Smith out cheaply, but Alsop and Pujara punish the Foxes
SUSSEX ON TOP AS GAME STARTS A DAY LATE
SUSSEX made 319 for four and Tom Alsop an unbeaten 118 but the attention was inevitably on Steve Smith, whose Ashes warm-up again failed to ignite as his temporary employer’s LV= Insurance County Championship match against Leicestershire began a day late at the Uptonsteel County Ground, writes Jon Culley.
Australia’s chief batting hope to face England this summer, who made a low-key 30 on his Sussex debut at Worcester last week, was back in the pavilion after facing just 14 balls, dismissed leg before wicket by South African seamer Wiaan Mulder for three.
Smith, who is halfway through a three-match sojourn with the Division Two side, had spent Thursday ensconced in the dressing room as Leicestershire’s ground staff tried in vain to make a saturated outfield fit for play.
On a cold day in which batting conditions were generally tough, he was held up again as Alsop and Cheteshwar Pujara put on 136 for the third wicket.
His chance came when the latter was out for 77 but he never looked at ease, surviving an lbw appeal second ball.
Alsop, the 27-year-old left-hander, went on to complete his ninth firstclass century in an unbroken stand of 121 with 19-year-old all-rounder James Coles, who ended the day unbeaten on 59.
Despite Smith’s flop, Sussex should be delighted with their day after being asked to bat first in challenging conditions.
How they fare with the ball remains to be seen given that England’s Ollie Robinson is being rested and the Australian quick, Nathan McAndrew – their joint leading wicket-taker with Robinson – has had to step aside to accommodate Smith.
On a pitch with a good covering of grass, Sussex had been two down for 91 at lunch after a session played with a chilly wind whipping across the large playing area at Grace Road and the sky uniformly grey.
Leicestershire, who dropped the out-of-form Mikey Finan from their seam attack and brought in Will Davis for his first Championship action since June last year, initially struggled to contain the Sussex openers but first change Mulder struck twice in his opening spell.
The all-rounder, presented with his county cap during the course of the playless opening day, found the inside edge of Tom Clark’s bat in his second over and followed up by trapping Ali Orr leg before with one that struck him at shin height.
But Pujara drew on his deep reserve of experience to frustrate the Leicestershire bowlers, never losing his patience.
The qualities rubbed off on Alsop, who reached his half-century from 126 balls when he drove Chris Wright square of the wicket for his ninth boundary.
Pujara dealt largely in boundaries, 11 of them in his first 50 (from 113 balls), which he reached by hammering Ackermann’s off-spin through midwicket, the first of three in a row in an over that cost 15 runs.
Three more boundaries in Ackermann’s next (and last) over prompted a reminder the Indian maestro had passed 50 eight times previously for Sussex and never failed to make 100.
It appeared this innings would follow a similar pattern. Seemingly in the blink of an eye, Pujara moved on to 77. But then it was over. He misjudged a Scriven delivery enough to tickle an inside edge on to pad, the ball looping to Handscomb.
Pujara’s departure ushered in Smith, but any expectation Australia’s No 1 batsman could trump his likely opponent in next month’s World Test Championship final soon evaporated.
Smith looked twitchy from the start, surviving a confident appeal for leg before by the eager Scriven from his second ball faced, offering no shot.
It appeared only height could have saved him. There was no such doubt three overs later when he shuffled into a ball from Mulder that came back in a little.
Sussex were well placed on 208 for four at tea, but walked off to a sense of anticlimax.
The final session, which would have lasted a marathon 39 overs had bad light not curtailed play 13 overs before the scheduled close, saw Alsop complete a 212-ball century when he cut the occasional spin of Sol Budinger for his 14th four.
Coles got to his fourth first-class 50 from 69 balls, with seven fours and a pulled six off Scriven.