Pacer Jason Holder took four wickets in four balls to blow up the last over of England’s run chase as West Indies won the fifth Twenty20 game by 17 runs on Sunday to capture the series 3-2.

West Indies won the toss, chose to bat and scored 179-4 at the Kensington Oval. In reply, England was all out for 162 with one ball left after entering the final over at 160-6 and needing 20 runs to win.

Also read: Fans spot Vicky Kaushal’s name on Team India’s scorecard, actor thanks internet

In that last over, Holder first claimed the wicket of Chris Jordan (7) caught on the fence, immediately followed by the key dismissal of Sam Billings (41 runs off 28 balls) before golden ducks for Adil Rashid and Saqib Mahmood.

Holder joined an exclusive club when Mahmood’s inside edge nicked leg stump. Lasith Malinga, Rashid Khan and Curtis Campher are the only other bowlers in men’s cricket to take four-in-four in a T20 international.

Also read: 4th T20I: Moeen Ali leads England’s win over West Indies, sets up series decider

Holder did not get a chance to go for five wickets in five balls with no England batters left. The allrounder finished with 5-27 from 2.5 overs.

James Vince top-scored for England with 55 off 35 but was one of left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein’s four wickets after holing out. Hosein took 4-30 from four overs.

Also read: U-19 World Cup: Ravi Kumar, Angkrish Raghuvanshi take India to semi-finals

Earlier, West Indies had been frustrated by England’s spinners but captain Kieron Pollard (41 not out off 25) and Rovman Powell (35 not out off 17) shared an undefeated fifth-wicket stand of 74 in just over five overs to give the hosts a reasonable target to set England.

The pair added a whopping 66 in the final 24 balls.

Also read: Watch: David Warner recreates ‘Pushpa’ dialogue, daughter Indi joins

Rashid (2-17) leapfrogged Jordan as England men’s leading T20 wicket-taker with 81 career wickets. Liam Livingstone collected identical figures as the pair and fellow spinner Moeen Ali yielded just 54 from their 10 overs, with England’s quicks repeatedly targeted by West Indies.