
Rishabh Pant is challenging Adam Gilchrist as best keeper-batsman in history
'I can middle the ball playing with a straight bat as well.'
So Rishabh Pant implored himself on the fourth morning at Headingley, with his words caught on the stump mic. And with good reason. Pant had just played a slog sweep off an 87mph delivery from Brydon Carse; he looked to the sky in despair, but the wind carried the ball between the slips and fine leg.
In his first 23 deliveries alone, Pant also charged down the wicket and edged Chris Woakes over second slip and backed away to the leg side to make room. Most recklessly of all, Pant fell away to the off side as he tried to ramp Carse over his shoulder, needing an inside edge to save him from being dismissed lbw. Pant's approach resembled a professional blackjack player who was now constantly hitting on 18.
Perhaps the greatest wonder of Pant's innings at Headingley was simply that he was there at all. In December 2022, while driving from Delhi to his hometown of Roorkee, Pant lost control of his car on the Delhi-Dehradun highway. His car skidded 200 metres before crashing into a divider and catching fire. While the car burned, Pant broke open a window to escape. He was hospitalised with major injuries to his head, back and feet and was considered lucky to survive. The scars on his legs and face remain.
How fortunate Test cricket was that Pant not only returned to the game, but has relocated his best form too. It would be easy to say that the impudent spirit, which led Pant to charge down the wicket against pace second ball in both the first and second innings, spoke of a man liberated by suffering a near-death experience. Except that Pant batted with a similar anarchic spirit long before he got into his Mercedes SUV three years ago.
For all the temptation to berate Pant's judgment, there is logic to his approach. Essentially, Pant has little faith in his defence at the start of his innings. Rather than allowing himself to poke uncertainly at the ball and still risk getting out, he prefers to accept the dangers of attacking, but knowing that this can bring a flurry of early boundaries.
Such early adventure also encourages teams to reposition fielders from close-in to the ropes. On both 31 and 45, Pant edged Josh Tongue to the slips, into a gap that would not have vacant for less audacious batsmen. So there is a rationale to Pant's essential approach, though his self-admonishing on the fourth morning at Headingley showed that his initial aggression was too extreme.
The wild strand to the start of Pant's innings obscured that he is among the most extraordinary Test batsmen – let alone keeper-batsmen – of this age. If his more restrained approach after the early jitters never exuded the clinical calm of KL Rahul, that is not the point of Pant. He continued to use his feet against seamers, nullifying lateral movement while crashing Tongue through the covers. Two sixes in three balls launched over long-on off Shoaib Bashir showed Pant's power. There was also ample evidence of his easily-overlooked finesse. When he was on 91, Ben Stokes packed the off side. With finesse and force, Pant still bisected the two cover fielders.
At Headingley, the presumption was that Pant would seek to reach his century with a six, just as he had in the first innings. But, within a single blow of reaching twin centuries, Pant surprised the crowd almost as much as in the morning: he slowed down. As he repeatedly left deliveries from Bashir alone, and defended forward with ostentatious care, Pant exuded the air of a man playing at being responsible, like a reformed naughty schoolboy on his first day as a prefect.
Twenty-one balls after reaching 95, Pant was still on 99. Then, with a cut off Bashir for one, Pant had his moment of history. This time, there was no somersault. Just a beaming smile and a glance to the heavens.
Rishabh Pant becomes the first Indian batter to score centuries in both innings of a Test against England! 👏🇮🇳 pic.twitter.com/FH8u4eibVr
— Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) June 23, 2025
In 2,586 Tests, just one man – Zimbabwe's Andy Flower – had ever scored twin centuries in a match while also keeping wicket. Now, Pant is the second member of this club.
And he is rapidly compiling a record fit to compare to any wicketkeeper in Test history. Had he converted all his 90s into centuries, Pant would have a staggering 15 centuries in 44 Tests. But his eight hundreds include four in just 10 Tests in England; Rahul Dravid is the only Indian to score more here. For all the scrutiny about Pant's early method against pace bowling, he is the only wicketkeeper in history to score centuries away in Australia, England and South Africa.
The upshot is that Pant is swiftly mounting a formidable case to challenge Adam Gilchrist for the tag of greatest keeper-batsman of all time. While Pant averages three runs fewer than Gilchrist – 44.4, compared to 47.6 – he has done so in a far worse era for batsmen worldwide.
Pant's feats are further elevated by his position in the order: number five, two places higher than Gilchrist normally batted. In 19 Tests at number five, Pant now averages 59.7 while scoring at a strike rate of 82. If the notion of responsibility bringing the best out of him was not backed up by Pant's frenzied start, batting at five gives him full scope to shape an innings.
Pant has achieved all this while the apparent sense of imminent peril in his batting remains. To change this would be to change the essence of Pant. Even when he plays with a straight bat, he is among the most intoxicating sights that Test cricket has ever seen.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
12 hours ago
- The Guardian
Key denies Archer concerns and backs him to be ‘one of best England have had'
Rob Key has played down concerns about Jofra Archer's readiness for Test cricket, insisting England could have fast-tracked his comeback sooner and saying he trusts Ben Stokes not to flog such a precious commodity. Archer, 30, was the standout name when an otherwise unchanged squad was picked for the second Test against India that starts at Edgbaston next Wednesday. But coming after a four-year absence from first-class cricket, and just 18 overs with a red ball for Sussex this past week, the selection also raised eyebrows. Among them were those of the Sussex head coach, Paul Farbrace, who fancies England should stick with the XI that secured a 1-0 lead at Headingley. Key has hinted at this being a possibility, with Archer potentially lined up for the third Test at Lord's. Either way, England's managing director has stressed his schedule – a diet of Twenty20 and one-day international cricket these past 18 months – has been a conservative one. 'I think we've gone slower than we could have done,' Key said on Friday, speaking at an event for the series sponsor, Rothesay. 'Jofra has been in a long period where he's been building up and building up [in white-ball cricket]. The temptation could have been to rush him back sooner. But actually we've gone down this road to make sure that we're in this position now where we're thinking about playing him. 'He could be one of the best bowlers we have had. And you only do that by doing it in Test cricket. Hopefully for the next few years we'll be fortunate enough to see Jofra have the chance to stake that claim.' Archer's past injury problems relate to stress fractures in the lower back and elbow, with England getting too giddy when he first burst on to the scene in the World Cup and Ashes summer of 2019. The 42 overs he sent down on an absurdly flat pitch in Mount Maunganui against New Zealand the following winter was a prime example of this, with Key expecting Stokes to avoid the mistake made by his predecessor Joe Root. Key said: 'These are impact players. You don't want them doing other roles. That's where you need complementary skills, so you can share a bit more of the work. The temptation at times with Jofra is that he can do a bit of everything. But you've got to use him when he can impact the game and Ben is one of the best at that. You have got to be smart with how you use them so they can help you win a game.' A second round of midsummer County Championship matches starts this Sunday, three days before the second Test, and it may be that one or two seamers who are unlikely to feature at Edgbaston – Jamie Overton and Sam Cook missed out last week – are released to play on the third and fourth days of it, as per the regulations. If held back for Lord's, Archer could in theory return to play the second half of the match between Sussex and Warwickshire at Hove. As the spare batter in the squad, Jacob Bethell will not be released for it, however, and will remain with England until the toss on Wednesday to provide cover for any late injuries or illness. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion Key also provided a positive update on Mark Wood, who has not featured since undergoing knee surgery after the Champions Trophy in March. The fifth Test at the end of July remains a possibility and, just as with his effective entrance midway through the 2023 Ashes, he may not need to prove his fitness with a four-day game. 'Wood is someone who could turn up after bowling a bit in the nets, like he did [in 2023], and it's 96mph, swinging the ball and hitting a length,' said Key. 'We're very fortunate he has the ability to hit his straps pretty much from the start. 'Jofra is close to the Mark Wood end of the scale: a pretty pure talent, not a lot of moving parts to his action. He knows exactly what he is doing and what he is about.'


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
India thrash England by 97 runs in first women's T20 cricket
Update: Date: 2025-06-28T16:58:15.000Z Title: Right on cue, Raf's report is in. Content: Mandhana's century and Charani's four wickets on debut rout England who fall to heaviest ever defeat. Daniel Gallan Sat 28 Jun 2025 18.56 CEST First published on Sat 28 Jun 2025 14.30 CEST 6.56pm CEST 18:56 Daniel Gallan It doesn't pull any punches. And why should it? That was a chastening defeat for England. But it also rightly sings the praises of the Indians were magnificent. Don't take my word for it, read it here: Thanks for keeping me company. Til next time… 6.54pm CEST 18:54 While we wait for Raf's report, get a load of these stats. They come from the brilliant X account 'hypocaust': Biggest win by runs in a T20I against England women: 97 IND at Trent Bridge today 93 AUS at Chelmsford, 2019 72 AUS at Adelaide, 2025 57 AUS at Sydney, 2025 57 AUS at Brabourne, 2018 Best figures by an Indian woman on T20I debut: 4-9 Sravanthi Naidu v BAN, 2014 4-12 Shree Charani v ENG, today 3-21 Poonam Yadav v BAN, 2013 3-23 Soniya Dabir v ENG, 2010 6.42pm CEST 18:42 Now for the player of the match, who wins a very big bottle of wine. No prizes for guessing it's Smriti Mandhana for scoring her first hundred in international cricket: It was a long time coming. I had this habit of going out in the 70s and 80s. It was high time I scored a century and I'm so glad it came in this first match. We had good prep. England wickets are really good to bat on. If you keep the wind factor in mind you just have to time the ball. The way Harleen [Deol] got going was amazing. She made it so easy for me to keep batting. We discussed that after the first innings, of course it is a good wicket, but if they're hitting against the wind we kept the pace off the ball. The bowlers, the way they executed the plans, was amazing to watch. Really happy. But it's just the start. We have four more matches. 6.39pm CEST 18:39 Sciver-Brunt is the first to speak: India are a world class side and challenged us throughout. We didn't bowl as well as we wanted to. You'd like to take every catch but it didn't go our way that innings. Something to work on for next time. When you're chasing 200 you have to keep going. Losing wickets [held us back]. We maybe looked to play too square. I was trying to get on strike and come back for twos and keep hitting boundaries. That was the only way we were going to win. We executed well and gained energy towards the back end of the [bowling] innings. We look forward to coming back in Bristol. 6.32pm CEST 18:32 There were still five overs and one ball remaining. India have simply destroyed England. They totally outplayed them across all three disciplines. Phew, England knew that the West Indies were below par but that is some wake-up call. 6.30pm CEST 18:30 England have been hammered. That's their heaviest ever loss. Bell on 2 is the last to go as she slogs Shree Charani – who signs off her first T20I with 4-12 from 3.5 – and is caught in the deep. Another good catch from Rodrigues. Smith is not-out without facing a ball. Brilliant from India. Sensational with the bat. Outstanding with the ball. Clinical in the field. Updated at 6.40pm CEST 6.27pm CEST 18:27 Action replay! And Nelson strikes again. Almost identical to the Filer wicket. Shree Charani offers width, Sciver-Brunt chases it but can only get a slight nick. Original decision was not-out but there was a clear sound. Brilliant from tje keeper. Brilliant from the debutant. And despite Sciver-Brunt's brilliance, she'll be speaking as a losing captain. Updated at 6.33pm CEST 6.25pm CEST 18:25 Nelson does the business! Someone in the England dressing must have had both feet on the floor because Nelson strikes. Another great catch from Ghosh, standing up to the stumps as Reddy dangled a wide one to Filer. The right hander hurled her hands towards the ball but could only manage a tickle. At the other end Sciver-Brunt monstered another stand and deliver biff over cover for four. But she's on her own. 14th over: England 111-8 (Sciver-Brunt 66) 6.20pm CEST 18:20 13th over: England 104-7 (Sciver-Brunt 60, Filer 1) Brilliant from the debutant Shree Charani. She's delivering her front-on finger spin with a lovely high action and release. Subtle changes in pace as well. She's got two wickets for just 10 runs from three overs. 6.18pm CEST 18:18 Holed out in the deep! Ecclestone caught a good piece of this slog sweep but picked out the fielder at cow corner. Rodrigues ran in, misjudging it in the air, but she managed to hold on above her head. Updated at 6.30pm CEST 6.17pm CEST 18:17 12th over: England 102-6 (Sciver-Brunt 59, Ecclestone 1) Top work from NSB. She crunched the first ball of this Sharma over for four off the back foot then moved around her crease and turned a fuller ball into a full toss which she swept fine for four. That movement caused panic in Sharma who chucked a wide down the leg side. A two off the last ball off a flick through the leg side adds up to 14 runs off the over. The required rate is 14.2. 6.14pm CEST 18:14 Brilliant, as you'd expect, from the best player in the world. I said it. I don't think there's anyone on her level. And that's another milestone for England's skipper. A 31-ball 50 is reached with a biff over cover. She just wallops spinners who miss thir length. A muted celebration. Job's not done. Updated at 6.18pm CEST 6.13pm CEST 18:13 11th over: England 92-6 (Sciver-Brunt 48, Ecclestone 0) Arlott spanked a six, collected a two and then chipped to cover. Yadav has 2-15 from two overs. What can England manage from here? They're being strangled by spin at both ends. 6.10pm CEST 18:10 Another one goes! I mistook Arlott for Sciver-Brunt. It wasn;t the skipper who belted that six but it's unquestionably Arlott who chipped, off the leading edge, Yadav straight to cover. Sciver-Brunt, not yet on 50, will have to face as many balls as she can from here. Updated at 6.31pm CEST 6.06pm CEST 18:06 10th over: England 78-5 (Sciver-Brunt 47, Arlott 3) NSB thwacks Rana over the infield and for four to the cover fence. They needed that. They'll need a lot more to be fair. But while the skipper climbs through the gears and farms as much of the strike as possible (she's only faced 29 balls) there is a chance. Seven runs off that over and as they take a drinks break, England will look up and notice they need 13.3 runs an over to win this. 6.03pm CEST 18:03 9th over: England 71-5 (Sciver-Brunt 42, Arlott 1) Superb from the debutant Shree Charani who now has 1-8 from her first two overs in T20Is. Not only has she got the wicket of Capsey, and not only did that over only cost two runs, but she kept Sciver-Brunt off strike. The new batter Arlott chopped a single to mid-off which will delight the Indians. England's captain will start to itch. She'll know that she is the only hope England have of turning this around. 6.02pm CEST 18:02 Soft dismissal! No other way to say it. That was just so tame from Capsey. Shree Charani, on debut, tossed it up and invited the drive from Capsey. But rather than hit it, she wafted her hands towards the ball and caught a thick edge that carried down to fielder at short third in the edge of the circle. India's spinners have put the squeeze on and they're suffocating the life out of England. Updated at 6.17pm CEST 6.00pm CEST 18:00 8th over: England 69-4 (Sciver-Brunt 41, Capsey 5) India are bowling to their field and keeping the scoring down. Sounds simple, but it's something Englaind failed to do. 18 balls since the last boundary as Rana is tight and keeping the scoring towards the leg side where everyone is stationed. They're also reading the wind. If England want to take on the desirable boundary they'll have to hit into the breeze. Just six runs off that set. 5.54pm CEST 17:54 7th over: England 63-4 (Sciver-Brunt 39, Capsey 1) Sciver-Brunt just needs someone to stay with her. This is a top set from Yadav who bagged the wicket of Jones and conceded just five runs. Lovely flighty spin. India have opted to take pace off and it's working a treat. England now need 148 from 78 deliveries. 5.52pm CEST 17:52 England are falling apart! Jones, facing only her second ball, skipped down to a flighter from Yadav and missed it entirely. Ghosh fumbled. Jones could have got back if she wasn't admonishing herself. As it turned out, Ghosh collected the ball and tipped the bails off. Sciver-Brunt is running out of mates. Updated at 6.15pm CEST 5.49pm CEST 17:49 Bowled on the charge! Sciver-Brunt started this Sharma over by spanking two fours – clobbering off the back off over cover and drilling down the ground. But she was cramped for four dot balls thereafter and after a leg-bye Beaumont was on strike. Perhaps it was that string of dots that prompted the premeditated charge down the wicket. Sharma spotted her coming, pulled her length back and castled the onrushing Beaumont. 6th over: England 58-3 (Sciver-Brunt 37) Updated at 6.16pm CEST 5.44pm CEST 17:44 5th over: England 48-2 (Sciver-Brunt 29, Beaumont 10) Reddy into the attack. It's a sort of flighty, medium pace sort of thing she's delivering. No real zip but no pace to work with either. Into the surface, wicket to wicket. Tidy. Sciver-Brunt hammered the first ball that was over pitched for four, but the final ball almost bags a wicket Beaumont just clears the fielder at mid-on. In fact, Mandhana got a fingertip to it and they come back for a couple. 5.40pm CEST 17:40 4th over: England 37-2 (Sciver-Brunt 21, Beaumont 7) Beaumont has a boundary with a nicely taken cut off a Charani drag-down. I'm liking this loopy spin and apart from that last ball it was pretty tidy. Just six runs off that set. The required rate is pushing around 10.5 an over. This is such a crucial partnership. 5.37pm CEST 17:37 3rd over: England 31-2 (Sciver-Brunt 20, Beaumont 2) NSB is on the charge! Two boundaries struck with authority. She's down the track drilling Amanjot over mid-on and then thumping a pull behind square. A quickly taken two keeps the score ticking and the required rate within touching distance. 5.33pm CEST 17:33 2nd over: England 17-2 (Sciver-Brunt 7, Beaumont 1) Sharma gets rid of Wyatt-Hodge but Sciver-Brunt is the key wicket. She looks in good touch as she nails a boundary down the ground to let the Indians know there's still a fight to be had here. She'll have to match the knock by India's captain. 5.30pm CEST 17:30 Two in two balls! Wyatt-Hodge will want to forget today's game in a hurry. A dropped dolly in the field now a duck with the bat. Sharma lands this on a good length and Wyatt-Hodge tries to work it through the on side. She gets a leading edge and it flies to short third where Deol pouches a simple catch. England are in deep trouble here. Updated at 5.46pm CEST 5.28pm CEST 17:28 Oh my GHOSH! That's a stunner from the 'keeper. It's a poor ball from Kaur, short and very wide. But Dunkley doesn't move her feet as she attempts to slash it through point. A thick edge looks destined for the deep third boundary but for the outstretched glove of Ghosh. That was the last ball of the over. India are on the board early after Dunkley hit the first ball for four. 1st over: England 9-1 (Wyatt-Hodge 0) Updated at 5.44pm CEST 5.22pm CEST 17:22 England's openers are ready. Dunkley and Wyatt-Hodge – who put down a dolly and will be keen to make up for her error. They can certainly do this. But they'll need a fast start. 5.19pm CEST 17:19 They're showing highlights of Mandhana's knock on Sky. Do yourself a favour. If you're reading this and haven't yet seen this innings try and locate the highlights when you can. This wasn't a slogfest. It was 'proper' cricket. Cover drives, pulls in front of square, bunts down the ground, firm sweeps. She rotated the strike, picked gaps and manipulated angles by moving around the crease. It was an exhibition. A masterclass. A clinic. Honestly, I'm not being hyperbolic for the sake of it. It really was a gem. 5.12pm CEST 17:12 Over to England's batters. Their bowlers got a right tonking with India's skipper, Mandhana, doing most of the damage with a superb 112 from 62 balls. Ecclestone was asked to bowl the last over and conceded two boundaries – one down the ground to Mandhana and another swept hard by Sharma – but she did bag the big wicket of Mandhana. Sharma ended not out on 7 adding two off the final over. Kaur collected three from as many balls in her red-inker. England were largely poor in the field and with the ball. Can they right those wrongs with bat in hand? 5.08pm CEST 17:08 A sublime knock comes to an end! Ecclestone was just smoked down the ground for four so she tossed it a little higher and a little slower. Mandhana, looking to crunch it again, couldn't get to the pitch and skied it into the covers where Sciver-Brunt completed the catch. That was a truly wonderful innings. One of the best I've seen. I reckon that was the first poor shot she played across 62 balls. Updated at 5.24pm CEST 5.07pm CEST 17:07 19th over: India 198-4 (Mandhana 108, Kaur 2) Brilliant over from Arlott who got her lengths right and varied her pace. Crucially she bowled to her field. So even though Mandhana played two gorgeous shots, one over cover and the other brilliantly picked up on the leg side, they only counted for singles. Five runs off the penultimate over is a huge win for the home side. 5.02pm CEST 17:02 18th over: India 193-4 (Mandhana 104, Kaur 1) An eventful and successful over for England. Bell bagged a brace and closes out 3-27 from her four overs. Crucially Mandhana only faced two legal deliveries (another was a wide down the leg side). She is on strike though for Arlott's set. 5.01pm CEST 17:01 Two in the over for Bell! A bit of a fightback from England as another slower ball from Bell holds in the surface. Rodrigues doesn't have the read of it having faced just one ball before and she smears a cut towards cover-point where Sciver-Brunt holds on with a tumble. Sharp catch from the skipper, setting the tone for these final few overs. Updated at 5.25pm CEST 4.59pm CEST 16:59 Bell deserves that! She's been the pick of the England bowlers. Ghosh's role was to hit every ball she faced to the boundary. So no shame in holing out at mid-off where Dunkley caught well around her ankles running in from the rope. Bell's change of pace doing the trick there. Updated at 5.04pm CEST 4.57pm CEST 16:57 17th over: India 184-2 (Mandhana 102, Ghosh 12) New batter Ghosh is up to the task, hitting two boundaries from her first two balls before sweeping her fifth ball fine to the fence as well. Smith has conceded 41 from three overs. 4.55pm CEST 16:55 Apologies to Lauren Filer. I've been incorrectly calling her Flier. Thanks for the steer Robert Dinsey. I'll make sure to go back and correct those mistakes at the change of innings. 4.52pm CEST 16:52 Finally some class from England as Arlott holds on well! Deol looked to cross-bat club Bell but was fighting against the wind. Arlott, at a wide long-on, ran to her right and held on with both hands. A handy knock comes to an end. Earlier in the over Mandhana swatted two boundaries – behind square on the pull and over cover on the drive – to bring up her first T20 hundred. 16th over: India 172-2 (Mandhana 101) Updated at 5.04pm CEST


The Guardian
14 hours ago
- The Guardian
Josh Hazlewood blitz sends Australia to victory inside three days in West Indies
It was an extraordinary final session to end the first Test in Barbados in the long shadows of the third evening. After two days of wobbles, a portion of Australia's batting got its act together, with the lower-middle-order trio of Travis Head, Beau Webster, and Alex Carey making half centuries to lift Australia's second innings to 310. That left West Indies needing 301 to win the first Test in Barbados, always unlikely on a Kensington Oval pitch that already had balls keeping low. Josh Hazlewood made sure of it with a withering burst of 4-4 in 16 balls, later upping that to 5-23, as West Indies crashed humiliatingly to 141 all out, losing by 159 runs. Hazlewood has been the subject of some public attention of late, given his injury absences and how well Scott Boland has performed during each one. But the first-choice option has 288 Test wickets, took 35 of them at 13 last calendar year, and has nine at 18 in the two matches he has managed in 2025. His career against West Indies is worth 43 at 15, and over two tours to this part of the world he has 19 wickets at nine. His match-defining spell was built around his ability to keep putting the ball on exactly the right spot. After an unusually expensive first three overs went for 18, Hazlewood had a brief break and returned for the 11th. West Indies were going brightly at 47-1. Former captain Kraigg Brathwaite had flicked a catch from Mitchell Starc to square leg, but John Campbell and Keacy Carty were scoring freely. Facing a line around the wicket, the left-handed Campbell gave up a gift, a kneeling lap shot that lobbed to Carey behind the stumps. The very next ball, Hazlewood's suffocating line got an inside edge on to pad from Brandon King, lobbing to slip, a golden duck to complete a grim debut for the man who dropped three catches in the first innings. The hat-trick didn't follow, captain Roston Chase able to leave just outside off, but Hazlewood got him next over, more seam movement and another inside edge to short leg. Then even more jag an over later, and a touch of low bounce, as he knocked Carty's stumps awry. He had four wickets for 23, West Indies were 65-6, and the match was all but done. Pat Cummins followed Hazlewood's spell with another lawnmower delivery into Shai Hope's stumps, but hope had already gone. Alzarri Joseph got a promotion after his late tonk in the first innings, but ran himself out with a slow response to a call from Justin Greaves, Marnus Labuschagne as a sub fielder hitting the stumps direct. Hazlewood returned from a brief break for his fifth thanks to Jomel Warrican, who survived an lbw thanks to umpire's call then nicked the next, making it 86-8 as extra time began. It was a subsidence, but one in the expected direction after Australia's score. In a match dominated by pace, Head and Webster were able to use it to their advantage, scoring almost entirely square of the wicket on the off side, left-hander and right-hander alternating cover drives and back-foot punches to opposite sides of the ground. West Indies frustration mounted as the partnership reached 102, and it took a devilish moment from the pitch to cut off Head for 61, lbw to a ball that almost went underground to hit his pad from around the wicket. That was the first of seven overs from Shamar Joseph either side of lunch, with the other end of his spell getting Webster nicking down the leg-side on review for 63. Carey immediately hit the nitro, smacking Jayden Seales straight for four and six before pulling another four in the same over. A second six followed from Greaves, as the Australian keeper raised 50 in 40 balls. With Cummins having skied a catch, Joseph returned to bowl Starc off the inside edge. Fatigue was telling, with a rash of no-balls including a wide beamer, as the tail smacked a few runs. His next break lasted all of four overs, until Chase got Carey out smartly with a wide slow off break lashed to long off. With Joseph on four wickets as he had been in the first innings, he had one last chance to take five, and as at the Gabba 18 months ago, he finished an Australian innings by castling Hazlewood, this time off a flailed bottom edge. The bowler sank to his knees, pounding the pitch with one hand. In three Tests against Australia he has 22 wickets at 16. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion Still, with their outmatched batting, West Indies had given away far more than they had a credible chance to chase. Not that Shamar Joseph would have expected to follow his five-for by having to go out and bat before the end of the day, with the umpires extending beyond the extra half hour because the required overs hadn't been bowled. He let out some frustration, lashing 44 from 22 balls, and while aiming for a half-century in one blow, edged Nathan Lyon to slip. That left three balls in the day, and Lyon only needed one. In gathering Friday dusk, it was an hour and 13 minutes after the scheduled close when Seales was caught by Sam Konstas at bat-pad – a chastening end for West Indies, and a dramatic turnaround for Australia. West Indies authorities were desperate for this match to reach the weekend to get some crowds into the party stand. Instead, everyone will hit the beach.