West Indies unleash latest Fab Four in England
July 6, 2020 03:50 PM
West Indies are set to field their latest fast-bowling quartet during this week's first Test against England in Southampton, with the likes of Shannon Gabriel, Kemar Roach, captain Jason Holder and Alzarri Joseph all vying to make an impact.
The Caribbean has a long and proud history of producing top-class fast bowlers.
AFP Sport looks back at some previous West Indies pace attacks in England:
1980: Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Joel Garner, Colin Croft
-- The original 'fearsome foursome' revolutionised world cricket under the captaincy of Clive Lloyd by ensuring there was no respite for batsmen even when the shine had gone off the ball.
Although all capable of being genuinely quick, the guile of Roberts, the speed through the air of Holding, the steepling bounce and crushing yorkers of the 6ft 8in Garner and the awkwardness of Croft, from wide of the crease or around the wicket, meant they each posed different problems for batsmen.
Meanwhile this series also saw Malcolm Marshall, arguably the greatest West Indies fast bowler of them all, start to establish himself in the side.
Even so, the West Indies only won the series 1-0, with Roberts taking eight wickets in a two-wicket win in the opener at Trent Bridge before the other four matches were all drawn largely due to weather interruptions.
1984: Marshall, Garner, Holding, Eldine Baptiste
-- The 'Blackwash' team hammered England 5-0. The writing was on the wall for the hosts when Marshall struck debutant Andy Lloyd on the head with a bouncer in the series opener, with the batsman never playing another Test.
Marshall's mastery was evident when he took seven for 53 in the third Test at Headingley despite a broken thumb and he finished the series with 24 wickets at 18.20 despite missing a match through injury. Barbados team-mate Garner took 29 wickets at 18.62.
1988: Marshall, Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh, Winston Benjamin/Patrick Patterson
-- West Indies won 4-0 in a series where England's disarray was summed up by the fact they got through four captains.
Marshall, capable of both sheer pace and late movement, led the way with 35 wickets at a staggeringly low average of 12.65 apiece, with Ambrose -- soon to become the leader of the attack -- and Walsh offering excellent support.
1995: Ambrose, Walsh, Kenny Benjamin, Ian Bishop
-- With the likes of batting greats Gordon Greenidge and Vivian Richards having now both retired, the West Indies found themselves held to a 2-2 draw in a six-Test series.
But all four frontline bowlers still took more than 21 wickets each.
Nevertheless there were signs the West Indies were not the force they had been and in 2000 England beat them in a series for the first time in 31 years.