
Harrison keeps Northants in control against Glos
Northamptonshire leg-spinner Calvin Harrison followed up a career-best knock of 63 with two wickets to keep his side in control of their County Championship clash against Gloucestershire at Wantage Road.Harrison, on loan from Nottinghamshire, shared a ninth-wicket partnership of 90 with Liam Guthrie as the home side posted a daunting total of 469, built around Saif Zaib's career-high 159.Visiting captain Cameron Bancroft defied Northamptonshire with a gritty 60 – his first half-century in seven innings – while Miles Hammond hit a more pugnacious 51, but both fell shortly before stumps to leave Gloucestershire 156-4, still 164 short of the follow-on target.Harrison finished the day with 2-40, with Luke Procter and Harry Conway picking up a wicket apiece.Resuming on 327-6, Northamptonshire built steadily throughout the morning session, with Lewis McManus square cutting Matt Taylor to the boundary to take his stand with Zaib into three figures.Taylor had McManus caught behind for 43 in his next over, persuading the right-hander to nibble outside off stump, but Zaib soon progressed to 150 for the first time as the home side pocketed a third batting bonus point.They declined to attempt a swift dash for a fourth, particularly after Zaib's marathon knock finally came to an end, slashing Archie Bailey to slip, but Harrison, who drove confidently on the off side – including an all-run four off Bailey – and Guthrie batted capably.Gloucestershire brought back Zaman Akhter, who had been wayward early on, for a second spell at the David Capel End and Guthrie immediately steered him to the long-on boundary, prompting them to switch to an all-spin attack leading up to lunch.That included the occasional off-breaks of Hammond, who continued after the interval but was soon targeted as Harrison, having passed his half-century, thumped him to the fence twice in quick succession.Fellow spinner Ollie Price made the breakthrough when Harrison reverse-swept him into the hands of backward point and, with Guthrie holing out for 33 in Graeme van Buuren's next over, it was finally time for Gloucestershire's openers to strap on their pads.There was an early scare for Bancroft, who dragged Guthrie on to his pad rather than the stumps, while Ben Charlesworth survived a hesitant inside edge off Conway in similar fashion.The pair appeared to have settled into their rhythm, but Procter's consistent spell as first change brought rewards when he found the outside edge of Charlesworth's bat and Ricardo Vasconcelos snapped up the chance at slip.However, Bancroft kept the scoreboard ticking along after tea, leg-glancing Conway to the rope and then flicking the seamer off his hips for four more while Ollie Price dropped anchor at the other end.Price had just begun to flex his muscles by sweeping Harrison for two boundaries and tried to turn the leg-spinner around the corner again – but Vasconcelos anticipated the shot and scurried around behind McManus to take the catch.New batter Hammond held firm and flourished against the spinners, scoring freely on both sides of the wicket to reach his fourth 50 of the campaign from 60 balls, sharing a stand of 80 with Bancroft.But Harrison returned to pin Hammond leg before and Bancroft departed in the next over, caught down the leg side off Conway as Gloucestershire limped through to the close.Report supplied by ECB Reporters Network, supported by Rothesay
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

South Wales Argus
15 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Assistant coach Jeetan Patel admits 151 overs in field had taken toll on England
Captain Shubman Gill ground down the hosts with a superb 269, occupying the crease for eight and a half hours as he guided his side to a formidable score of 587. That is the most England have conceded since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took over the team three years ago and they were creaking at the end of 151 overs in the field. Shubman Gill's superb double hundred put India in control (Martin Rickett/PA) The strain showed as India picked off their top three in eight overs with the new ball, Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope dismissed for ducks off successive deliveries from Akash Deep as they finished 510 adrift on 77 for three. 'Spending 151 overs in the dirt in any scenario is pretty tough. There's some tired minds and tired bodies,' said assistant coach Jeetan Patel. 'You put in that much effort and it's not just physical, it's mental as well. Credit to Shubman for the way he's batted over two days, it was a masterclass in how to bat on a good wicket. The guys threw everything at them, and rightly so, but they're very tired for their efforts. 'They'll get a good night's rest tonight.' Brydon Carse has been hampered by toe problems (Joe Giddens/PA) Brydon Carse was down on pace and amid concerns that the toe problems that forced him to withdraw from the Champions Trophy earlier this year had resurfaced, with Patel hinting that he would now be rested for next week's third Test at Lord's. First, though, there are three hard days ahead. A draw would be the likeliest route to preserving England's 1-0 lead but that option is anathema to Stokes' side, who have upset cricketing logic on three different occasions to win after conceding over 500. Asked if England still felt they can turn things around, Patel said: 'One hundred per cent, I've said this many a time and (people) keep laughing at me. 'We will find another way of trying to get over the line. That's the beauty of the team we have, the players we have and the belief they have. There is lots of cricket to go on a fast-scoring ground and you never know what can happen.' Ravindra Jadeja says India's only concern is taking 20 wickets (Martin Rickett/PA) England's commitment to the positive approach is understandable given they chased down a lofty target of 371 to win the series opener but India all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja had a sharp response. 'In cricket, in press conferences, you can talk whatever you want to talk,' he said. 'It's none of my business, but at the end of the day you have to go out and perform and take those 20 wickets. That's all that matters.'


BreakingNews.ie
21 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Iga Swiatek fights back to reach Wimbledon third round
Four-time French Open champion Iga Swiatek avoided joining Wimbledon's lengthy list of fallen seeds by stylishly battling back to beat world number 208 Caty McNally. The 24-year-old – a five-time major winner, having also claimed the 2022 US Open title – was in danger of seeing her comparatively woeful SW19 record continue after blowing a 4-1 lead to drop the opening set. Advertisement But she responded impressively in the Centre Court sunshine to prevail 5-7 6-2 6-1 in two hours and 25 minutes. Reigning champion Barbora Krejcikova and 2022 winner Elena Rybakina also progressed to round three on day four of the Championships. World number four Swiatek was Wimbledon girls' champion in 2018 but has only a single quarter-final appearance at the senior level of the tournament on an otherwise-impressive CV. With the women's draw wide open following the elimination of five of the top 10 seeds, including last year's runner-up Jasmine Paolini and current French Open champion Coco Gauff, the clay-court specialist was in serious danger of becoming the latest scalp. Advertisement American McNally, who had a career-high ranking of 54 prior to recent injury issues and beat Britain's Jodie Burrage in round one, stunned her rival by winning six of seven consecutive games to snatch the first set. Defending champion Barbora Krejcikova progressed in three sets (Jordan Pettitt/PA) Yet the 23-year-old was victorious in only three more as Pole Swiatek marched on to a meeting with former Australian Open finalist Danielle Collins after finishing with an ace. Earlier, title holder Krejcikova overcame Caroline Dolehide 6-4 3-6 6-2 to set up a clash with 10th seeded American Emma Navarro, who wasted little time in dispatching Russian Veronika Kudermetova 6-1 6-2. World number 11 Rybakina defeated Maria Sakkari 6-3 6-1, while 18-year-old seventh-seed Mirra Andreeva beat Lucia Bronzetti 6-1 7-6 (7-4). Advertisement Italian world number 116 Elisabetta Cocciaretto backed up her shock success against third seed Jessica Pegula with a 6-0 6-4 triumph over American Katie Volynets Dayana Yastremska, who knocked out Gauff, came from behind to edge past Anastasia Zakharova 5-7 7-5 7-6 (8). Russian pair Ekaterina Alexandrova and Liudmila Samsonova, seeded 18th and 19th respectively, each enjoyed straight-sets victories. Canadian lucky loser Victoria Mboko, 18, lost to Hailey Baptiste of the United States. Advertisement


Times
27 minutes ago
- Times
Jack Draper outplayed by inspired Marin Cilic in Wimbledon second round
The Jack Draper bandwagon suffered a serious blowout as youth bowed to experience in the duel of the big-hitters on No1 Court. Marin Cilic, a finalist eight years ago, belied his age, knee operations and lowly ranking of No83, to inflict a chastening 6-4, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4 second-round defeat on Britain's leading man. The 36-year-old Croat, 13 years older than the fourth seed, started in belligerent fashion with flat, hard and wounding ground strokes, racing into a two-set lead. Draper did find something in the third to still the momentum, but back came Cilic. Last year he became the lowest-ranked player to win an ATP Tour event at No777, and last month's follow-up on the grass of the Nottingham Open served another warning. He may not have beaten a top-five player at Wimbledon before, but he had made the final in 2017 and was here as the most dangerous of loose cannons. Draper did mount a comeback but Cilic steadied himself and his forehand paved the way. He struck 27 winners off that wing compared with Draper's seven. He played a brave, risky game with little margin for error — but how it paid off. He then thanked his watching children. 'They are one of the reasons I kept such a great passion,' he said. 'Running after them keeps me in great shape.' Trailing 2-1 in sets, Draper took issue with a call in the fifth game of the next. Of course, the absence of line judges meant he was bemoaning AI. It showed the tension and exasperation, and if anything, endeared him to a crowd yearning for the sort of old-fashioned comeback that Andy Murray used to serve up to make a mockery of dinner reservations. Not this year, though. He did not do too much wrong but credit to his opponent. Cilic is dangerously erratic. You wouldn't always bet your bus fare on him, let alone the mortgage, but he is bereft of expectations and can be brilliant. Even in his pomp he betrayed traces of sometime coach and fellow Croat, Goran Ivanisevic, who would talk of 'Good Goran' and 'Bad Goran' and mix the sublime and ridiculous. Some Wimbledon finals are one-sided, but Ivanisevic's winning turn had at least three. So, too, Cilic can ebb and flow. Draper said all the right things in the preamble. Cilic was an 'amazing player' who has had an 'unbelievable career'. He hoped to get 'bad Marin', the old one with the knackered knee, but got the much improved one rolling back the years. Cilic was inspired. Draper raised his level and fought tooth and nail, but it was not enough. He saved two break points at 4-3 down in the fourth but was broken in the last game. It was edgy and enduringly entertaining. He made a sharp, and surprisingly premature, exit.