
Geddes and Sharma put Middlesex in control at Leics
Ben Geddes scored his first century for Middlesex and Naavya Sharma took four wickets to put Division Two leaders Leicestershire under pressure on day two of their County Championship match at the Uptonsteel County Ground.Badly dropped on 11 on the first evening, Geddes, 23, was eventually out for a career-best 137 as the visitors amassed a challenging total of 534 after being asked to bat first.Then England Under-19 right-arm quick Sharma - playing in only his third first-class match at 19-years-old - plunged them into disarray with four wickets in 11 balls as the promotion favourites found themselves in unfamiliar territory, despite a half-century from opener Rishi Patel.Ben Green, the on-loan Somerset all-rounder who had been guilty of the error from which Geddes profited so handsomely, had been the best of a depleted home attack with 3-54 from 28 overs, seamer Roman Walker finishing with a career-best 3-78.Geddes, who moved to Middlesex from Surrey over the winter, supplemented Sam Robson's 133 on day one as next-to-bottom Middlesex posted their biggest total of the summer before Sharma (4-24) showed the way to bowl with the much-criticised Kookaburra ball, finding movement that had eluded others.Tom Helm chipped in with two of his own as Leicestershire plunged from 39-1 to 99-8, as the hosts finished the day on 103-8.Earlier, Middlesex added a further 102 before lunch to their 336-five overnight for the loss only of nightwatchman Sharma.Leicestershire could not make more inroads until the eighth over after lunch when Cracknell (38) nicked Green to first slip, the pair having added 92 for the seventh wicket.Moments earlier, Geddes had pulled Sam Wood for his ninth four to complete his hundred from 167 balls.Zafar Gohar was caught off bat and pad, before Geddes, having overtaken his previous best (124 for Surrey v Kent in 2022), was bowled by Patel, whose off-spin had not been seen in competitive professional cricket before last week, but now has two wickets to his name.Noah Cornwell, the 20-year-old left-arm seamer, was leg before without scoring but Middlesex would have been delighted with their work, even though it was worth only three bonus points.They were happier still to have Leicestershire 39-2 inside nine overs in reply.Sol Budinger perished for 10 from eight balls, leg before to Cornwell. Trevaskis, promoted to number three in the absence of the injured Rehan Ahmed, fell for three, edging Ryan Higgins to first slip.Patel and Lewis Hill battled to rebuild, but after the third-wicket pair had added a painstaking 43 in 16 overs, the Middlesex tactic of bowling short to Hill paid off as the former Leicestershire captain was caught behind off the glove, pulling.What looked initially like a well-worked breakthrough on a pitch that had hardly been helpful until then turned out to be the start of a devastating spell by Sharma that yielded four wickets in 11 balls without a run conceded.The right-arm quick followed the dismissal of Hill by nipping one away to have Australian Test batter Peter Handscomb nicking behind, before taking two in three balls as Green fended to short leg and Ben Cox was beaten past the inside edge to be leg before, leaving Leicestershire in deep trouble at 88-6.That became 99-8 as Helm bowled Patel and had Logan van Beek caught behind from consecutive deliveries before Chris Wright survived the hat-trick ball.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


Daily Mail
20 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Alex de Minaur leads the charge as Aussies recover from disastrous opening day at Wimbledon
Australia's Wimbledon challenge has been reinvigorated after a disastrous opening day with the national No.1s Alex de Minaur and Daria Kasatkina leading a four-win revival. On another sweltering day in London on Tuesday, the pair raced into the second round by early afternoon and were joined by Aleksandar Vukic and Rinky Hijikata. Seven Australians had lost in Monday's calamitous start with only an injured Jordan Thompson battling through, but there'll now be five in the last-64 draw. Sixteenth seed Kasatkina became the first and only one of the seven Aussie women to progress with her 7-5 6-3 victory over Colombian Emiliana Arango. Beaten in three matches on grass this season, she laboured against the world No.76, revealing she'd been so nervous in her first Wimbledon appearance since switching allegiance to Australia that she vomited outside just before entering court 14. 'A lot of people saw it five metres from the court. I vomit, so just before entering the court, yes, the little accident happened, like, completely out of nerves,' she explained. She dished up 11 double faults and 38 unforced errors against the world No.76, but the South American contributed to her own defeat, making 39 errors of her own. De Minaur was far more authoritative in his first grand slam outing since taking a break after his shock second-round exit at the French Open, beating Spain's Roberto Carballes Baena 6-2 6-2 7-6 (7-2) in two hours 25 minutes. Even a delay while an unwell ball boy was replaced, just before he was to serve to stay in the third set at 5-6, didn't faze the 11th seed. De Minaur's form was sharp enough, given his lack of match practice on grass. 'It felt like a very solid match against a tough competitor, and there was a little bit of everything. There was some really good tennis, some tough moments, which I played through,' said de Minaur, thrilled to have his family watching from courtside. 'At the end I had to lift my level when I needed it and played some clutch tennis to finish it off. So overall, quite happy.' The chances of an all-Sydney second-round meeting were extinguished, though, after Adam Walton, having battled back from two sets down, lost 6-3 7-6 (8-6) 4-6 6-7 (5-7) 6-1 to Frenchman Arthur Cazaux, who'll be facing de Minaur for the first time. Vukic beat Chinese Taipei's Chun-Hsin Tseng 6-3 6-4 4-6 7-6 (7-5) in just over three hours, setting up a daunting meeting with world No.1 Jannik Sinner who defeated compatriot Luca Nardi 6-4 6-3 6-0. It will be the second year running Vukic has drawn a big gun in the last-64 after impressing while losing to champion Carlos Alcaraz in 2024. 'I've really nothing to lose,' said Vukic. 'He'll be the one feeling the pressure. If there's a surface to play him on it's probably this one because it is a bit more random, so more upsets can happen. Hopefully, I can be one of those.' Sinner agreed that 'he has has nothing to lose, things won't be easy for me', while adding: 'Australian tennis is in a good spot, they have some good players.' Hijikata made surprisingly easy progress against veteran David Goffin, brushing aside the 34-year-old Belgian 6-3 6-1 6-1 after temperatures had dropped in the evening. Next he'll face Ben Shelton, the American 10th seed who proved a younger, superior mirror image of Alex Bolt, defeating the Murray Bridge qualifier 6-4 7-6 (7-1) 7-6 (7-4). Beyond Kasatkina's win, it was a chastening day for the Australian women's challenge, with the biggest disappointment being 19-year-old new Eastbourne champion Maya Joint's fairly routine 6-3 6-2 defeat to a teak tough first-round opponent, Russian 19th seed Liudmila Samsonova. It was deja vu for Joint who had won the Morocco Open in Rabat the weekend before losing in the first round at Roland Garros. 'It's something I hope to get used to, but it was a lot different from the last time when I was coming from Morocco,' the teenager said. 'I obviously expected to do a bit better but Liudmila played really well.' Priscilla Hon went down 6-2 7-5 to Russian 18th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova while fellow debutant, Sydney's James McCabe, was well beaten 6-1 6-4 6-3 by Hungary's world No.58, Fabian Marozsan, after he'd arrived later than he had hoped for his match after his car had got stuck in a traffic jam.


The Guardian
20 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Coco Gauff knocked out of Wimbledon in first round by nerveless Dayana Yastremska
'Yeah, this definitely sucks,' said a tearful Coco Gauff. She was trying, and struggling, to put her finger on why she had become the most high profile casualty of a typically consequential first round at Wimbledon. 'I don't know, I just feel a little bit disappointed in how I showed up today.' The question before the tournament was whether Gauff could cement her standing at the top of the game by adding Wimbledon to this year's French Open title for a 'Channel Slam'. The answer turned out to be a rather decisive 'no'. The second seed was knocked out in less than two hours on Tuesday evening, with the biggest shock how easily she was dispatched by the Ukrainian Dayana Yastremska. The 21-year-old was at first outpunched and ultimately outplayed, but in the middle came a collapse all of her own making. An inability to match up against Yastremska's power in a series of fierce rallies only led to Gauff taking more risks, which rarely came off. When her serve began to depart her in the first set tie-break the writing was on the wall. Gauff said maybe a bit more practice on grass might have helped her efforts, but she couldn't be certain. Yastremska seemed almost as nonplussed in victory as Gauff was in defeat. She said she went into the match without even a 'small expectation' of winning. 'I knew that [Gauff] would not give me one ball for free,' she said. 'Today I think I've done most of the job. I was leading during the game, during the points. Obviously she plays much playing much better on clay court and hard court and I kind of felt [I have] a bit more priority on grass. But, well, in general, I don't know!' At which point she burst into laughter. Gauff beat Venus Williams in her first match at the Championships on a run to the fourth round in 2019 as a 15-year-old. She won the hearts of SW19 then, and the crowd were behind her here, but she is yet to go deeper in the competition and seemed very short on ideas of how to play her way out of the trouble Yastremska was inflicting on her. The Ukrainian has been the subject of media coverage reporting her apparent allergy to grass, but while an aversion to pollen may or may not have provided the animus, she approached the match with maximum intensity, forcing Gauff on to the back foot from the off with her forehand, a weapon that was as fast as it was precise and stayed consistently low. Gauff had the bigger serve, but it failed to rattle Yastremska on the defensive and the Ukrainian broke serve for 4-2 in the first set. In response Gauff simply put more power into her strokes, producing some mesmerising exchanges but also increasing the errors. Only rarely did she think instead to switch up her shot selection, with Yastremska much more vulnerable when forced to change her angles of approach before booming her drives. Gauff broke back at 4-5 and dragged the first set to a tie-break but any hopes of a revival were soon extinguished. In the break she served two double faults and in apparent slow motion, one even after a let of serve. It was like watching her match plans literally fall down around her, not to mention any sense of impregnability that she may have attempted to convey to her opponent. From there things only got worse. Broken at the first attempt in the second set, Gauff tried once again to plug herself into the mains but the outcome was even wilder. Yastremska broke again for 3-1 and then for 5-1 and a call from the stands of 'Don't worry Coco, don't worry!' had a distinctly forlorn tone to it. For Yastremska, meanwhile, there was nothing but delight. The second day of competition at Wimbledon saw other high profile departures from the women's draw too, including the world No 3 Jessica Pegula who was beaten in straight sets – 6-2, 6-3 – by Elisabetta Cocciaretto in just 58 minutes. Pegula praised her opponent: 'She played absolutely incredible tennis,' she said, but she too was at a loss to explain her defeat. 'Do I think I played the best match ever? No. But I definitely don't think I was playing bad. I haven't lost first round of a slam in a very long time, so that sucks.' Elsewhere, the two-time Wimbledon champion Petra Kvitova bade farewell to Wimbledon following a 6-3 6-1 loss to the 10th seed Emma Navarro. The 35-year-old wildcard, who returned to the tour in February following the birth of son Petr last summer, intends to retire after this year's US Open. 'I never dreamed of winning Wimbledon and I did it twice so this is something very special,' she told a grateful crowd.


The Guardian
28 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Morecambe on verge of administration amid infighting and stalled takeover talks
Morecambe are on the verge of entering administration after talks between the club's directors and owner Jason Whittingham failed to find a breakthrough regarding a potential takeover. The Panjab Warriors consortium received clearance from the Football League to complete a takeover of the Shrimps at the start of June but the process remains incomplete and on Friday Morecambe's board said Whittingham and his Bond Group Investments 'appear to be considering reneging on the deal'. Early on Tuesday the board set a deadline of 4pm for Whittingham to conclude the deal as his group did not have the funds required to meet the club's payroll commitments, saying they would call in the receivers if the deadline was not met. That deadline was later extended to 6pm 'after new information came to light', but a further statement on Tuesday evening said that no progress had been made. The statement read: 'Following further discussions with Jason Whittingham this afternoon and evening, it is apparent to the board of directors that he is, for some reason, stalling for time and attempting to drag out what is a truly horrible situation and decision for as long as possible. 'We must emphasise that this is without providing the board with any substantive or convincing reasons for us to responsibly delay triggering the administration process. 'The board of directors have this evening informed Jason that administrators will be called, at the earliest opportunity, tomorrow morning. Jason still has the chance to do the right thing, agree to sell his shares tomorrow morning, but that opportunity expires once and for all after that.' Morecambe suffered relegation from League Two at the end of last season and are due to compete in the National League next term.