logo
Essex hold out for draw against Yorkshire

Essex hold out for draw against Yorkshire

BBC News12-05-2025
Rothesay County Championship Division One, Ambassador Cruise Line Ground, Chelmsford (day four)Yorkshire 216 & 426-6 dec: Lyth 185, Bairstow 79, Wharton 61; Thain 3-96Essex 123 & 273-9: Critchley 75, Pepper 68; White 4-32, Hill 3-31 Essex (11 pts) drew with Yorkshire (11 pts) Match scorecard
Matt Critchley and Michael Pepper knuckled down for a monumental fifth-wicket stand of 154 in 77 overs to help steer Essex to the unlikeliest of County Championship draws against Yorkshire at Chelmsford.The pair came together in the depths of despair at 45-4 on the third evening and batted for four-and-a-half hours together, spanning 458 balls, and looked to have made it through two complete sessions on the final day. Pepper, though, fell to the last ball before tea after a 229-ball 68 that included five fours and two sixes.Critchley followed after the interval for 75 from 246 balls as Yorkshire scented their second win of the season with three wickets in 21 balls. However, last-wicket pair Simon Harmer and Jamie Porter saw out the final 38 minutes and 82 balls to prevent a second successive defeat.George Hill returned career-best match figures of 9-82, supported by Jack White's season's best 4-43, but to no avail as Yorkshire toiled in vain for one more wicket.The target of 520, with 456 still nominally required at the start of day four, was always going to be beyond Essex's compass and it became more a case of settling in to save face.The plans for survival, however, were set out from the start as Pepper and Critchley blocked and blocked with little alarm. It was not until the 20th ball of the day that they moved off their overnight 64-4 when Critchley angled a Ben Coad delivery wide of the slips for a boundary. It was only the introduction of Hill after 35 minutes that saw the usually flamboyant Pepper opened his morning's account, turning the ball down to fine leg for a single.The first sign of serious aggression came when Critchley hooked Matty Revis so firmly that the square-leg umpire had to take evasive action as it sped to the boundary. Revis then attempted a short-ball barrage at Pepper which and it nearly came off when the Essex batsman gloved one up and over Jonny Bairstow's head behind the stumps.Pepper broke out of his self-imposed shackles by sweeping Dom Bess for one six and adding a second over long leg. In between, he survived a difficult chance off an uppish drive past mid-on.Reprieved, Pepper scampered the single soon after lunch that took him to a 155-ball 50 followed quickly by the century stand that ate up 51 overs. Critchley's 50 was more circumspect, reached with another four guided down to third man from his 190th ball faced.Yorkshire's hopes seemed to hinge on the second new-ball, but they failed to make it count immediately and Bess was recalled to the attack after nine fruitless overs. However, to the final ball of the 13th over with it, on the cusp of tea, Pepper was caught leaning into a Hill delivery and departed lbw.Noah Thain lasted 15 balls before he was bowled through the gate by Bess and Critchley's marathon innings ended when he got the faintest of tickles to Hill and was caught behind.Shane Snater held out for 32 balls without scoring before he fell lbw to White and Kasun Rajitha's 21 came off 40 balls before he played down the wrong line and was bowled by Dan Moriarty. But then Porter came in to join Harmer and thwart Yorkshire despite being ringed by close fielders.ECB Reporters' Network supported by Rothesay
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lewis Hamilton ‘hoping and praying' to return to podium at British Grand Prix
Lewis Hamilton ‘hoping and praying' to return to podium at British Grand Prix

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Lewis Hamilton ‘hoping and praying' to return to podium at British Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton said he is 'hoping and praying' to end the worst podiumless streak of his Formula One career at Sunday's British Grand Prix. Hamilton has a remarkable record at his home race, winning a record nine times at Silverstone. He has also finished in the top three in all of his last 11 appearances here. However, the seven-time world champion has not landed a podium in Ferrari colours – a streak of 11 races – the deepest into the season he has ever gone without a top-three finish. Hamilton ended his two-and-a-half-year losing streak with a famous victory at Silverstone last season, and speaking ahead of Sunday's race, Hamilton said: 'I am hoping and praying. 'There is always magic here at Silverstone. It is a very, very special race and I am hoping all sorts of things can help us because we are not as quick as McLaren. If it stays dry they will walk the race. 'I don't look at those (podium) statistics so it is not something that affects me or I think about. But we are here at Silverstone and what better place to change that run so that is what we are working towards. 'I cannot wait for Friday. Driving a Ferrari at Silverstone for the first time will be special and unique in its own way. We have the best fans here, and for a British driver they really do make a difference. I have shown that to you time and time again so I hope this weekend they really make the difference for us.' Hamilton finished fourth, a place behind team-mate Charles Leclerc at the previous round in Austria. During the race, Hamilton aired his frustration with Ferrari after they pulled him in for a tyre change against his wishes. Hamilton continued: 'The team's view is that they wanted to secure third and fourth which is totally fine, but I am not here to start fourth and finish fourth. 'I am racing for every little bit we can gain. They had us on the same strategy. I never want to do the same as my team-mate, ever. 'I said I don't want to get to a point where I am ignoring you. We are working on our conversation. We are still getting to know each other and how we operate so that was all understood.'

Arthur Fery left with few regrets as Wimbledon campaign comes to an end
Arthur Fery left with few regrets as Wimbledon campaign comes to an end

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Arthur Fery left with few regrets as Wimbledon campaign comes to an end

Arthur Fery has few regrets after his Wimbledon campaign came to an end with a second-round loss to Luciano Darderi. The 22-year-old defeated the Australian 20th seed Alexei Popyrin in the opening round to cross paths with the Italian in a clash scheduled as the last to take place on Court Two on Wednesday evening. Fery had lost the first two sets when the light began to falter and the match was paused, though the French-born Briton felt the interruption was to his advantage as his opponent was firmly on the front foot. Play resumed after midday on Thursday, and though Darderi was made to work hard for his third and final set he eventually prevailed 6-4 6-3 6-3 to knock Fery out of the tournament. 'I did my best, I thought I came out with a pretty good game plan – not too many regrets,' said Fery, whose French father Loic owns Lorient football club. 'I was tired, for sure. That second set yesterday was a physical one. 'It probably was going to help me to stop last night. I was two sets to love down. It was a very close match but still, momentum was on his side and he was playing very well. 'Stopping last night was good for me. I came out this morning, practised, warmed up well this morning. I was going to try and inch my way back into the match. 'Even today I thought he was physical. He's a clay-court player. It was tough at times but I guess it shows me where I can improve. 'There were some matches where you have so many break points, and you come off the court having lost and you're p****d at yourself because you felt like you managed them poorly. 'I'm pretty proud of my performance. Overall it's frustrating. I had a lot of break points but didn't think I did a huge amount wrong. 'I thought he came out very well again today. I tried to use the crowd, I tried to change a few things tactically. It wasn't enough today.'

What is Hamilton's record at Silverstone?
What is Hamilton's record at Silverstone?

BBC News

time23 minutes ago

  • BBC News

What is Hamilton's record at Silverstone?

Lewis Hamilton has won the British Grand Prix at Silverstone a record nine times - the most victories for a Formula 1 driver at a single circuit or grand seven-time world champion has taken victory at Silverstone in 2008, each year from 2014 to 2017 and 2019 to 2021 and again in also means that Hamilton, as he heads into the 2025 race weekend in Northamptonshire, holds the most wins at a driver's national or home he has a huge following across the world, Silverstone is Hamilton's home race and one where he has excelled and set records over the debut Silverstone win was not straightforward as Hamilton had to battle with heavy rain conditions in a race that several drivers failed to most recent victory at Silverstone came last year, when he made an emotional return to the top of the podium after two and a half years without a win anywhere."I've had so many amazing times [at Silverstone] in the past, but when I came across that line something really released in me that I guess I've been holding on to for a very long time," Hamilton said after his 2024 British Grand Prix win."It was the most emotional end to a win I've ever experienced, I never cry, but it hit me hard, after such a difficult 2021, just trying to continue to come back." Podiums aplenty at Silverstone Hamilton has stood on the podium at Silverstone 15 times since he began his Formula 1 career in 2007 - a record for the most top-three finishes at a single the hybrid engine era began in 2014, Hamilton, no matter the type of season he is having, has consistently finished the British Grand Prix on the podium every year - 11 times, taking victory on eight occasions, P2 once and P3 was also on the podium for the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix at Silverstone in a Covid-hit 2020 season, with that race staged a week after the British Grand his 18 starts at Silverstone for the British Grand Prix, Hamilton has finished outside the top 10 only once, in 2009 where he took 16th spot. Hamilton a 'huge part' of circuit's history Silverstone honoured Hamilton's successes over the years by naming a part of the circuit after the pits straight at the British Grand Prix, where the race start and finish line is, was named the Hamilton Straight in was the first time a part of the Silverstone circuit had been named after an Racing Drivers' Club president and former F1 driver David Coulthard said: "Lewis has become a huge part of [Silverstone's] history and the directors of the club and I felt there was no better way to mark this than to rename the iconic pits straight in recognition of his record-breaking achievements."Hamilton has celebrated many victories at Silverstone's finish line and the straight is where fans celebrate in front of the podium. Hamilton has actively engaged with the fans in celebrations, including crowd article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team. What is Ask Me Anything? Ask Me Anything is a service dedicated to answering your want to reward your time by telling you things you do not know and reminding you of things you team will find out everything you need to know and be able to call upon a network of contacts including our experts and will be answering your questions from the heart of the BBC Sport newsroom, and going behind the scenes at some of the world's biggest sporting coverage will span the BBC Sport website, app, social media and YouTube accounts, plus BBC TV and radio. More questions answered... What is DRS in Formula 1 and what's coming next?What are penalty points in F1 and how do they work?How does Formula 1 points scoring work?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store