Short and sweet, that's it from me for this Test but plenty of cricket going on around the world. New Zealand and England, the third Test continuing tonight at 9.30pm GMT. India and Australia also in the final Test of that tour, day two begins at 4am GMT. A couple of one-dayer too over the weekend. Sri Lanka v Bangladesh tomorrow at 9am GMT and the deciding rubber between South Africa and Pakistan, Sunday at 8pm GMT. Indulge and enjoy, I'll be back soon, bye for now...
Somewhat muted celebrations from West Indies because they know they've only ran over a poor side that they were expected to beat. But they've done a very professional job in dishing out two absolute hammerings. Six in a row for them now and can look forward to getting back to one-day cricket and a crack at the Champions Trophy.
Zimbabwe simply need to be taken out of the Future Tours Programme. They're not even really in it, which is worse cause they play top sides so irregularly. Either give them proper exposure with regular fixtures so they can learn or improve, or consign them back to the Intercontinental Cup. I'm sure Ireland and Afghanistan would love a crack at Zimbabwe. That would be far more competitive and better for world cricket.
Time for the presentation and I wonder who the Man of the Match is going to be...
Huge cheers for Darren Sammy: "Shane's performance here has been tremendous but throughout the games different people have been called upon and they executed properly. All in all, people took responsibility."
Brendan Taylor is understandably, rather downbeat: "It's been massively disappointing and we've been taught a proper lesson. It hurts to be in this position" says Brendan Taylor. "A lot of us need to go home and have a good think, we need to improve in a lot of areas. 20s and 30s aren't going to win you a Test match. We'll get home, put hours in and try to put things right."
10 for 93 here and 19 for 200 at 10.52 in the series, Shane Shillingford is the Man of the Match and Man of the Series. A fine performance by someone who should be looking to kick on and become a real matchwinner for West Indies, not just when conditions are bang in his favour like here.
From ball one this has been all West Indies, they won the toss, they made a bold statement in choosing to bowl first and it paid off, firing Zimbabwe out for a paltry first innings total. Chris Gayle and Shiv Chanderpaul then racked up a big lead with centuries. Another positive move saw Darren Sammy declare overnight and Zimbabwe again crumbled against spin. There was significant assistance for Shane Shillingford and he made the most of it, finishing with 10 for 93 in the match - the best return from his 10 Tests. Marlon Samuels also got in on the act, taking 6 for 50 himself. Not bad for a part-timer!
And that's it, West Indies win by an innings and 65 runs Shillingford again the star on his home ground with a 10-wicket haul and that is as big a stuffing as you will see. Zimbabwe with nowhere near the skills required to be competitive.