Sport

Northamptonshire v Middlesex – LV= Insurance County Championship Day 3

Jon Batham of ECB Reporters’ Network on the day’s play at Wantage Road

Photo by Chirayu Trivedi on Unsplash

Northamptonshire 198 & 30-1

Middlesex 149 & 167

Northamptonshire closed in on their first LV= Insurance County Championship win over Middlesex since 2010 after the visitors suffered a fourth batting collapse of the season on day three at Wantage Road.

The visitors’ top order had misfired in their first three innings since returning to Division One and this was Groundhog Day as they plummeted from 37-0 to 107-7, Chris Tremain the chief destroyer with 3-41

A 52-stand between Toby Roland-Jones and Luke Hollman at least ensured there would be a fourth day but needing only 119 to win the hosts closed on 30-1 Ricardo Vasconcelos the man to fall.

Middlesex’s latest woes willow in hand came after Northamptonshire were bowled out for 198 on the stroke of lunch, a first innings lead of 49, Rob Keogh left unbeaten on 75, Roland-Jones returning 4-53 and Ethan Bamber 3-42.

Middlesex would have begun their second innings with some trepidation and Sam Robson, a man with just six runs to his name so far this season should have added a nought to that tally, only for Josh Cobb to shell a comfortable catch at fourth slip.

However, although he and fellow England opener Mark Stoneman battled to 37 the sky then fell in once more.

Robson was castled by Ben Sanderson and just two balls later Pieter Malan shouldered arms only to see the ball send his off stump cartwheeling out of the ground.

Stoneman perished soon afterwards, caught on the crease and pinned lbw as he had been in last week’s loss to Essex.

Stephen Eskinazi and Max Holden briefly stemmed the flow of wickets, but just five minutes before tea, the latter inexplicably hooked a short ball from Berg, skying a catch to the grateful Proctor at mid-on.

If tea in the away dressing-room was indigestible, things would only get worse two balls after the resumption as Tremain uprooted Eskinazi’s middle-stump and in his next over the Australian quick found the edge of Ryan Higgins’ bat presenting Lewis McManus with a simple catch.

Not even wicketkeeper John Simpson, often the man for a crisis, could stop the rot, and when he drove another one from Tremain straight to cover, defeat in three days looked likely.

Roland-Jones and Hollman (30) eased those fears with an enterprising half century stand, the former striking the ball powerfully to record a towering six and five fours in a swashbuckling 37.

Proctor though shrewdly called on the spin of Keogh to break the burgeoning stand, luring Roland-Jones out of his crease to be stumped by McManus after which the end came swiftly.

Keogh stood head and shoulders above the rest in the morning session to steer Northamptonshire to a priceless first innings lead.

The 31-year-old fresh from his unbeaten 2nd inning century in last week’s defeat to Kent, made light of gloomy conditions and a pitch which had sweated under covers throughout the previous day when no play was possible.

Keogh shrugged off the loss of skipper Luke Proctor in the first over of the day, caught at slip off Bamber to play the only innings of real quality. As wickets tumbled around him, other Northamptonshire batters groping and prodding uncertainly, their middle-order stalwart cut and drove with real authority to move to a half century from 103 balls with seven fours,

Even so, with Bamber and Toby Roland-Jones chipping away the hosts were only 25 ahead when their ninth wicket fell.

It was the signal for Keogh to go on the attack, twice launching Ryan Higgins over the ropes for six, both blows ending up on the concourse. His belligerence meant by the time Jack White’s stumps were scattered by Roland Jones, Northamptonshire’s lead had stretched into the realms of ‘more than useful.’


No news is bad news 

Independent news outlets like ours – reporting for the community without rich backers – are under threat of closure, turning British towns into news deserts. 

The audiences they serve know less, understand less, and can do less. 

If our coverage has helped you understand our community a little bit better, please consider supporting us with a monthly, yearly or one-off donation. 

Choose the news. Don’t lose the news.

Monthly direct debit 

Annual direct debit

£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month. £50 annual supporters get a digital copy of each month's paper before anyone else. £84 annual supporters get a print copy by post and a digital copy of each month's before anyone else.

Donate now with Pay Pal

More information on supporting us monthly 

More Information about donations