A superb
rearguard century from skipper Ramnaresh Sarwan helped the West
Indies to draw the second Test match against Australia in
Antigua. Sarwan, aided by Shivnarine Chanderpaul who made
an unbeaten 77, hit 128 to thwart the tourists' hopes of going
two up in the three-match series. Brett Lee removed
opener Devon Smith (0) and Runako Morton (14), while Stuart
Clark dismissed Xavier Marshall.
But the West Indies dug in to
keep the series alive going to Bridgetown.
Declaring on their overnight
score of 244-6 and leaving the West Indies a nominal target of
372 to win, the Australians wrested the early initiative at
lunch. Lee, who took five wickets in the first
innings, continued to bowl with pace and aggression, taking two
wickets to leave the home side struggling at 95-3. He gave
opener Smith a thorough working over with a string of sharp,
short-pitched deliveries, before the batsman meekly fended a
rising ball to Mike Hussey at gully for a duck.
Smith's dismissal brought
Sarwan to the crease, and the West Indies captain soon lost his
partner when Xavier Marshall - who had earlier survived a caught
behind appeal - edged Stuart Clark to Brad Haddin for five.
Sarwan, ably assisted by Morton, launched into rearguard action
as Australia's fast bowlers searched for their third
breakthrough.
Lee - the West Indies' first
innings tormentor - eventually found his way through Morton's
defences with the score on 84, trapping the hard-hitting
29-year-old leg before for 14. However, with new
batsman and first innings centurion Chanderpaul at the crease
with Sarwan, the two Guyanese thwarted all Australia threw at
them - but not without the odd stroke of luck on the way.
Leg-spinner Stuart MacGill,
playing his final Test, looked certain to have Sarwan stumped
with the last ball of the 51st over, but third umpire Norman
Marshall gave the 27-year-old the benefit of the doubt, even
though replays suggested the batsman's foot was on the line,
rather than behind. And Sarwan compounded
Australia's frustrations when he swept a full toss off MacGill
for four to bring up his 11th Test hundred two balls before tea.
Australia eventually broke the 143-run partnership with the
first ball bowled with the new ball, Mitchell Johnson achieving
extra bounce and forcing Sarwan into a defensive prod that
looped to Hussey in the gully.
Dwayne Bravo came and then
went in quick succession, fending a leading edge from a
short-pitched Lee delivery to Brad Hodge to give Australia
renewed hope of forcing victory. But with Danesh
Ramdin providing able support to reach 21 not out, Chanderpaul
was able to see out the remaining overs and take his match tally
to 184 runs without dismissal.
Following the match Sarwan
praised Chanderpaul's efforts which have seen the left hander
average over 100 in the past year of Test cricket: "Over the
past few years he's shown his consistency and he's getting
better with age. Hopefully we can learn from him. "Our
focus was to take every session as it is, we needed to survive
but at the same time we needed to be positive."
"Ramnaresh and Shiv played
very well and that partnership in the middle session that we
couldn't break was the difference between us winning and it
being a draw," agreed Australian captain Ricky Ponting.
Ponting also singled out Brett Lee's 8-110 match figures on the
North Sound pitch: "In his spell yesterday morning he ran in and
bowled nice and fast.
"We figured pretty early in
this game there was no point pitching the ball up and trying to
swing it, you really had to bash it into the wicket and try to
get a little bit out of it that way. "I'm sure when
we get down to Barbados there'll be a little bit more bounce and
bit more assistance for the bowlers."
The final Test starts on 12
June with Australia leading 1-0.