The ODI circus has descended upon Bristol in the hope of reigniting the series against West Indies. The first match at Old Trafford was a cakewalk for England, the second at Nottingham was ruined by rain.
The series needs a lift and the man most likely to provide it, Chris Gayle, is expected to be fit to play after tweaking his hamstring in Manchester. a�?He seems to be raring to go,a�? said his captain, Jason Holder. It is sometimes hard to tell with Gayle.
His presence in this series is to be welcomed. Gayle does look faintly ridiculous wrapped up in his sweaters, shambling the odd single between the sixes when batting and neatly plonking his foot on the ball in the field when he has been removed from his favoured position at first slip.
This must have been how WG Grace finished his career at Bristol. Yet Gayle still adds lustre to the event.
He is a one-off, who surely clears the boundary more regularly than any other player in history. At the last count in T20 internationals he had hit 103, which averages out at more than two sixes per innings.
It is a figure that mushrooms to 772 sixes in all T20 cricket. Stay alert in the stands especially if situated at wide long-on or deep square-leg.
Gayle can mesmerise. Moreover, his return to the West Indies team at least hints at the possibility of an end to what has amounted to a civil war between the players and the board.
It is essential that progress continues and that the current situation becomes more than a temporary amnesty.
Most of those at Bristol on Sunday, no matter who they are supporting, would welcome an hour of Gayle at the crease.
He is now 38 and unlikely to grace our fields for much longer. But do not include David Willey among that number a�� he received some harsh treatment from Gayle at Old Trafford.
Willey has the dubious privilege of propelling the new ball when he is on strike. He is forewarned. a�?Wea��ve seen what Gayle can do and hea��s done it time and time again,a�? said Willey. a�?If ita��s his day and he gets hold of it, the way he hits the ball [means it] is going to clear the ropes. So you want to get him early. Wea��ve looked at the footage and wea��ve got a rough idea where we want to bowl to him.a�?
England (possible): EJG Morgan (capt), AD Hales, JM Bairstow, JE Root, BA Stokes, JC Buttler (wkt), Moeen Ali, CR Woakes, Adil Rashid, LE PLunkett, DJ Willey.
West Indies (possible): J Holder (capt), C Gayle, E Lewis, S Hope (wkt), M Samuels, J Mohamed, A Nurse, R Powell, J Taylor, K Williams, M Cummins.
Umpires: S Fry (Aus) and M Gough (Eng). . .



