
'Leader' Coad extends Yorkshire contract until 2028
Yorkshire pace bowler Ben Coad has extended his contract until at least the end of the 2028 season.The 31-year-old took a division-leading 56 wickets as the Headingley side won promotion back to Division One of the County Championship last season."I take real pride in representing my home county," he told the club website., external"I'm incredibly excited for this next chapter at the club. We have a great set of young, talented cricketers coming through and I want to do all I can to help develop them and push the team to some silverware."
New Yorkshire head coach Anthony McGrath, who signed a five-year contract in October, called Coad "one of the best bowlers in the country" and was "delighted" the deal had been done. "The hard work he consistently puts in continues to pay off for himself and the team," McGrath said."He is not just exceptional on the pitch, he's a leader off it, too and his presence in the dressing room is crucial at a time when we're reaching that next level."

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Glasgow Times
16 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
Adam Hose hits career-best 266 as Worcestershire dominate day one at Hampshire
Hose smashed 31 fours and seven sixes off 253 deliveries, while stand-in captain Libby passed 10,000 career runs on his way to an unbeaten 137. The Pears, who have won only once all season, reached 463 for three at stumps in the Division One match at Southampton. Adam Hose is caught for a simply sublime 266. 🔥 Absolutely astonishing Adam! 🙌 Worcestershire 455/3 (94.5 overs) — Worcestershire CCC (@WorcsCCC) June 29, 2025 Centuries from Dom Sibley and Sam Curran helped reigning champions Surrey take control against Durham. Opener Sibley remained unbeaten on 169 and Curran contributed 108 off 124 balls in a score of 407 for three, with captain Rory Burns having registered 55 at the start of the innings at The Oval. Dan Lawrence will resume alongside Sibley on 58 for the second-placed hosts. Half-centuries from James Rew, Tom Abell and Tom Banton dug Somerset out of trouble against leaders Nottinghamshire at Taunton. CLOSE: Somerset end day one 275/6 from 96 overs here at the CACG. 🏏 Abell 64🏏 Rew 58🏏 Banton 57*#SOMvNOT#WeAreSomerset — Somerset Cricket (@SomersetCCC) June 29, 2025 The hosts slipped to 46 for three after winning the toss before Rew (58), Abell (64) and Banton (57 not out) guided them to 275 for six at the close. Essex captain Tom Westley made 107 as his side closed on 248 for three away to relegation rivals Yorkshire. Westley hit 12 fours in 239 balls and shared 198 for the second wicket with former South Africa captain Dean Elgar, who was dismissed for 94. Warwickshire opener Rob Yates made 93 in a total of 372 for seven against third-placed Sussex at Hove. And that's stumps on day one. 🤝 — Sussex Cricket (@SussexCCC) June 29, 2025 Sam Hain and Ed Barnard posted 87 and 66 respectively for the visitors, while Henry Crocombe took three for 73 for the hosts. In Division Two, Middlesex opener Sam Robson recorded his first County Championship hundred of the season as his side ended on 336 for five against table-topping Leicestershire. Robson hit 133 in an first-wicket stand of 173 with Joshua De Caires (76), while Roman Walker took three for 57 for the home team. Ben Compton celebrated being handed his county cap and a new three-year contract by making 66 during Kent's clash with Northamptonshire at Canterbury. 📝 We're delighted to announce that Ben Compton has signed a new three-year contract with the county, which will now run until at least the end of the 2028 season 🧱 — Kent Cricket (@KentCricket) June 29, 2025 The division's bottom side were 325 for four at stumps, with Tawanda Muyeye hitting 58 and captain Daniel Bell-Drummond not out on 66. Landmark centuries from Keaton Jennings and Chris Green revived Lancashire against Derbyshire at Chesterfield. Jennings passed 12,000 first-class runs on his way to 106 while Green celebrated his maiden red ball hundred as Lancashire recovered from 132 for six to 367 all out. James Bracey's unbeaten 57 backed up half-centuries from captain Cameron Bancroft and Zaman Akhter as Gloucestershire closed on 279 for seven against Glamorgan at Cardiff. Timm van der Gugten trapped Bancroft lbw for 50 and later dismissed Akhter by the same method for 58. Mason Crane chipped in with three wickets.


Times
an hour ago
- Times
Adam Hose at home with the Kookaburra ball for Worcestershire
For a batsman short of runs, this mid-summer introduction of the Kookaburra ball is a boon. As it was for Adam Hose, who scored the first double century of his career, and Jake Libby, who made an unbeaten 137, against a Hampshire attack unable to gain any movement off this unpronounced seam. The upshot was that Worcestershire, who had amassed only three batting points in their eight previous County Championship matches, finished with the healthiest of totals. Hose would have relished scoring so many runs on this ground, for he is from Ventnor on the Isle of Wight, which in cricketing parlance is a part of Hampshire. He was on the county's junior books until under-17 level, once playing against a Cardiff MCCU side that included Libby, whereupon he was released. He went to Somerset, then to Warwickshire, and on to New Road. His runs here were a reward for perseverance and recognition, not just because he is 32, of maturity as a cricketer. He made 266 off 253 balls with 31 fours and seven sixes. Last week he became a father for the first time and now he and Libby put on 395 for the third wicket. Nothing Hampshire tried on a sweltering day came off, including at one stage Kyle Abbott bowling with all nine fielders on the leg side, five of them in an arc close to the bat. In addition, they chose not to play a second spinner, Felix Organ being relegated to 12th man. Hampshire are awash with promising young fast bowlers. Sonny Baker, however, is still injured and John Turner appears out of favour. This was not the best day for Dominic Kelly, of Millfield School, Hampshire Hogs and England Under-19, to make his championship debut but he did dismiss Hose, whose innings was the highest by a visiting batsman on this ground, beating Phil Jaques's 243 for Yorkshire in 2004. Taunton (first day of four; Somerset won toss): Somerset have scored 275 for six against Nottinghamshire It was a day of hard toil for Nottinghamshire, the Division One leaders, after they lost what could prove an important toss. Somerset, pleased to bat first on a used pitch that should turn later in the match, lost three wickets in the first hour but only three more in the rest of the day as they clearly set out to occupy the crease for as long as possible in their first innings (Geoffrey Dean writes). White-ball swashbucklers Tom Abell and Tom Banton were accordingly obliged to accumulate rather than dominate against an admittedly disciplined Nottinghamshire attack. Abell grafted his way to 64, which took him 166 balls, before Banton compiled a painstaking unbeaten 57 off 128 balls that featured only six fours. After Abell had been fifth out with the score at 179 — a soft dismissal when he tickled one down the leg side to the wicketkeeper — Banton and the composed Archie Vaughan shared a valuable sixth-wicket stand of 71 until the latter fell to a sharp slip catch off the second new ball. Notwithstanding the smaller seam of the Kookaburra ball, in use for the second of four successive rounds of championship matches, Nottinghamshire's opening pair of Mohammad Abbas and Brett Hutton found movement until it got older. Hutton beat Sean Dickson with a straight one that he played across, and then persuaded Tom Lammonby to prod fatally at one that left him. Abbas, seldom to be denied, produced a fine leg cutter to have Tom Kohler-Cadmore caught behind. That represented a blow for Somerset as he looked in prime form, hitting three majestic back-foot forcing shots for four in his polished 31. James Rew likewise played very convincingly to reach an 86-ball fifty, adding 99 with Abell in 34 overs. A big score appeared within his grasp until he fell tamely, driving a length ball straight back to the bowler, Lyndon James. For Nottinghamshire, Liam Patterson-White performed a good holding job with his accurate left-arm spin, bowling 32 overs for 67 runs from the river end and picking up Abell's wicket. That allowed his captain to rotate the seamers from the other end on a day that started under cloud before becoming hot after lunch. Conditions cooled in the final hour when Kasey Aldridge (6 off 36 balls) and Banton eked out 24 from the final 13 overs.

Leader Live
5 hours ago
- Leader Live
Adam Hose hits career-best 266 as Worcestershire dominate day one at Hampshire
Hose smashed 31 fours and seven sixes off 253 deliveries, while stand-in captain Libby passed 10,000 career runs on his way to an unbeaten 137. The Pears, who have won only once all season, reached 463 for three at stumps in the Division One match at Southampton. Adam Hose is caught for a simply sublime 266. 🔥 Absolutely astonishing Adam! 🙌 Worcestershire 455/3 (94.5 overs) — Worcestershire CCC (@WorcsCCC) June 29, 2025 Centuries from Dom Sibley and Sam Curran helped reigning champions Surrey take control against Durham. Opener Sibley remained unbeaten on 169 and Curran contributed 108 off 124 balls in a score of 407 for three, with captain Rory Burns having registered 55 at the start of the innings at The Oval. Dan Lawrence will resume alongside Sibley on 58 for the second-placed hosts. Half-centuries from James Rew, Tom Abell and Tom Banton dug Somerset out of trouble against leaders Nottinghamshire at Taunton. CLOSE: Somerset end day one 275/6 from 96 overs here at the CACG. 🏏 Abell 64🏏 Rew 58🏏 Banton 57*#SOMvNOT#WeAreSomerset — Somerset Cricket (@SomersetCCC) June 29, 2025 The hosts slipped to 46 for three after winning the toss before Rew (58), Abell (64) and Banton (57 not out) guided them to 275 for six at the close. Essex captain Tom Westley made 107 as his side closed on 248 for three away to relegation rivals Yorkshire. Westley hit 12 fours in 239 balls and shared 198 for the second wicket with former South Africa captain Dean Elgar, who was dismissed for 94. Warwickshire opener Rob Yates made 93 in a total of 372 for seven against third-placed Sussex at Hove. And that's stumps on day one. 🤝 — Sussex Cricket (@SussexCCC) June 29, 2025 Sam Hain and Ed Barnard posted 87 and 66 respectively for the visitors, while Henry Crocombe took three for 73 for the hosts. In Division Two, Middlesex opener Sam Robson recorded his first County Championship hundred of the season as his side ended on 336 for five against table-topping Leicestershire. Robson hit 133 in an first-wicket stand of 173 with Joshua De Caires (76), while Roman Walker took three for 57 for the home team. Ben Compton celebrated being handed his county cap and a new three-year contract by making 66 during Kent's clash with Northamptonshire at Canterbury. 📝 We're delighted to announce that Ben Compton has signed a new three-year contract with the county, which will now run until at least the end of the 2028 season 🧱 — Kent Cricket (@KentCricket) June 29, 2025 The division's bottom side were 325 for four at stumps, with Tawanda Muyeye hitting 58 and captain Daniel Bell-Drummond not out on 66. Landmark centuries from Keaton Jennings and Chris Green revived Lancashire against Derbyshire at Chesterfield. Jennings passed 12,000 first-class runs on his way to 106 while Green celebrated his maiden red ball hundred as Lancashire recovered from 132 for six to 367 all out. James Bracey's unbeaten 57 backed up half-centuries from captain Cameron Bancroft and Zaman Akhter as Gloucestershire closed on 279 for seven against Glamorgan at Cardiff. Timm van der Gugten trapped Bancroft lbw for 50 and later dismissed Akhter by the same method for 58. Mason Crane chipped in with three wickets.