
County cricket talking points: Notts soar higher as Lancashire sink lower
A second consecutive win – a 366-run evisceration of Hampshire – lifted Nottinghamshire 12 points clear at the top of Division One. Haseeb Hameed's team are clearly the outstanding team in the Championship with more than a third of the season already gone.
Playing only his 10th first class match, Freddie McCann, who started the campaign as a teenager, was last man out for 138, his third career century. Kyle Abbott's five wickets had justified, to some extent, Ben Brown's decision to bowl – an increasingly popular option for captains. But Hampshire had no answer to a seam attack ideally suited to Trent Bridge conditions, Mohammad Abbas (five wickets), Brett Hutton (six) and Lyndon James (seven) rolling Mr Brown's Boys twice for 196 and 116. There was time in-between for Jack Haynes and Liam Patterson-White to notch what felt like decisive second-innings tons, but they proved merely icing on a considerable cake.
Brett Hutton has been a consistent performer for years now and it's something of a surprise to learn that he's still only 32. He's only ever played representative cricket at Under-19 level, pigeonholed as lacking the pace to get Test batters out on Test strips. I suspect England would have said the same of his fellow opening bowler in this match, but Abbas has 100 Test wickets at 23, which rather rebuts that argument.
After a bit of a mauling from the leaders last time out, Sussex defeated a spirited Worcestershire to go third in the table with the vanquished county in danger of being tailed off at the bottom.
The crucial innings in a low-scoring match was played by Jack Carson, whose first innings 102 from No 8 improved the scoreboard from 88 for 6 to 284 all out. Finn Hudson-Prentice's 5 for 40 was enough to secure a 104-run first-innings lead and, despite a fighting 167 from Jake Libby, victory was secured by 47 runs.
Carson, once a bowler who bats, is morphing into a batter who bowls, as his season averages, 42 and 67, stand in contrast to his career averages, 24 and 33. The County Armagh born off-spinner is England-qualified and, though he has some development to do before he's seriously mentioned in dispatches, at 24 he has time on his side. But runs in Spring and wickets in Autumn, is a very handy combination for a county pro to possess.
How many is enough, was the question on Jonny Bairstow's mind, as he plundered 79 runs at better than a 100 strike rate having been given an armchair ride by Adam Lyth's latest big knock, 185. If 520 seemed excessive, even at Chelmsford, it didn't look like it mattered much as Essex, having chased leather for 116 overs, squandered four wickets on the third evening.
But, as Scarlett O'Hara knew, tomorrow is another day and all-rounder Matt Critchley and wicketkeeper Michael Pepper came out with the intention of frustrating the bowlers and did so, batting through to the last ball before tea, each going at the Boycottian strike rate of 30.
It was a herculean effort that Simon Harmer backed up with 37 overs of unbowed resistance of his own, superbly supported by a 32-ball duck from Shane Snater and 80 minutes split evenly between No 10 Kasun Rajitha and No 11 Jamie Porter. The draw didn't do either side much good in the table, but that home sextet had played cricket from a bygone age, demonstrating the patience and bloody-mindedness that, like a particularly rich tiramisu, is a delight, but not one to enjoy every week.
As 665 for 5 declared played 504 and 15 for 0, Warwickshire drew with Surrey – and cricket lost.
Praise for the home side's Tom Latham (184), Ed Barnard (177*), Zen Malik (105*) and Rob Yates (86 and 47 cruel overs of off breaks). And for the visitors' Ben Foakes (174* after five sessions of keeping) and Matt Fisher (nearly four hours batting at No 11 after 28 overs hard labour). If Beasley Street was a sociologists' paradise, Edgbaston was a statistician's paradise – and just about as attractive.
How is it possible to retain a squad of top-flight veterans, add an overseas player who has hit nearly 150 runs more than any other batter in the County Championship and yet find yourself rock bottom of Division Two? Your correspondent is not the only Lancashire supporter asking those questions.
After four draws, the Red Rose wilted to an ignominious defeat at Wantage Road. At 67 for 6 on the first morning, Lancashire had the home side exactly where they wanted them, but a spirited late-order fightback got Northamptonshire up to 238, representing a toehold in the match. Marcus Harris then did what he does and constructed a third ton in five matches to secure a useful 38-run lead on first innings.
At 107 for five, Northamptonshire's top order had failed again and it looked like Lancashire's season would be getting off to a start at last. But the match turned on Ben Sanderson being dropped on four and then blitzing 65 off 28 balls from No 9, a first half century after 112 matches, setting a shell-shocked batting line-up 236 for the win. On-loan leg-spinner, Calvin Harrison, snared Harris to break a stand of 83 for the third wicket and the next seven couldn't muster 50 runs between them.
Dale Benkenstein, Mark Chilton and Keaton Jennings have two more Championship matches before the break for the T20 Blast. The locals at Old Trafford will be informing them of exactly what's required come Friday's fixture against Derbyshire.
Daniel Bell-Drummond had cause to reflect on how capricious the game of cricket can be having won the toss and sent Glamorgan in to bat at Canterbury. After Asa Tribe fell just short of a maiden first-class century, another 21-year-old came to the crease looking for a first ton, and only left it after the declaration came on 549 for 9, Ben Kellaway's share 181.
Bell-Drummond must have believed that his own sequence of low scores had come to an end with his 223 at Lord's last time out – three and five suggested otherwise. Only Chris Benjamin, with 94 not out, offered much resistance as Kent went down by an innings and plenty, finding no answers to Glamorgan's experienced seam attack.
Both sides remain in the logjam of five counties with points tallies in the 50s. Not for the first time, the division is producing too many draws and lacks shape.
This article is from The 99.94 Cricket Blog
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Reuters
28 minutes ago
- Reuters
Lack of test preparation no bother for South Africa head of WTC final
LONDON, June 8 (Reuters) - A lack of preparation for the World Test Championship final will be no problem for South Africa as they get set to take on Australia at Lord's, opener Aiden Markram said on Sunday. South Africa last played a test in January when they beat Pakistan to book a place in the WTC final and their hopes of an extensive warm-up last week were stymied as their four-day match with Zimbabwe was largely rained out. "A lot of our series have been two test series, so in order to win them, you can't start slow, so I suppose there's a little bit of that that's helped us along the way," Markram told a press conference at Lord's, where the WTC final begins on Wednesday. "We know the importance of starting well, trying to get ahead of the game early and how important each session is going to be, because there's no second dip at it. "We have to make sure we hit the ground running and are nice and sharp come day one," he added. South Africa qualified for the final with a seven-match winning streak but also having played seven tests fewer than Australia, who are defending champions. "We've had a lot fewer games, so I suppose every time you get in, everyone's obviously getting super pumped up to play test cricket because we don't play as much of it," Markram said. South African cricket has a long history of coming close but failing in limited overs tournaments, but Markram felt that would have no impact on their first WTC final. "This team's obviously very different (in) personnel to what the white-ball squad was, so we haven't addressed it too much," he said. "The few of us that have been a part of previous ICC events that didn't go our way, have dealt with it. We've obviously chatted to each other and made sure we've buried it nicely and taken some good lessons from it. "But besides from that now it's more about the excitement of having another opportunity to actually do the job. So it's pretty much where the mind is at the moment. If we play good cricket, you give ourselves at least a fairly good chance of winning."


BBC News
40 minutes ago
- BBC News
Hope attacks after Wood strikes for England - text, radio & clips
Update: Date: 15:13 BST Title: Post Content: Carlos BrathwaiteFormer West Indies all-rounder on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra This over is an important one. You feel like something will happen. West Indies have to target Bethell with Rashid bowling at the other end. Update: Date: 8.2 overs Title: WI 73-1 Content: Could that be taken... no, just over the leaping Will Jacks for six. Johnson Charles slog sweeps Jacob Bethell and just clears the sweeper on the rope. Update: Date: 8 overs Title: WI 66-1 Content: Runs from every delivery of Adil Rashid's first over, but no boundaries again as the England spinner rattles through his first six. Update: Date: 15:07 BST Title: Post Content: Carlos BrathwaiteFormer West Indies all-rounder on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra There were two horrific drag-downs in that over by Jacob Bethell and they were both dots. Update: Date: 7 overs Title: WI 59-1 Content: Jacob Bethell replaces Liam Dawson for the first over out the powerplay. Left-arm spinner around the wicket which the West Indies can't get away - just four singles from the over. Update: Date: 6 overs Title: WI 55-1 Content: Carse sends down a bouncer to end the powerplay, but it's called a no ball. Hope smokes the resulting free hit straight to mid-off - no run. Update: Date: 15:03 BST Title: Post Content: Carlos BrathwaiteFormer West Indies all-rounder on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra Again Carse is too full. He needs to find the one between that and the hit-the-length length. Update: Date: 5.5 overs Title: WI 55-1 Content: Two balls later, same shot, even bigger. The six lands deep in the stands, where it's shelled by a member of the public. 50 up for the West Indies. Update: Date: 15:02 BST Title: Post Content: Alex HartleyFormer England bowler on BBC Test Match Special Hope gave himself so much room, probably too much, and he ended up reaching for it. He's still hit it for six. Update: Date: 15:02 BST Title: Post Content: Henry MoeranTest Match Special commentator on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra That is a massive hit. Update: Date: 5.3 overs Title: WI 48-1 Content: Big hit. Brydon Carse continues to take a bit of punishment from Shai Hope, with the West Indies captain making room to smash a six over mid-off. Update: Date: 15:00 BST Title: How's stat?! Content: Kieran ParmleyCricviz analyst This video can not be played Hope smashes Dawson over deep mid-wicket for six Shai Hope has improved significantly in T20Is after a poor start to his T20I career, upping both his average and strike rate significantly: 2017-2022 - 17 innings, 17.88 average, 121 strike rate 2023-Now - 22 innings, 35.62 average, 149 strike rate Update: Date: 5 overs Title: WI 40-1 Content: A couple of singles for Charles and Hope, to either side of the wicket, end the over. Update: Date: 14:59 BST Title: Post Content: Alex HartleyFormer England bowler on BBC Test Match Special A creaky bat handle... Update: Date: 4.4 overs Title: Not out Content: Daniel's ears can't be bested, snicko has absolutely nothing whatsoever - not a spike to be seen. Should that be a wide then? Nothing given. Update: Date: 14:57 BST Title: Post Content: Daniel NorcrossTest Match Special commentator on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra Buttler said "you have got to refer this". I didn't hear a noise, I have got to say. Update: Date: 14:57 BST Title: Post Content: Alex HartleyFormer England bowler on BBC Test Match Special The spinner's margin for error with the off-side up is actually the leg-side wide. It is so hard to bowl to this field. Update: Date: 4.4 overs Title: Umpire review Content: A change of ends for Liam Dawson, and Johnson Charles gets his innings going by twice dropping back and cutting short balls from the spinner to the off side boundary. But now England fancy they have him out, caught down the leg side by Jos Buttler. They're going to take a look. Update: Date: 14:55 BST Title: Post Content: Alex HartleyFormer England bowler on BBC Test Match Special Three shots have all gone to the boundary by Shai Hope and he has not swiped at any of them. Update: Date: 4 overs Title: WI 28-1 Content: Hope makes it three boundaries a row, easing the ball through third for four with an open face. A further single to point takes him to 24 from 14, Charles has two from 10.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
How Palace are fighting to keep European dream alive
Crystal Palace are anxiously waiting to hear whether their European dream is over before it even begins. Winning the FA Cup - the Eagles' first major trophy triumph - resulted in the south London club qualifying for the Europa League, the club's only qualification into continental football in their 164-year whether Palace can start planning for European football is in the hands of governing body Uefa, who must decide whether the Eagles have breached its rules on teams under one multi-club ownership structure competing in the same European final ruling will centre on American businessman John Textor, owner of Eagle Football - which holds a 43% stake in Football also owns a 77% stake in French side Lyon, who - like Palace - have qualified for next season's Europa BBC Sport outlines the details of Palace's defence as they fight for their European lives. Palace deny operating multi-club model Uefa's regulations are in place to prevent collusion between clubs. At the heart of Palace's argument is that their historic FA Cup win and consequential European qualification was an achievement accomplished entirely on their own are insisting they are an entity that operates entirely independently, and not within the structures of a multi-club with knowledge of the situation have told BBC Sport that Textor's personal share in the Selhurst Park side does not meet the 30% threshold - which is key in Uefa determining decisive influence - and that he has just 25% of the voting rules state that "no individual or legal entity" can hold a majority of shareholder voting rights at two clubs in the same European it is understood Palace have made clear they had no assistance in winning the FA Cup, in that they have not collaborated with Lyon since Textor's original investment into the club in August 2021 and will have no connection with the French side during next year's Europa Premier League side are believed to have pointed out that there have been no transfers between the clubs since Jake O'Brien, now at Everton, left Palace for Lyon in August also say there has been no employee, backroom staff or coach sharing, no dialogue, no collaborative strategy, no combined partnerships, sponsorships or commercial deals and no collective scouting, analysis or software is accepted, and been widely reported, that chairman Steve Parish and his leadership team make all final decisions in relation to the management and operations at working structure has existed for a decade and is supported by fellow shareholders Josh Harris and David Textor, who only has one vote, has publicly spoken about his lack of influence at Selhurst Park."As proud as we are to have been a part of the resurgence of Crystal Palace, it remains true that Crystal Palace is an independent club, run by a man with a steady hand, who has achieved a level of sustainability that is incredibly uncommon in today's Premier League," said Textor in May 2024."An integrated sporting model, such as ours at Eagle, is simply not a perfect fit for Crystal Palace."It has been pointed out to Uefa that Textor is an individual and minority shareholder and, when he first invested into Crystal Palace in 2021, he owned no other clubs and his investment into other teams followed takeover over Lyon was confirmed in 2022, 16 months after he secured a stake in Palace. Textor could resign as Palace director Under Article 5 of Uefa's rulebook, which relates to the integrity of the "competition/multi-club ownership", a club is required from March 1 2025 to have complied with the requirements necessary to prove they are not "simultaneously involved in any capacity whatsoever in the management, administration, and/or sporting performance of more than one club participating in a Uefa club competition".In the past clubs have sought to divest the stakes of key shareholders with a view to complying with Uefa's example, the City Group, Ineos, Red Bull group and most recently Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis have adapted their shareholdings in clubs accordingly to ensure their teams can compete in the same European year Ineos, which owns Manchester United, put its shares in French club Nice into a blind trust to ensure both clubs could compete in the Europa League last made a similar move earlier this season by placing its ownership of Swiss club Lausanne-Sport into a blind trust, before a potential conflict in the 2025-26 rules regarding the March 1 deadline are clear - and clubs have sought to comply with the regulations and cut-offs. A template for Palace to follow is in Palace are understood to have made clear that Textor's position means he cannot be enforced by the club to place his shares into a blind trust, owing to a lack of legal authority, unlike previous precedents where a single entity owns multiple as has been well documented, effectively holds the deciding vote at Palace with the backing of Harris and Blitzer, so existing shareholder agreements would need to be altered to enforce a blind trust scenario - which is not within the club's power and infringes on Textor's property is also a sense that the chain of events that have left Palace's position in European football in jeopardy were unforeseen and is a factor towards why they failed to meet the deadline for ownership faced Millwall in the FA Cup fifth round on March 1. Since then they beat Champions League clubs Aston Villa and Manchester City en route to winning the side Strasbourg conceded a 90th-minute goal on the final day of the season to hand Lyon the final Europa Conference League spot, before Paris St-Germain later won the French Cup to elevate Lyon into the Europa Uefa rules that Lyon and Palace cannot both compete in the Europa League, regulations state that the French side will play in the competition because of their higher league that scenario Palace could play in the Europa Conference League, but even then there is the added complication that Danish club Brondby, who have qualified for the Conference League, are owned by Harris and missed the deadline, Palace have expressed to Uefa that they are prepared to take immediate steps to comply with their with knowledge of the situation have told BBC Sport that one of those measures includes the resignation of Textor as a director of Palace, which would mean he will have no influence in any capacity. 'Europa League ban is disproportionate' It is understood Palace are arguing that banning them from the Europa League would result in a disproportionate sanction and unfairly punish the club, players, staff, fans and local thoughts are that preventing the club from competing in the Europa League next season would result in an injustice, particularly given their breach is technical and that no competitive harm has is believed Palace also feel that refusing them a place would contradict the promotion of football's development that ensure that "sporting values always prevail", as per Article 2 of Uefa's sources are indicating that Palace believe a fine or temporary oversight measures - for example the monitoring of transfers - would appropriately punish a breach, without harming stakeholders who have no involvement in the ownership is expected to confirm its decision in the coming weeks.