
Bohannon hits 155 as Lancashire draw with Northants
Josh Bohannon came to Lancashire's rescue with a century as their County Championship Division Two match with Northamptonshire ended in a draw.On-loan Notts leg-spinner Calvin Harrison's career-best 7-119 from a marathon 57 overs (for career-best match figures) had looked likely to propel Northants to a first win in 26 years at Old Trafford.But Bohannon hit 155, allied to a half-century from Marcus Harris, led some stern resistance from the hosts.After starting the morning on 126-2, they had reached 351-9 when the players shook hands at 17:40 BST.Northants struck early when Harrison disposed of nightwatchman Anderson Phillip for 10, bowled playing down the wrong line - but that proved to be the visitors' only success of the morning as Bohannon and Harris knocked a further 72 runs off the overnight deficit of 144 by the lunch break.Harris settled in quickly after edging his first boundary to third man off Raphy Weatherall, before posting his half-century from 94 balls.Northamptonshire grabbed the new ball as soon as it became available after 23 overs as skipper Luke Procter rang the changes against his old club, using eight bowlers in all.Harris had just posted his third fifty-plus score in four innings during a partnership of 94 when he was well caught at short leg by James Sales off Harrison with Lancashire 243-4 and still 25 runs in arrears.Bohannon drove gloriously through the covers for four to take the home side into the lead half-way off Harrison, who then had Matty Hurst caught at slip.The wicket Northamptonshire really wanted arrived 10 minutes before tea with Bohannon's unlucky dismissal, caught by wicketkeeper Lewis McManus from a rebound off the back of Sales at short leg from a Saif Zaib delivery.Harrison then celebrated a second first-class five-for when George Balderson popped up a bat-pad catch to Sales at short leg eight overs into the evening.Luke Wells and Tom Bailey took the game into the final hour but, although Harrison removed Wells for 39 and then Tom Hartley in quick succession, it was all in vain.Report supplied by ECB, supported by Rothesay.
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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
BBC investigates takeover turmoil behind Morecambe suspension
The National League has announced that Morecambe have been suspended until 20 August due to their perilous financial league has "serious concerns" surrounding the Lancashire club's compliance with its rules and last week warned there would be "possible further sanctions" if terms were not the Shrimps' first three fixtures - against Boston, Brackley and Scunthorpe - have been postponed. If they are unable to provide proof they will be able to complete the whole season by the time the league's compliance and licensing committee meet again next month, they face expulsion."It was decided further sanctions must be imposed, with the club's membership to be suspended with immediate effect," the National League said in a statement on Monday."The committee will meet again on Wednesday, 20 August to determine if outstanding items have been satisfied, and to decide the club's ability to retain membership in the competition."Morecambe have had a chaotic summer since being relegated from League Two, with a deal yet to take place despite two parties having takeover bids accepted, while the board of directors 105-year-old club's current owner Jason Whittingham has missed several self-set deadlines to sell, and has been unable to convince the league's board that the team has the financial means to complete the season, which would be its first outside the Football League since 2007. Does Morecambe's suspension come as a surprise? Current majority shareholders Bond Group, led by businessman Whittingham, purchased Morecambe in May 2018. By September 2022, Whittingham had put the club up for club has since been relegated twice, and no takeover has been completed in that has been a director at 25 companies during his career, according to Companies House. Of those 25 companies, 18 have been either dissolved, voluntarily dissolved, put into administration, put into liquidation, or put into receiver action (the precursor stage to liquidation).Two of Whittingham's companies had been dissolved by compulsory strike-off prior to his takeover of Morecambe - but he still passed the EFL's owners' and directors' 21 of the companies, Whittingham was joint director with business partner Colin Goldring - a legal worker turned entrepreneur - including at Morecambe until Goldring's resignation in August and Goldring were disqualified as company directors for 12 months following a court hearing in 2022. Goldring has also been barred by the Solicitors Regulation Authority from working for any law firm without pair also ran Worcester Warriors rugby club, which went into liquidation in 2022. What has happened with the latest Morecambe takeover bid? Whittingham says he has been trying to sell the club to a consortium led by Jonny Cato, but said over the weekend that Cato has been put off completing a deal "by continual negative press statements impacting on the club".Since Whittingham named Cato as a bidder 10 days ago, Cato has not been seen or heard publicly. In fact, there is no businessman with the name Jonny Cato listed on Companies House, and the only person on professional networking website LinkedIn with the name Jonny Cato is a Swedish BBC contacted a man with a slightly different spelling of the name, the only such person with a credible business background in the UK, and were informed he has nothing to do with a potential bid for the who is Cato? Why does he have no business footprint in the UK? Does he exist?Whittingham has not responded to requests for interview from the BBC. What is behind Panjab Warriors' Morecambe bid? Whittingham also says fellow bidder Panjab Warriors, who announced they had agreed a deal to take over the club earlier this summer, have gone quiet and are refusing BBC understands Panjab Warriors were so convinced their takeover deal would imminently be confirmed that they lined up a replacement who had agreed to take over from current manager Derek Warriors threatened legal action over their takeover not being completed and said they have already invested millions of pounds into the club to keep it Monday, lawyers representing Morecambe's minority shareholders announced they had not been able to contact any representative from Panjab Warriors for a week, rendering their attempt to force a sale through their website Panjab Warriors state they "invest in sporting excellence" and "execute deals that drive value". But the group does not list any specific investments, and no information about other investments is listed origin of the group's money is also unclear. At least 75% of Panjab Warriors' shares are owned by a company called JKM Capital, which is majority-owned by businessman Kuljeet Singh show he has been involved in 15 companies during his career, the vast majority of which have been established since 2023, but none appear to have made notable latest accounts describe it as a "dormant" company and list its current cash in hand as £100. Several of Singh Momi's businesses note the involvement of Sarbjot Johal, a young entrepreneur who was heavily linked with a takeover of the club in bid - and youth - earned him plenty of press coverage, but no takeover was ever completed after the extent of his wealth was thrown into exact nature of Singh Momi and Johal's business relationship is not clear, but Singh Momi released a statement last year saying he has cut ties with Warriors have not responded to repeated attempts at contact by the BBC. What does the future hold for Morecambe? Morecambe's staff and players were paid only a third of their wages in June. Any payments for July have not yet been publicly club has a squad of just 10 senior players and has cancelled pre-season friendlies. If and when a sale will be completed - and whether whoever the eventual buyers are represent the financial salvation the club desperately needs - remains to be unless a sale is somehow pushed through before the 20 August deadline, the potential of expulsion - or the club ultimately folding - cannot be ruled out.


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Morecambe's future thrown into doubt after suspension from National League
Morecambe have been suspended from the National League with immediate effect as concern mounts regarding the future of the 105-year-old club. Jason Whittingham, Morecambe's controversial owner, had been given until noon on Monday to outline how the club would meet their financial obligations for the 2025-26 season after talks with the National League last week. However, shortly after the Monday deadline passed, it was announced that further sanctions had been taken against Morecambe at another meeting of the league's compliance and licensing committee. In a statement, the National League said the committee had 'reconvened this afternoon to debate the ongoing concerns surrounding Morecambe Football Club and its compliance with National League rules', adding: 'It was decided further sanctions must be imposed, with the club's membership to be suspended with immediate effect. 'The club will also remain under embargo ahead of the new season. Morecambe Football Club will also be removed from the National League Cup for the forthcoming season.' The committee will meet again on 20 August to consider whether Morecambe have satisfied its financial concerns and 'to decide the club's ability to retain membership in the competition'. That meeting is scheduled for after what would have been Morecambe's opening three games of the new season. Whittingham's Bond Group Investments have been involved in a contentious takeover saga over the past two years that has led to the resignation of Morecambe's board of directors, seen wages paid late and prospective owners, Panjab Warriors, threaten legal action. Panjab Warriors received EFL clearance to complete a takeover last month only for Whittingham to announce that a new buyer had come forward. Whittingham issued a long-awaited statement on the takeover on Sunday in which he claimed his company 'has continued to work with the consortium led by Jonny Cato in their efforts to acquire the majority shareholding' in Morecambe. He blamed negative media reports for giving the consortium 'cause for concern and pause' and claimed the Bond Group had been unable to contact Panjab Warriors over the past week. Morecambe were relegated from the EFL last season after 18 years. Lizzi Collinge, the Labour MP for Morecambe and Lunesdale, said recently there was a 'very real risk' that the club would soon cease to exist.


Scottish Sun
6 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Scottish manager left in limbo as his club is SUSPENDED from English league
BOOTED OUT Scottish manager left in limbo as his club is SUSPENDED from English league A SCOTTISH football manager's future is now up in the air as his club have been SUSPENDED from their league. Crisis-hit Morecambe have been booted out by the National League pending another meeting with the league's Club Compliance and Licensing committee on August 20. 1 It leaves Derek Adams in limbo Credit: Kenny Ramsay But until then, Morecambe - managed by Derek Adams - will not be allowed to play in the division. The Lancashire club were given a deadline of midday on Monday by league chiefs surrounding their compliance with its rules and were warned they would face "possible further sanctions". A statement from the National League read: "It was decided further sanctions must be imposed, with the club's membership to be suspended with immediate effect. "The club will also remain under embargo ahead of the new season. "Morecambe Football Club will also be removed from the National League Cup for the forthcoming season. "The committee will meet again on Wednesday, August 20 to determine if outstanding items have been satisfied, and to decide the club's ability to retain membership in the competition." More to follow. Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page