Rhodes left to rue his decision as visitors pile on the runs
RICARDO Vasconcelos and Will Young racked up a record opening stand after Northamptonshire were put in by Warwickshire in their Lv=insurance County Championship match at Edgbaston.
The openers stayed together until after tea to add 287 in 64.2 overs and lift their side towards a commanding 372 for two at the close of the first day.
Vasconcelos, whose previous seven innings this season had yielded a combined 90 runs, stroked 156 (197 balls, 21 fours, two sixes) before falling to the second ball after tea.
New Zealand batter Young scored a polished 134 (230 balls, 16 fours, two sixes), his 13th first class century and first for Northamptonshire.
All that Bears captain Will Rhodes could do was rotate his depleted bowling attack and rue his decision to insert. That was a surprising move, especially given that pace spearhead Liam Norwell was again ruled out by injury, so joined England seamers Chris Woakes and Olly Stone on the sidelines.
Against a weakened bowling attack, on an excellent batting pitch, Northamptonshire made hay while Rhodes could only digest his ill-fortune in
winning the toss. It was soon apparent that the pitch was very good for batting and, to Warwickshire’s dismay, the hazy conditions offered no swing. Olly Hannon-dalby delivered his customary fine new ball spell (5-4-1-0) but runs then began to arrive steadily.
Northamptonshire were on 119, with both batsmen on 51, at lunch, before Vasconecolos accelerated to take them to 287 at tea. The 24-yearold’s first 50 having come from 81 balls, his second took 59 and his third just 53. Young, meanwhile, advanced with quiet authority with neither batter offering a chance in the first two sessions.
The breakthrough finally arrived immediately after tea when Nathan Mcandrew, making his home debut, trapped Vasconcelos lbw. That ended what was comfortably Northamptonshire’s record opening stand against Warwickshire, overtaking the 176 by Brian Reynolds and Colin Milburn at Northampton in 1964.
Young continue to chug along chancelessly until he departed in infuriating fashion when he tickled a
It has been a bit of a pattern in the last few games that we just haven’t got that first hour right.
Matt Mason
leg-side catch to wicketkeeper Michael Burgess off Hannondalby.
The flurry of two wickets in 18 overs was as good as it got for Warwickshire. Emilio Gay, having spent two sessions waiting to go in next, batted solidly through the final session for 45 in company, for the last hour, with the in-form Luke Procter (17 not out).
The visitors will resume today pretty confident of surpassing their previous record total against Warwickshire (507) and with half an eye on their record total against anyone (781). The Bears will just wish they could have today back again.
Bears bowling coach Matt Mason described a frustrating day: “Winning the toss and bowling, we expected to make early inroads but it has been a bit of a pattern in the last few games that we just haven’t got that first hour right.
“It’s something the group is aware of and desperately trying to put right. One thing I would say is it’s definitely not lack of effort.
“The guys really stuck to their task and even at the end there Nathan Mcandrew was still steaming in and trying all he could.
“The surface looked good for batting as the day went on but when we looked at it in the morning, there was a feeling it was going to be more like the pitch we played Essex. But even then you have got to make best use of the surface in the first hour.”