Bess 4, Archer 1) The only positive for England this morning had been Buttler, mixing defence and attack as if he was back in form. When Gabriel tried a short one, he pulled it authoritatively, but Gabriel was good enough to respond with that excellent out-seamer. That left England down to the tail already. Jofra Archer gets off the mark with an inside edge, and then Dom Bess uppercuts for four. He has to get one of his feisty 30s here.
Wicket!! Buttler c Holder b Gabriel 67 (England 272-7)
It is a collapse! Gabriel jags one away, Buttler can’t quite keep the nick down and Holder takes a sharp catch, inches off the turf. England’s score so far today is 14 for three, and West Indies have just removed the man who scored nearly all of them.

Shannon Gabriel celebrates taking the wicket of Jos Buttler. Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images/ECB
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91st over: England 267-6 (Buttler 63, Bess 0) So Woakes goes for one, his highest score of the series. And the gamble of putting him up to No.7 has gone awry.
Wicket! Woakes b Roach 1 (England 267-6)
Another one! Woakes tries to cut, only gets his bat to the 45 rather than the horizontal, and plays on. Is this, by any chance, an England collapse?

Chris Woakes plays on. Photograph: Gareth Copley/Getty Images/ECB
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90th over: England 267-5 (Buttler 63, Woakes 1) Apart from the odd no-ball, Gabriel is getting everything right: length, line, movement, consistency. Woakes is relieved to escape with a quick single after playing a push so straight that it breaks the stumps at the other end. Buttler is watchful, then pounces when Gabriel’s inswinger strays onto leg stump, clipping the first boundary of the day.
What a shame that Pope didn’t get a hundred. He saved the day for England, gave great entertainment, made runs in a home Test for the first time and even spoke candidly afterwards, about how there’s no escape when you go back to your room and look out on the pitch where you just got out. At 22 he is a wonderful prospect.
Wicket!! Pope b Gabriel 91 (England 262-5)
Castled! Shannon Gabriel gets his due as his nip-backer bursts through Pope’s defences and produces the fast bowler’s favourite sound. First blood to West Indies.

Ollie Pope is bowled out by Shannon Gabriel. Photograph: Reuters
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89th over: England 262-4 (Pope 91, Buttler 59) Buttler plays the first purposeful stroke of the morning, a crisp tuck for two, and follows up with a forward-defensive so immaculate that it could have come out of Chris Woakes’s bathroom cabinet.
88th over: England 260-4 (Pope 91, Buttler 57) Buttler’s turn to prod and miss, at Gabriel, who follows up with an LBW appeal, politely turned down by Michael Gough, probably because of a hint of an inside edge. The ball is moving more than the scoreboard. Buttler escapes, in two senses, when he gets an inside edge on a no-ball. And then Pope is dropped by Rakheem Cornwall at slip, a much easier chance than the one he caught yesterday to get rid of Rory Burns.
On Twitter, Bernard Walsh responds to Gary Naylor (10:40). “I’m amazed that Buttler has ever made as many as 144 in red ball cricket, the red rose county’s 4th best wicket keeper has certainly never had an innings like that for @lancscricket.”
87th over: England 258-4 (Pope 91, Buttler 56) From the Statham end it’s Kemar Roach, who has Ollie Pope playing and missing, twice, as he tries to push out into the covers. His feet are moving, as ever, but his eye isn’t in yet.
86th over: England 258-4 (Pope 91, Buttler 56) You’re not going to believe this, but we even have some watery sunshine. Shannon Gabriel creaks into action, finishes his over and comes close to bowling Buttler with one that looked wider of off stump than it was.
“Great innings from the Pope yesterday,” tweets Robert Ellson. “Beats me why people aren’t calling him His Oliness. #popepuns”
The covers are off! And the players are out there. “It’s cold, it’s blustery, the floodlights are on,” says Ian Ward, “but it’s dry.”
“I send you good weather news!” says Ian Copestake. “I have seen actual blue sky! Okay, this is on the Wirral and the Manchester micro-weather system will have its own ideas but like a Buttler century it might just happen.” Ha.
And the first message of the morning comes from… Gary Naylor! “Hi @TimdeLisle.” Hi Gary, do you ever – sorry, you were saying? “I was amazed to find out earlier that Jos Buttler’s highest first class score (144 off 268 deliveries) was notched 10 years ago! On this pitch against this weary attack, he’ll never have a better chance of beating that.” That’s a very good spot. Though it also has a whiff of the curse of the commentator.
Preamble
Morning everyone and welcome back to one of sport’s oldest and most thrilling contests: cricket v the weather. No Test series has ever had more matches in Manchester than this one, and Manchester has not let us down. Today may not turn out as bad as it looked like being a couple of days ago, which, in Manchester, is about as good as it gets. The latest from the Met Office gives a 60pc chance of rain delaying the start and a 10pc chance of rain in every hour thereafter. That sounds like enough for the match to move along.
England find themselves in an unexpectedly strong position. Put in to bat again by Jason Holder, they subsided to 122 for four. Ben Stokes only got 20: if there had been a crowd, they would have asked for their money back. And because of Stokes being unlikely to bowl, England were already down to their last two proper batsmen – neither of them in great form. On such moments, series turn. Ollie Pope batted like Ollie Pope abroad (Test average 62), not Ollie Pope at home (Test average 16 until yesterday). Jos Buttler batted like Jos Buttler in the year from May 2018 (higher average than Joe Root), not Jos Buttler in the year after the World Cup (lower average than Joe Denly). Together they have added 136 in 38 overs of stylish defiance.
For West Indies, the best thing about the day was the presence of Rakheem Cornwall. How that missing crowd would have warmed to him – larger than life and taking a blinder of a slip catch while wearing two hats and not appearing to move. His bowling didn’t go so well, and Holder may have missed a trick by not letting his other off-spinner, Roston Chase, carry on fooling the batsmen with his deceptive simplicity.
The game, as ever, will be intriguing as long as it actually happens. Do join me before 11 for another exciting weather update.
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