
Surrey stay unbeaten despite Porter five-for for Essex
Sam Curran added 77 to his first innings 70, in his first red-ball appearance since last September, as Surrey saw out a rain-hit final day on 289-7 to secure a draw against Essex at the Kia Oval.Curran's 121-ball effort held Surrey's batting together as seamer Jamie Porter and off-spinner Simon Harmer threatened to bowl Essex to a second County Championship win of the season.Six separate rain interruptions – all of them short, but lopping 20 overs in all from the final day's allocation – did not help Essex's cause and in the end, a 51-run stand between Jamie Overton and Jordan Clark proved decisive.Overton stayed just over two hours for his 47 from 102 balls, edging Porter to third slip just before 6.00pm from what became the last ball of the game, Clark finishing 23 not out.Porter took 5-88 from 27 overs and Harmer 2-94 from 34 with Essex taking 11 points for the draw and Surrey, who stay second in the Division One table, picked up 12.Surrey had started the day on 32 without loss, having been set an unlikely 418 in the fourth innings after Essex, led by centuries from Paul Walter and 20-year-old Charlie Allison on days two and three, had reached 479 in their own second innings.Rory Burns and Dom Sibley, Surrey's openers, were fluent early on against Essex's seamers and took their stand to 76 before Harmer made the breakthrough with the first ball of his third over of the morning.Left-hander Burns, on 39, jumped out to drive but was beaten by appreciable spin and bounce out of the bowlers' footmarks and superbly stumped by Michael Pepper, who had to bring the ball down from almost shoulder height.Sibley, having reached 40 with some excellent strokes down the ground, was similarly deceived by Harmer. The former South African Test spinner, seeing Sibley advance from his crease, tossed the ball a bit wider to leave the former England man groping for it and Pepper to complete a far simpler stumping.At lunch, with only one over at that stage lost to a sharp mid-session shower, Surrey had stabilised the innings at 142-2 through Australian left-hander Kurtis Patterson and Curran, who got off the mark in spectacular style by hooking Porter for six over deep square leg.Another shower delayed the restart by 10 minutes and, in the afternoon's second over Patterson was beaten by a break-back from Porter, operating from around the wicket, and bowled off a thin inside edge for 40.Surrey's faint hopes of chasing down their distant target fell away when Porter removed Ben Foakes and Jason Roy in the space of three balls to leave the home side 167 for five.Nibbling the ball away from the right-handers, he first had Foakes caught behind for seven before Roy was superbly held, low and left-handed, by a diving Harmer at second slip. It completed an unhappy pair for the former England one-day opener.In between further showers, Curran and Overton steadied Surrey once again in a sixth-wicket partnership that eventually realised 77 in 24 overs.Curran, on 76, survived an impassioned appeal for a low legside catch behind the wicket off Porter that may not have carried. But later, in an eventful over and one ball after Overton had looked fortunate not to be given leg-before as he moved across his stumps, Allison flung himself to his left at point to clutch a Curran square drive and give Essex renewed hope with Surrey now 244-6.Only eight more balls were possible, however, before more rain arrived and after another subsequent delay the final mini-session of play saw Essex crowding the bat in vain while Surrey's seventh wicket pair kept out Porter and Harmer - until Overton fell with the draw assured.ECB Reporters' Network supported by Rothesay

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


South Wales Guardian
31 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
England recall spinner Liam Dawson for fourth Test to replace Shoaib Bashir
The 35-year-old made the last of his three Test appearances eight years ago but looks set for an unexpected return at Emirates Old Trafford following Bashir's withdrawal. Bashir took the match-winning wicket in a tense finish at Lord's on Monday evening, having already broken the little finger on his left hand. He is set for surgery in the coming days and will miss the remainder of the series. Welcome, Daws! 👋 Spinner Liam Dawson joins our squad for the Fourth Test match against India 🏏 Full story 👇 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 15, 2025 Dawson has been picked ahead of fellow left-armer Jack Leach, despite the latter being centrally contracted. 'Liam Dawson deserves his call-up. He has been in outstanding form in the County Championship and consistently puts in strong performances for Hampshire,' said selector Luke Wright. Leach has played 39 Tests and was the long-term number one before being usurped by county colleague Bashir. He was England's top wicket-taker on the tour of Pakistan over the winter but now appears to have slipped even further back in the pecking order. Dawson offers a superior all-round package, with 18 first-class centuries to his name, and returned to the England fold for the first time under Brendon McCullum earlier this summer. The Hampshire stalwart featured in the T20 series against the West Indies, taking four for 20 in his comeback match at Durham. Speaking after the game, he admitted: 'I had got to an age where I probably thought international cricket was gone. 'In my domestic career, I've tried to go out there and just enjoy playing for whoever I'm playing for. It was about going out there and not worrying about playing for England. 'I think that can hamper you sometimes, so I've not really worried about that. I'm at an age now where I know that I'm close to finishing. I'm on the edge of that. So now it's just about enjoyment, trying to work smarter in your training and just believing that you're good enough.' England have thinned their squad to 14 for the trip to Manchester, allowing pace bowlers Jamie Overton and Sam Cook to return to Surrey and Essex respectively. Josh Tongue and Gus Atkinson are included and will be considered should England opt to rest Chris Woakes or Brydon Carse, who have been ever present in the series to date. Woakes is likeliest to step down after failing to find his best form, with Dawson's arrival potentially helping cover his batting duties at number eight.


The Guardian
33 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Daniel Dubois: ‘That first fight against Usyk is behind me – I'm a man of the future'
'It's definitely the biggest fight of my life,' Daniel Dubois says of his world heavyweight title unification bout against Oleksandr Usyk at Wembley Stadium on Saturday night before, following a slightly deflated pause, he highlights an unusually downbeat buildup. 'It's strange but it feels like it's been going under the cover, like it hasn't been really hyped‑up as I would have thought a unification fight will be. But maybe that will pick up on the night.' Sitting in the July sunshine outside his gym in Borehamwood, with the Wembley arch clearly visible through the haze of heat, Dubois looks a little hurt when I ask if he can explain why there has been such limited fanfare around an interesting rematch between two contrasting heavyweights who own all the world titles between them. 'I'm not sure,' Dubois says in his role as the IBF champion. He then laughs ruefully. 'It seems as if every fight I'm in, there seems to be a little bit of funniness going on. I can't quite put my finger on why.' Dubois is a deeply reserved world heavyweight champion who still lives with his formidable and mysterious father. He is 27 and a wrecking force in the ring, as he proved when knocking down Anthony Joshua four times during a one‑sided beating last September, but Dubois often appears more like a shy teenager who is still tentative beneath the giant shadow of his domineering dad, Stan. Could it be that Dubois is simply too quiet to generate outrageous headlines and soundbites before a fight? 'I don't know, mate,' he says, before comparing himself with Joshua, who has been such a consummate publicity machine throughout his long career. 'AJ don't trash-talk really, either. Every fight he's doing sells out and it's all big hyper stuff. But with my fights it always seems to be something …' Dubois trails away before he returns with a more defiant response to his low-key profile. 'But, after this fight, I want to clear up and move forward as a legit world champion. The undisputed world champion.' Did his destruction of Joshua receive the acknowledgment it deserved? 'No, I don't think so. I think people are talking more about AJ's loss rather than my victory. It don't hurt me but it's unjust, isn't it? I've got to put that right.' Dubois sounds more hopeful. 'It looks like it's going to be a sellout which is good, innit?' he says, stressing that he will be even better against Usyk. 'I'm a different fighter now. There have been real improvements. I'm doing things I've always done but I'm doing them better. Maybe I just want it more now. I'm setting out to do what my dad talked about in the beginning, before I even was a real fighter. He always said I would win a world heavyweight championship and then I'd win it outright and become a legend like Frank Bruno, Lennox Lewis and Nigel Benn [from] that era of fighters where there were real fighting men.' Last year Usyk became the first undisputed world heavyweight champion this century when he defeated Tyson Fury. Matching a feat that had been last achieved in 1999 by Lewis, Usyk is the best heavyweight of the past 25 years. He defeated both Joshua and Fury twice and his intelligence, technique and resolve are, until now at least, unbeatable assets which have allowed the Ukrainian to win all 23 bouts since his professional debut as an Olympic champion in 2013. Dubois concedes that Usyk is, by some distance, the best fighter he has faced. 'He's done it all, really, hasn't he? I just have to break down whatever he's good at.' Usyk was in trouble when he and Dubois fought for the first time in August 2023. A heavy punch from Dubois landed on the beltline and, as it was ruled controversially as a low blow, Usyk stayed down for four minutes. He was canny enough to wring as much time as he could on the canvas before rising and eventually stopping Dubois in the ninth round. Dubois now stresses that Usyk has a weakness 'to the body, to the head, wherever a shot can land'. He says: 'I don't want to keep going back to that [2023] fight because that wasn't me at my best. I landed one good shot but that weren't my best shot. You're going to see the difference on 19 July. That first fight is behind me now. It's just a memory and I'm a man of the future. I've got to stamp my authority on this division.' His father always told him that he would become the undisputed world heavyweight champion, and Dubois says: 'I believed everything he said – the words, the way he said it. He was so sure about it that I believed and thought: 'Yes, I'm going to do this.' It's not just talk. We've been working really hard from when I was seven years old. I was grinding my fists down to the bone for it.' Dubois holds up his bunched fists to show me again the deep scars that pockmark his knuckles. 'They were made from all the push-ups I did [with his knuckles pressed down against the floor]. I can be proud of these marks. They've got me out of trouble a few times.' Dubois once told me that, when he was a kid, his dad made him do press-ups for hours. What was his record? The big man grins. 'We never counted the push-ups. We counted the hours. Maybe four, five hours? We did some crazy stuff. 'We mix it up now as it's all about maintaining what you already have. So I still do the push-ups but not to that level I was doing then. I'm reaping the benefits of it now.' Dubois and six of his siblings were kept at home by their father, and never went to school, and he still seems stunted outside the ring. When I ask if he is finding a way to be his own person while still listening to his dad, Dubois looks confused. 'I don't even know what you mean by that question.' I talk again about the deep influence his dad exerts over him and his boxing career. It has helped in the ring but surely he wants to make his own choices away from boxing? 'I guess you could say that. But, in the boxing sense, we're a team.' Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Since he swept aside Joshua and proved himself a renewed force following his earlier defeats by Joe Joyce – when he suffered a badly broken orbital bone in 2021 – and Usyk, Dubois has cut a much more confident figure. In beating Jarrell Miller, Filip Hrgovic and Joshua, and becoming a world champion after boxing politics gifted him the IBF belt from Usyk, Dubois has new conviction. He now presents a serious challenge to Usyk which is bolstered by the decisive backing of his trainer Don Charles – the veteran cornerman who joined the Dubois camp in 2023. Whose idea was it to approach Charles? 'My dad's. My dad contacted him.' Did Dubois know much about Charles? 'I didn't need to. My dad gave me the go-ahead. I think I sparred with Derek Chisora [whom Charles used to train] but it just happened. It's just fate.' Charles is an intriguing figure – a strict disciplinarian with a layered personal story from being a child soldier in Biafra during the Nigerian civil war to homeless in Britain, cleaning toilets and sweeping streets before he reinvented himself as a successful florist and then the owner of a large security business. How does Charles calm him during the last hour before a fight in front of 94,000 people at Wembley? Dubois shrugs. 'You'd have to ask him. He holds it together pretty well but my dad has a good stern talk with me. Don leaves me alone until I need to be spoken to when he pulls me aside to tell me a few things.' How has Charles helped Dubois? 'I think we've helped each other. I've helped him get success with a world champion, while he's been there for me as a constant old‑school man that's always on time and brings old-school values and that's a major thing.' Dubois points out that, until they began working together, Charles 'hadn't cracked it before' which seems to imply that the trainer's hunger matches that of his fighter. 'I think so,' Dubois says. 'He's hungry and I really am hungry. I'm glad we've done it together and I've become world champion. We need to push on now.' Kieran Farrell, who works on the pads with Dubois and as Charles's assistant trainer, has made a remarkable recovery since he lost around 30% of his brain following an acute subdural hematoma suffered during his bout with Anthony Crolla in 2013. Dubois's insular character means that he has little interest in Farrell's backstory. When I ask him if he knew much about his co-trainer's past he shakes his head. 'Not really. I've heard a little bit and I think I read about him in Boxing News, way back then [when Farrell was hospitalised]. But my dad reached out to him to get him involved. So it's been all put together by my dad and it works.' Dubois also dismisses the idea that Farrell's fate as a fighter might sometimes make him consider the dangers of boxing. 'No, not at all. I'm on my journey and these are the risks I take. I know what I'm doing. We're in this to win and that's part of the game – the hazards of being a boxer. I've just got to make sure it's not me [who is injured], I guess.' The heavyweight's limited outlook is perhaps understandable. He was vilified on social media after losing against Joyce, and accused of being a coward and 'a quitter' even though his injury could have left him blind if he had boxed on, and he suggests that such difficult experiences have shaped him into the more assertive champion he is now. 'Yes, yes,' he says. 'I like Joe a lot and I've got a lot of respect for him. Without Joe I wouldn't be where I am. Setbacks always make way for a good comeback.' Joyce's career has since plummeted while Dubois has finally soared. 'It's fate,' Dubois suggests, 'and not being denied, working hard, having a good support network and a good dad. I never doubted it. I just was like, how are we going to come back now? How are we going to be better? Those moments, they pass like nothing. They're just moments. Everyone has them. If you're doing anything worthwhile that's hard, you're going to have these moments and you've got to push through them.'


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Ivan Toney fumes 'I HATE London' after England star's £197K Lamborghini is broken into after returning from his new home in Saudi Arabia
Ivan Toney suffered damage to his prize Lamborghini on his return to London from the former Brentford striker's new home in Saudi Arabia. The England international booked a move to Al-Ahli last summer amid feverish speculation over his future plans. After inking an alleged £20million-a-year deal with the Saudi Pro League side, Toney jetted off to join his new side in the Kingdom's second city, Jeddah. The 29-year-old has since secured the Asian Champions League title after their 2-0 victory against Japanese side Kawasaki Frontale. The move to Saudi came just over six months on from his return to football after Toney had served his eight-month ban for breaching the Football Association's gambling regulations. Toney's 232 breaches of the association's laws took place between 2017 and 2021, and the player was later diagnosed with a gambling addiction. His new home in Saudi Arabia outlaws gambling altogether. But Toney has since returned to the United Kingdom during his off-season - and appeared to soon discover why he opted for a move away from his home country. Sharing a picture on his Instagram Story, Toney showed that the window of his Lamborghini Urus - worth an upwards of £197,000 - had been smashed and the car broken into by would-be thieves. It is not known whether Toney had anything stolen from inside the vehicle, but the forward was incensed, captioning an image of the damage: 'This is why I hate London'. Just three days before the crime, Toney had shown off his car in a video posted on social media of the striker training with his two sons, Ivan Junior and Ikari, who he shares with long-term partner Katie Bio. Toney, who was born in Northampton, previously made the capital his home for the four seasons he spent at Brentford, after his move to the side from Peterborough United. But in November last year, Toney is believed to have revealed his new fondness for Saudi stemmed from Jeddah's supposed similarities to another British city. It is claimed that Toney thinks that his new home shares the same qualities he liked in Milton Keynes, where he used to live - and started his relationship with Bio. Toney and Bio are believed to have received special dispensation to live together out of wedlock in the devout Muslim country - receiving the same privileges as Al-Nassr superstar Cristiano Ronaldo and his girlfriend Georgina Rodriguez.