India vs West Indies, 4th Test: India Lose No. 1 Ranking After Damp Draw in Port of Spain
With the match in Port of Spain being called off, Pakistan have become the new No. 1 Test team. This is also the first time India have won two Tests on a tour of the Caribbean
- NDTVSports
- Updated: August 22, 2016 08:22 PM IST
Highlights
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The fifth Test between India-Windies ended in a draw
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India won the series 2-0 but lost the top spot in ICC Test Rankings
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Pakistan are now the number one ranked Test team in world
The fourth and final Test between the West Indies and India was abandoned because of the wet outfield on the fifth morning in Trinidad on Monday.
Only 22 overs were bowled at the start of the match. India won the series 2-0 but surrendered the top spot in the Test rankings to Pakistan, as they needed to defeat the West Indies 3-0 to prevent their arch-rivals from supplanting them.
Pakistan sit atop the rankings with a total of 111 points, while India have 110 points after the series against West Indies.
A torrential shower at the lunch interval prevented play for the remainder of the day and also left the playing area unfit for action over the remaining four days despite the desperate efforts of local authorities to have the ground dried out in continuing sunshine.
This match goes down in the 139 years of Test cricket as the third-shortest match ever and officials of the West Indies Cricket Board, the Trinidad and Tobago Cricket Board and the Queen's Park Cricket Club have faced severe criticism over their management of a situation that was always likely to unfold given that August is one of the rainiest months of the year in Trinidad.
No Test match had ever been scheduled after the month of June in the 86 years that the venue has been hosting international cricket.
West Indies cricket now holds the unenviable record of hosting the three shortest Test matches for reasons related to pitch and playing conditions.
In 1998, the first Test of the series against England at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica lasted less than an hour before the umpires determined that the pitch was too dangerous for the English batsmen to face genuine fast bowling.
And in 2009, also against England, the scheduled second Test of the series survived less than two overs when the officials determined that the heavily-sanded outfield, which included the bowlers run-ups, made proper movement without the risk of injury for the fielding team almost impossible.
(With inputs from AFP)