Sunday Sun

England facing defeat at Bridge

North are looking for change of fortune RECKLESS BATTING MEANS TEAM WILL HAVE TO FIGHT HARD FOR LEAD

- Jeff Bowron

NORTHUMBER­LAND and Cumberland go head-to-head over the next three days at Barrow looking for a change of fortune.

Cumberland are overdue a win in championsh­ip cricket, while the winning habit has proved elusive for North this year.

An improved performanc­e in a drawn game at ambridgesh­ire, however, has lifted morale in the Northumber­land ranks.

North took nine points from the game at March as they restored pride after a chastening defeat at home to Suffolk.

Team manager Stuart Tiffin is hoping a corner has been turned and that the game at Furness Cricket Club brings a first win.

“The wicket generally does a bit when you play in Cumbria,” said Tiffin. “Especially if the weather hasn’t been great.

“Hopefully rain won’t play a part at Barrow and it would be nice to win the toss for the first time this year in the championsh­ip.

“That can be important but there were encouragin­g signs at Cambridges­hire and plenty of positives to take from the game.

“It has lifted spirits, but we now have to make sure we build on that performanc­e over the next three days.”

Newcastle players make up half the side, six different clubs contributi­ng the remainder of the line up.

Cumberland romped to a 116-run win when the two sides met in the limited overs MCCA Trophy earlier this year.

The hosts have drawn two and lost one of their three championsh­ip games and had Hertfordsh­ire 90-7 in their second innings last time out.

They are led by former Durham batsman Gary Pratt, North by Jacques du Toit, who will be looking for a big second half to the championsh­ip campaign. ENGLAND surrendere­d a yawning advantage to South Africa on a manic second day at Trent Bridge.

The hosts, hoping to consolidat­e here after their wide-margin win at Lord’s, will have to do so the very hard way after being bowled out for 205 to concede a first-innings deficit of 130 in this second Investec Test.

South Africa then extended their lead to 205 with a stumps total of 75 for one, as a curiously serene late passage of play broke the mould and yielded a solitary wicket in a daily tally of 15.

James Anderson added just that one further success to his first-innings five for 72, having kickstarte­d the cameo appearance­s – which continued almost throughout under cloudy skies – by taking four for four in 16 balls as South Africa mustered only 26 more runs to be bowled out for 335.

Joe Root (78) then responded to the early loss of both England openers with a 40-ball half-century. But his and Gary Ballance’s all-Yorkshire counter-attack did not last long enough, before Keshav Maharaj (three for 21) and Chris Morris (three for 38) restated South Africa’s supremacy in a home innings which lasted only 51.5 overs.

On a pitch already providing variable bounce for the seamers, particular­ly from the Radcliffe Road end, England were therefore facing a mission improbable to somehow escape Nottingham with their series lead intact.

Six wickets fell in under 10 overs before lunch – and Root then reached his 50, in under an hour, with his ninth four three balls before lunch.

Anderson began an apparently unstoppabl­e chain of events with the wicket of Vernon Philander, and he also did for Morris – the pair who had frustrated England in a partnershi­p of 74 on Friday evening.

Gloomy morning conditions under lights played into Anderson’s hands as he continued his wonderful record at this venue.

It took him only five deliveries to have Philander caught in the off-side ring off a leading edge, without addition to his overnight 54. In his next over, a second successive wicket-maiden, Maharaj was wellcaught at second slip by Root. Morris then closed the face and got a leading edge back to England’s all-time record wicket-taker, who completed South Africa’s slide when Morne Morkel was last out – edging an expansive drive behind to Jonny Bairstow. The change of innings did nothing to halt the spate of wickets. Philander went straight to DRS when he got one to straighten back into Alastair Cook in the fourth over – and although an inside-edge precluded lbw, it instead resulted in another caughtbehi­nd via the pad. Morkel made it two in two with the first delivery of the next over – a very good one, and a third dismissal in succession caught-behind with Keaton Jennings the latest victim. At a crisis point of three for two, the onus was very much on Root and Ballance. Root put pressure back on the bowlers with three off-side fours in one Philander over, and Ballance was good enough to quickly follow the example set in a stand of 83. But he was gone straight after lunch, bowled via an inside-edge and pad as he pushed forward to Philander’s first delivery of the session.

Root shared another half-century stand with Bairstow until he paid for one shot too many at Morkel and edged an attempted drive behind.

England had effectivel­y targeted third seamer Duanne Olivier, but there was an important success for slow left-armer Maharaj when Ben Stokes went for an 11-ball duck – inside-edge on to pad, and Quinton de Kock doing well to readjust his timing for his fourth catch of the innings, from gloves up to shoulder and back again.

Bairstow went too, just before tea, bowled off-stump by Maharaj on the forward-defence to a very good ball that drifted in and then turned sharply.

Morris quickly grabbed a double share of the spoils in early evening.

He pushe pushed Moeen Ali on to the back foot with a s series of short balls, then had the left-handerleft-hand poking to cover when he pitched one up at the start of his next over, and w was on a hat-trick after DRS confirmed StuartS Broad’s golden duck – lbw deep in the crease.

Liam Daw Dawson’s mis-sweep at Maharaj meant Engl England had lost three wickets stuck on 199 199, but they at least scrambled past 200 bef before Mark Wood was last out to Morris wh when he fended a catch to second slip.

South Afr Africa were soon minus Heino Kuhn, edgingedgi­n Anderson low to second slip – and only after his departure for a third single-figure score in his four Test innings to date, did the clatter of wickets abate at last as Dean Elgar and Hashim Amla prospered in 14 curiously uneventful overs.

 ??  ?? England’s Jonny Bairstow dejected after being bowled by South Africa’s Keshav Maharaj
Vernon PhilanPhil­ander of South Africa successful­lysucc appeals for the wicketw of Alastair Cook
England’s Jonny Bairstow dejected after being bowled by South Africa’s Keshav Maharaj Vernon PhilanPhil­ander of South Africa successful­lysucc appeals for the wicketw of Alastair Cook

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