Lauren Bell (right) celebrating a wicket with Heather Knight (left) and Lauren Winfield-Hill (centre)
Lauren Bell took two wickets for England as the continued their dominance over West Indies
England 141-6 (20 overs): Dunkley 43 (43); Matthews 3-15
West Indies 125-8 (20 overs): Fletcher 18 (13); Dean 3-22
England won by 16 runs
Scorecard

England took a 2-0 lead in the Twenty20 series after beating West Indies by 16 runs.

The hosts were able to reach 125-8 as spinner Charlie Dean took 2-22.

The West Indies didn't pass 18 in their batting performance.

It is England's fifth win in a row on the tour after a whitewash in the one-day internationals.

NatSciver, Amy Jones and the world's number one bowler were rested as England showed their improved strength in depth.

Sophia Dunkley top-scored for England with 43 as West Indies put in an improved performance in the field with captain Hayley Matthews taking three-15 from her four overs.

On a slow pitch, Dunkley added a valuable partnership of 40 in four overs with Maia Bouchier, who scored 24 from 15 balls.

The West Indies were once again let down by their batting as they fell to 50-5 inside the first 10 overs and at no point did England's bowlers look under pressure.

Saturday is the last day of the series at the same venue.

  • England in West Indies - results & fixtures

England's depth passes its test

It was clear that England needed to overcome their reliance on senior players after they were whitewashed by India in the one-day internationals at the end of the summer.

England had to turn to their less experienced players after Brunt took 1-18 and Knight only made 18 in the Caribbean.

Dunkley continues to nail down her place at the top of the order, batting with maturity to score at a run a ball when the boundaries were not flowing, and also showing aggressive intent during her cameo in the middle-order.

England did not miss an asset in their bowling attack with the addition of Dean.

In the T20 World Cup in February, the likes of India and Australia will challenge for the trophy, making the true assessment of England's depth difficult.

It isn't comparable for West Indies. They have struggled throughout the series but have no choice but to keep playing the same players.

Spinners lead the way

Dean is having a great year. The 21-year-old's performances may not always grab the headlines but she has given Knight a good selection dilemma before the World Cup.

Glenn is a leg-spinner, Dean is a left-armer and Ecclestone is a bowler.

With England wary of Ecclestone's workload, they will prove to be an important trio for Knight and Jon Lewis.

Dean's spell tore through the West Indies' line-up, mixing up her pace effectively and frustrating the batters with nagging consistency.

Lauren Bell continued her excellent series, bowling with the new ball and using her variations at the death, taking 2-21 from 3 overs.

The spinners are going to have an important role to play in the final three games of the series, as evidenced by Matthews' three-for in England's first-class match.