Second Test, Trinidad, day four (stumps):
England 319 & 71-2 v West Indies 208 & 209 England need just 28 to win the second Test when play resumes on Tuesday after bad light ended day four with the tourists on 71-2. A victory would give England a 2-0 lead in the four-match series.
Marcus Trescothick and Michael Vaughan were dismissed but Mark Butcher (33) and Nasser Hussain (five) blazed on.
Simon Jones claimed 5-57, including Ridley Jacobs for 70, to bowl West Indies out for 209 during the evening session in Trinidad.
Then, as the shadows lengthened at Queen's Park Oval, England's top order punished some loose bowling from a tiring home attack.
Vaughan took a six and a four off consecutive deliveries from Tino Best, but was undone by a bowling change, Adam Sanford trapping him lbw for 23. Trescothick was equally positive, pulling the first ball of the innings for four, but was bowled by the third, a delivery from Best that stayed low.
In contrast, England would have been disappointed with their batting display earlier in the day.
They extended their first innings to 319 all out in the first half hour, with Graham Thorpe making 90.
But with some intelligent bowling, Pedro Collins had Thorpe and his overnight partner Ashley both caught in the slips to finish with figures of 4-71.
Giles fell for 37 to end a seventh-wicket partnership of 85, and Thorpe pushed a ball that cramped him for space to second slip for 90.
Spinner Gayle bowled Jones and Steve Harmison in the space of three balls to finish the job.
But the roles were quickly reversed as Jones joined the attack in the 13th over and bowled Gayle for 16 with his first legal delivery (the first ball went for four wides).
In the Glamorgan bowler's next over, first Test centurion Devon Smith lofted a drive to mid-off to depart for 17.
Shortly after lunch, Ramnaresh Sarwan fell to an angry Jones, who trapped the West Indies vice-captain on the back foot and then delivered a verbal send off.
 Hussain's outstanding catch dismissed Chanderpaul |
Captain Brian Lara's decision to promote Jacobs in the order bought the home side and extra two-and-a-half hours, and 70 runs. The burly wicket-keeper was unfazed by England's bustle, providing the bulk of a 102-run stand with Chanderpaul.
But normal service was resumed after tea when Jones gained some extra bounce, forcing Jacobs to fend to point.
Harmison returned to gain the wicket of Lara first ball, an inswinger striking the left-hander high on the pad in front of off-stump.
And there were two wickets each for Andrew Flintoff and Matthew Hoggard as England knifed into the tail.
Flintoff's brace came thanks to magnificent fielding and a little luck.
Substitute Paul Collingwood took a reflex catch at point to snare Dwayne Smith's square drive, although replays showed Flintoff had over-stepped for a no ball. And Nasser Hussain dived full length at square leg to grab Chanderpaul's top-edged pull - a rare loose shot after a 147-ball vigil that brought 42 runs.
Jones bowled last man Collins to secure his first five-wicket haul in Tests.
West Indies: B Lara (capt), C Gayle, Devon Smith, R Sarwan, S Chanderpaul, R Jacobs, Dwayne Smith, T Best, C Collymore, P Collins, A Sanford.
England: M Vaughan (capt), M Trescothick, M Butcher, N Hussain, G Thorpe, A Flintoff, C Read (wkt), A Giles, S Jones, M Hoggard, S Harmison.