6.05pm: England have actually retained the Wisden Trophy, though Alastair Cook looked as if he'd been asked to accept a sack of mouldy spuds from WICB president Dave "Dave" Cameron. Well, whatever he thinks, it's been fun. England were the better side in Antigua but couldn't finish things off; West Indies tossed away their hard work during a daft couple of hours in Grenada; then the hosts came bouncing back from behind the eight ball here to level things. Sadly, that's it for England in the West Indies, but we'll be returning for more before you know it. England play an ODI against Ireland on Friday (good luck there) and then host New Zealand, starting with two Tests at the end of May (good luck there). West Indies have a month off and then contest the Frank Worrell Trophy with Australia. Join us for all the thrills and spills - but, from Alan, Gnasher and Alex, it's goodbye for now. Goodbye!
5.50pm: Here we go with the presentations... Jermaine Blackwood is the Man of the Match: "I always try to play my natural game, adapt to the situation. Way I get out sometimes is playing my natural game, so I'm not really worried. [First innings] Definitely, tried go out there and play my shots and it came out very well. I saw Bravo, he said stay positive and we'll get there, we did that, so well played to him as well. Each Test series I'm learning so it's good for me."
James Anderson is named Man of the Series: "Definitely, played some good cricket and to get a first-innings lead, we thought we were in a good position. There were periods when we thought we were in with a chance but Bravo and Blackwood played very well. We've played well, I fell like I've bowled well and contributed, so very disappointed we didn't get over the line. [Breaking Botham's record] I've had a purple patch since then and a bit of luck. It might be my last time to come here, if we have to wait another six years, but we've enjoyed every minute of it."
West Indies captain Denesh Ramdin: [Barbados pitch?] "It was a quite tricky one, but it turned out well for us. Batters didn't quite do as we wanted in the first innings but young Bravo and Blackwood came out for us today. We needed to get wickets in the second innings and those five wickets [on day two] put us in a commanding position. We played some good cricket, the bowling line-up was a good one, we let it slip in Grenada but I'm really glad we beat them today. [Performances from young players] Young blood, Shai Hope as well, sure he will go from strength to strength."
England captain Alastair Cook: [Wanted series win?] "We came here after Grenada with the opportunity to do it, played a lot of good cricket in the first day and a half. It's a bit of both, 250 wasn't enough, probably 300 was par, and then obviously 120 was disappointing. We have to take it on the chin, credit to West Indies, they bowled well and put us under pressure. When you're defending 190 you need to take your chances, even 80 for 4 we had them under pressure. The bottom line is we haven't done enough to win the series. Every series we play we try to win, we'll take it on the chin. The support we've had in Antigua, Grenada and Barbados has been fantastic. I can't fault the lads but the last 20 overs we weren't good enough. The squad will talk about things but we need to go and deliver."
5.35pm: A brilliant, brilliant win for West Indies, denies England the series and means their fans can proudly rally round the flag tonight. They showed reserves many doubted they had, fighting back from losing the toss and a significant first-innings deficit; Phil Simmons is among those heading out to congratulate Jermaine Blackwood, who has shown immense promise in this series, while Darren Bravo finally played the sort of knock his talent demands. Kensington Oval may have England flags draped all over it but there's no doubting who's patch it is right now. That defeat means England still haven't won overseas since India in 2012 and extends their parched run in the West Indies, which stretches back a decade.
"Well played, West Indies - especially Bravo, Blackwood, Holder and Taylor," says Nic. "I hope Colin Graves is rethinking his judgement of them as 'mediocre'." Yes, it's certainly a statement that irked West Indies and can only have stoked the Babylonian fires. Will there be repercussions for the likes of Alastair Cook and Peter Moores? We'll find out soon enough, I'm sure... Better to focus on the winning side here, West Indies have matched England, ranked five places above them, and barring a crazy session in Grenada that cost them the game, might have claimed another scalp for the mantelpiece. There's talent, no doubt, the task for Simmons now is to inspire a fearsome collective will. Maybe they can do England a favour and rattle the Aussies as well?
Anyway, however you slice it, that was a cracking Test match. More of these, please!