Vincent wants another shot at New Zealand

Lou Vincent, the former New Zealand batsman, expressed his disappointment at being ignored by the national selectors despite doing very well in domestic cricket and is considering a permanent move to UK.

Cricinfo staff02-Mar-2010Lou Vincent, the New Zealand batsman, expressed his disappointment at being ignored by the national selectors despite his success with Auckland in the domestic Twenty20 competition and thinks he still has it in him to play for his country.Mark Greatbatch, the New Zealand coach, said Vincent was not considered for the upcoming ODI series against Australia because he did not commit to New Zealand cricket. Vincent, however, denied Greatbatch’s contention and said he had attempted to clear the air with the coach.”I made it perfectly clear to Greatbatch. I want to play for New Zealand. I want to be considered for the Twenty20 World Cup. That’s my niche, that’s my specialty. I’ve definitely proved to the world and to the New Zealand selectors I’ve still got what it takes,” Vincent was quoted as saying in .Vincent last played for New Zealand in December 2007 before he was dropped from the side. After suffering from a bout of depression that threatened to end his career early, Vincent gave up his New Zealand contract to play in the Indian Cricket League. After moving on from the ICL, Vincent had been living in the UK before heading back to New Zealand in the hope of returning to the top flight.With the selectors continuing to ignore him, Vincent is considering taking up club cricket in the UK. Though his chief interest lies in playing for New Zealand, Vincent is aware that he could qualify for England in less than two years.”I came back to New Zealand to prove that I wanted to play cricket again and to tell the selectors that I want to play for New Zealand again. And I guess the ball is in their court. And yeah, if all else fails I might play against the Black Caps at the next Twenty20 World Cup for England,” Vincent said.

Samit Patel makes the difference as Derbyshire hunt down the Foxes

Midlands rivals complete the double with four-wicket win at Grace Road

ESPNcricinfo staff06-Jul-2024Veteran allrounder Samit Patel tormented Leicestershire Foxes for the second time this Vitality Blast season as Derbyshire Falcons completed a double over their East Midlands neighbours in the North Group to lift their hopes of qualifying for the quarter-finals.The 39-year-old Falcons skipper, whose 64 was the difference when the sides met at Edgbaston at the start of the campaign, hit nine fours and two sixes in an unbeaten 67 as Derbyshire chased down 185 to win by four wickets with four balls to spare.Ben Cox hit four sixes in a 30-ball unbeaten 61 and Lewis Goldsworthy 48 from 41 as the Foxes finished strongly to post 184 for six. Former Leicestershire seamer Zak Chappell took three for 42 and Patel two for 27, with Pakistan left-arm quick Mohammad Amir wicketless on his Derbyshire debut.Derbyshire had been well ahead of the required rate by posting 64 in their batting powerplay but had lost three of their key batters. Luis Reece edged behind off Mike, who then held a good low catch in the deep to remove the dangerous Aneurin Donald. Tom Scriven marked his return from a six-week injury absence by bowling David Lloyd, each of the trio falling to the eighth ball they faced.Yet with fellow veteran Wayne Madsen (46) and Patel using their nous to find the gaps in the field, the Falcons were more than halfway to their target at 96 for three after 10.They put on 80 in nine and a half overs before Madsen smacked Hull straight to New Zealand all-rounder Jimmy Neesham on the cover boundary. When Mike had Ross Whiteley leg before for a golden duck in the next over, the outcome looked less certain with 52 still needed off 33 balls.Brooke Guest was caught off a top edge to give 19-year-old Sam Wood his first senior wicket but there was no pinning down Patel, who continued to find the rope as the last over arrived with the scores level, Chappell hitting the winning boundary.Earlier, Patel had seen a quick reward for deciding to field first as the Foxes lost three wickets for 45 in the powerplay, with early indications that taking the pace off would be an effective tactic.Chappell, hit for two fours and a six, responded by bowling Sol Budinger with a slower ball and held another one back a touch to similarly dismiss Rishi Patel, with Paul Stirling run out in between, his first innings for the Foxes ended by Madsen’s direct hit from midwicket.The home side slipped to 78 for five by the 11th over. Neesham’s first innings as a Leicestershire player encompassed a stumping chance survived off Alex Thomson before he was bowled by Patel, with Louis Kimber following a big six over the leg side by hitting the left-arm spinner’s next ball down straight to long off.But Goldsworthy and Cox sensibly gave themselves time to get the measure of the pitch and their 48 off four and a half overs until the former was caught on the cover boundary created an opportunity for Cox to attack in the last four overs.He had some luck on 10, his first attempt to clear the ropes dropped by Thomson, who lost the ball in the sun, but cashed in by hammering four sixes in the last four overs, scoring 44 of the 58 runs added.

Cummins calls for third umpire catch changes

Three times at the SCG the TV official ruled that slip catches hadn’t carried

AAP and ESPNcricinfo staff08-Jan-2023Pat Cummins says there has to be a better way for the third umpire to adjudicate on catches after Richard Kettleborough was forced to make three contentious decisions during the third Test.Sydney match umpires lodged reviews for three catches taken low to the ground in the slips at the SCG. On each occasion, third umpire Kettleborough found evidence the ball had touched the ground before the fielder was able to control it. Consequently, none of the catches were given.Cummins’ team-mates Marnus Labuschagne and Josh Hazlewood previously suggested the first step to changing the way such catches were officiated would be to scrap the on-field umpire’s soft signal, given the third umpire overturned it on two of the three occasions, although that decision now only becomes a factor if technology fails or is unavailable for the third umpire.Related

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“I don’t really know the answers but there has to be a way to try and improve it somehow,” Cummins said after the Test against South Africa ended in a draw. “As it currently stands, it’s really hard to give a batter out. If there’s any kind of benefit of the doubt, it goes the batter’s way.”I think with a couple of camera angles really slowed down, it’s pretty hard to not find doubt somewhere. I do feel for Ketts a little bit up there.”In making a decision, the third umpire only has access to footage from the host broadcaster, Fox Sports and not from Seven Network cameras.”Maybe there’s more cameras we can use down the track,” Cummins said.South Africa captain Dean Elgar was visibly frustrated when his side was on the receiving end of the first non-catch call but at stumps said he was pleased the umpires remained consistent throughout the match.”The way the umpires conducted the three was pretty good. I think it was brilliant,” he said. “Once you’ve set the bar with the first one, you can’t really budge much from there.”Those things are always going to be a grey area, some guys will say out, some guys will say not out. At the end of the day, their decision is final and as players we respect that.”

Jonathan Trott stresses importance of first-innings runs as England brace for Chennai challenge

Batting consultant praises Joe Root’s enduring drive ahead of his 100th Test

Andrew Miller03-Feb-2021Jonathan Trott, England’s batting consultant in India, has stressed the importance of big first-innings runs, with contributions all down the order, as the team puts in its final preparations ahead of Friday’s opening Test at Chennai.Trott, who has taken over the role filled by Jacques Kallis in Sri Lanka, was a part of the last England side to win a series in India in 2012-13 – a campaign in which Joe Root, now set to play his 100th Test, made his first England appearance in a series-settling draw in Nagpur.And just as that triumph was built on England’s ability to put big first-innings runs on the board – they posted scores of 413 and 523 in their two victories at Mumbai and Kolkata – so too will be their hopes of competing against an India side riding high after a hard-fought series win in Australia.”The message varies from player to player, but the fundamentals of playing in India are pretty much the same,” Trott said. “It’s about big runs in the first innings, like anywhere else, but in India it’s really, really important.”Although England can expect a typically stiff examination of their techniques against spin, with R Ashwin fit again, and either Axar Patel or Kuldeep Yadav set to partner him, Trott also stressed that India’s pace attack is a match for any line-up in the game, with Jasprit Bumrah and Ishant Sharma the probable spearheads in Chennai.”We saw their pace attack in Australia do really well, and they’re very talented all round with the ball,” he said. “For batters nowadays, as you go around the world, everyone’s got a good pace attack, so it’s crucially important to prepare for both.”I wouldn’t reinvent the wheel with the guys,” he added. “But it’s about making sure that they’re in the right space and ready to do whatever the conditions dictate, and that their all-round game is in tip top shape. That comes down to us as coaches, but also as players taking responsibility, not only in training but in the matches as well.”Confronting the new ball and perhaps the reversing ball, with spin in the middle, and the seamers doing a very good holding job, your skill level has to be very high, especially when playing in the heat and humidity of Chennai. You have to be very, very switched on.Related

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“And we saw in Sri Lanka that you need to play good cricket for all the four-five days that the Test lasts. It’s not just about first innings, but being able to back it up as batsmen and bowlers in the second innings as well, because that’s when the games are won and lost.”England’s options with bat and ball are set to be boosted by the return of Ben Stokes, who missed the Sri Lanka leg of the winter but has been training in Chennai since Sunday. And with both Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes available again after coming through their Covid quarantine periods in Sri Lanka, England have the ability to field a deeper batting line-up than was the case in Galle, where Dom Bess produced a gutsy 32 from No. 8 to help turn the tide in the second Test.”[Depth] is key,” Trott admitted. “It’s always a luxury if you can, but you have to make sure you have the right options with the ball as well, and I think that’s paramount when it comes to winning Test matches.”You try to find that balance all the time, so that’s why we’re very lucky to have a player like Ben Stokes, but it’s key for everybody to make sure that they have a good game plan as a batter, and make sure that they can chip in and hold up an end.”Even if you’re down at the lower end of the order, [you have to] understand what your role is, so working with those guys is always enjoyable for myself as a batting coach, and making sure that the guys are ready to perform.”All eyes, however, are bound to be on Root as he embarks on his 100th Test, fresh from an outstanding series in Sri Lanka where his haul of 426 runs was instrumental in England’s triumph. And looking back on his debut series, Trott admitted his success had not come as a surprise.”He’s certainly baby-faced still,” he said. “You wouldn’t say he’s played 100 Test matches compared the crow’s feet that most guys get from playing so much cricket in the sun.”But I wouldn’t be surprised one bit. On that tour [in 2012], he came into the warm-up games and impressed everybody, not only by his skill but the way that he conducted himself.”He was new to the scene then, but he’s gone from strength to strength. He leads by example, he still has a passion for the game and the desire to improve. I think that rubs off on everyone and England are very lucky to have a guy like that leading from the front and batting in the middle order.”

Jeetan Patel named new captain of Warwickshire

Jeetan Patel, the former New Zealand offspinner, has been named as Warwickshire’s new first-class and one-day captain

ESPNcricinfo staff27-Nov-2017Jeetan Patel, the former New Zealand offspinner, has been named as Warwickshire’s new first-class and one-day captain, with Grant Elliott continuing to lead Birmingham Bears in the NatWest T20 Blast.Patel, 37, joined the club in 2009 and has been their overseas player across all formats since 2012, during which time he has played a part in three domestic trophies, including the County Championship in 2012, the T20 Blast in 2014, and Royal London Cup in 2016.All told, he has taken 353 first-class, 102 List A and 113 T20 wickets for the club and was named as the PCA County Most Valuable Player in both 2014 and 2016 and runner-up in 2017.His appointment comes at a difficult time for Warwickshire, who were relegated from the top flight of the County Championship last season. Ian Bell, the former club captain stood down towards the end of the season following a loss of form, and was initially replaced by his former England team-mate, Jonathan Trott.”We’re thrilled to have Jeetan returning to the club in April as our captain,” said Ashley Giles, Warwickshire’s director of sport. “He’s a true Bear, who has won all three domestic competitions at the club, and sets exceptionally high standards on and off the pitch.”In addition to being one of the best cricketers on the county circuit for several years, Jeetan has played a key role in mentoring our young spin bowlers and we believe that he will be an excellent leader as we continue our transition and build a platform for more success in the future.”Patel said: “I absolutely love playing for Warwickshire and it’s a great honour to return to Edgbaston in 2018 as club captain. When you look at the guys who have captained the club over the years and what they have achieved, it is amazing to go on that list.”It’s all about looking forward now though and working hard with the current group of players to try to create something special for the club and supporters in the years ahead. Last season was a difficult one but every club goes through transitions and the important thing is how people react. The challenge is there for us to rebuild and go again.”As part of that redevelopment, the club have named Dom Sibley as the new vice-captain, following his arrival from Surrey in August. Sibley, 22, made an immediate impact with 191 runs in seven T20 games to help the Bears to the Final of the T20 Blast, and he also scored 310 runs in six County Championship appearances.”Dom made a significant impact after joining the club at a difficult time last season and we saw some real fight and character in the innings that he played,” Giles said. “He’s fitted well into the changing room and by working closer with Jeetan, Grant and the other experienced players, we believe that he can also develop into an excellent leader.”

Lynn signs five-year deal with Brisbane Heat

While the exact terms of the contract are not yet known, reports suggest it could make him a million-dollar player in the BBL

ESPNcricinfo staff20-Oct-2017Chris Lynn has signed a new five-year deal with the Big Bash League franchise Brisbane Heat. The franchise has called it “the biggest deal in BBL history”, although among Australian players, Aaron Finch is also on a lucrative long-term deal having signed with Melbourne Renegades for three seasons in August 2016.The exact terms of Lynn’s contract are not yet known, but reports suggest it could make him a million-dollar player in the BBL.Heat have also announced two-year deals for coaches Daniel Vettori and Shane Bond. “The fact we have locked-up Dan and Shane and a good proportion of our squad for the next few years bodes well for the future,” Lynn told the franchise’s website. “The Heat has evolved into a club for all Queensland fans and we’re determined to make a success of the opportunity we have ahead of us. It was one of the best experiences of my career to play in front of five sold-out home crowds at the Gabba.”To be in the same side as a legend like Brendon McCullum and enjoy some success along the way made it even more memorable. I’m honoured that the Heat have shown confidence in me for the coming seasons and given us the opportunity to achieve something special as a club in the future.”Lynn has spent his entire BBL career with Heat, scoring 1459 runs for them at an average of 39.43 and a strike rate of 155.04. He had an phenomenal 2016-17 season, scoring 309 runs in five innings while only being dismissed twice, at a strike rate of 177.58.Numbers of that nature make Lynn one of Australian cricket’s most exciting talents – when fit. He has suffered persistent shoulder injuries, and he is currently recovering after undergoing surgery. He has missed the start of Australia’s home season – including the entirety of the domestic one-day tournament – for the fourth year running, and has not been offered a Queensland contract for 2017-18.Lynn said that his recovery was proceeding steadily. “I’ve had some good reports from the surgeon and the QC medical staff and we’re working to the recovery plan. It is feeling okay now, although there is still a way to go.”

Moeen milestone keeps Kent at bay

Moeen Ali became the third player to reach 1,000 first-class runs for the season as Worcestershire struggled to get on terms with Kent at New Road.

03-Aug-2013
ScorecardMoeen went past 1,000 runs for the season•PA Photos

Moeen Ali became the third player to reach 1,000 first-class runs for the season as Worcestershire struggled to get on terms with Kent at New Road.The former Warwickshire batsman followed Joe Root (England and Yorkshire) and Chris Rogers (Middlesex and Australia) to the milestone while making 59 in his county’s progress to 213 for 7 on a rain-shortened second day. Moeen’s innings was crucial in trimming his team’s deficit to 111 after James Tredwell’s best Championship bowling performance for two years.Tredwell twice took two wickets in five balls in posting figures of 4 for 34 but Worcestershire comfortably avoided the follow-on thanks to the composure of Tom Fell, the 19-year-old Oxford University batsman, who made an unbeaten 62 against Australia last month. He again looked impressive in scoring 64 not out from 123 balls on his second appearance in the Championship.Fell’s unbroken eighth-wicket partnership of 55 with Jack Shantry made sure that Moeen’s work was not wasted.Having passed the 900 mark more than a month ago, the Moeen finally crossed the 1,000-run threshold when his eighth boundary, a crisp shot through midwicket off Mark Davies, took him to 43. By then Worcestershire had lost their openers, Matt Pardoe and Daryl Mitchell both giving slip catches in a spell of 2 for 23 by Darren Stevens, and soon after afterwards Thilan Samaraweera was taken behind the wicket off Calum Haggett.For Kent it was another day of consolidation in their recovery from a dismal start to the season. Bottom of the division at the halfway stage, their campaign began to pick up with a first win against Gloucestershire at Cheltenham. Now they are looking a stronger, more competitive unit. Their seamers pegged away with the necessary accuracy and the pressure led to mistakes by Worcestershire’s top order, although it was a switch to Tredwell’s spin that accounted for Moeen.After batting for two and a half hours, a loose shot to mid-on sparked off a collapse in which Ben Cox, Joe Leach and Gareth Andrew were all snapped in a ring of close catchers.When the seventh wicket fell at 158, Worcestershire still needed 15 to make Kent bat again but Shantry cleared that hurdle with two cover driven boundaries in an over from Davies. This seemed to take the momentum out of Kent and Fell, who made s duck in his only previous Championship innings against Glamorgan, cashed in with 10 fours.

Ireland face up to difficult task

Ireland have a huge challenge ahead of them in the World Twenty20, having been grouped with one of the favourites, West Indies, and a team with a reputation for doing well on the world stage, Australia

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Sep-2012Ireland have a huge challenge ahead of them in the World Twenty20, having been grouped with one of the favourites, West Indies, and a team with a reputation for doing well on the world stage, Australia. They had made a splash in the 2011 World Cup with a thrilling defeat of England, and their captain William Porterfield was certain Ireland would not be pushovers in Sri Lanka.”We are confident with ourselves, with what we’ve got in terms of player potential,” Porterfield said. “Craig McDermott (who recently joined as Ireland’s bowling coach) has fit in pretty well, working with the bowlers. They’ve been taking confidence from him with the fact that he was with Australia before us but he’s come in and he’s seen what we’ve got and he’s got a lot of confidence within the squad that we can go out there and beat anyone.”Ireland had a strong showing in the qualifying tournament six months ago in Dubai, where they won all but one of their 11 matches. Since then, they have played only three official T20s, losing all of them to Bangladesh. Porterfield, though, was happy with the lead-up to the World T20.”The majority of the lads have been here about a week or so and we’ve had a couple of games so we’ve got some game time in the middle,” he said. “Preparations have gone really well so far.”Since we qualified in March we’ve had a season’s cricket in between but it’s always been something all the lads have had half an eye on throughout the season as we knew we were going to finish off with the World Cup in Sri Lanka and it’s obviously the subcontinent, so it’s a great atmosphere and a great place to play cricket.”With the World T20’s first round featuring only two matches per side, Porterfield wanted Ireland to make a strong start. “Our first game is against Australia,” he said, “so it’s important we start well. There are groups of three teams so you’ve got to win at least one game if not two to go through out of the groups.”Ireland have a warm-up game against Zimbabwe on Thursday and another against Bangladesh on Monday before the match against Australia next Wednesday.

How Oman turned it around in the last three overs for a Super Over

Namibia needed a comfortable 18 runs to win off 18 balls but couldn’t do it. Here’s how the action unfolded in the last three overs of the chase

ESPNcricinfo staff03-Jun-20242:29

O’Brien: Wrong call to give Bilal the Super Over instead of Mehran

17.1 Mehran Khan to Smit, 4 byes, Good length ball outside off. Tries to cut, but extra bounce forces no connection, and it flies past the keeper for four more!17.2 Mehran Khan to Smit, no run, Fullish ball just outside off. Cut is stopped by point17.3 Mehran Khan to Smit, OUT, Twist? Perhaps not given Frylinck is still out there. But some Oman flags flutter as Smit holes out at long on. Variable bounce again as Smith tries to club Mehran for a big-shot, however it comes off the top-half of the bat.17.4 Mehran Khan to Wiese, no run, Full ball around off stump. Caresses a drive to cover17.5 Mehran Khan to Wiese, no run, Full ball wide outside off, but inside the tram-lines. The ball barely bounces and dribbles through to the keeper17.6 Mehran Khan to Wiese, no run, Good length ball on a fourth-stump line. The cut is hit well, but straight to the man lurking at point. Namibia need 14 off 1218.1 Bilal Khan to Frylinck, no run, Full ball on his pads and clipped to the leg side, but not for any run18.2 Bilal Khan to Frylinck, 1 run, Flat-batted down the ground for a single18.3 Bilal Khan to Wiese, SIX runs, Just clears wide long on! Length ball around leg stump and Wiese backs himself to clear the boundary with a big shot. Even though the timing isn’t perfect, he targets the shortest boundary of this ground, and Aayan’s attempt is futile.18.4 Bilal Khan to Wiese, no run, Yorker, fourth-stump line. Bit of tail away. Dug away to point18.5 Bilal Khan to Wiese, 1 run, Yorker on middle stump and all Wiese can do is keep the ball away from the stumps. Dug away to the leg side18.6 Bilal Khan to Frylinck, 1 run, Yorker length ball on off to end the over, but Frylinck manages to bunt it away to the off side for a single towards square leg19.1 Mehran Khan to Frylinck, OUT, Oh my days! More drama! Around the stumps. Full ball on middle and leg. Frylinck tries to clip it leg side but the hits his pad, and then it ricochets onto the stumps!19.2 Mehran Khan to Green, no run, And it is a dot ball! Green makes room at first but then returns to his normal stance as Mehran bowls a full ball outside off. Green attempts to ramp it over short-third but missesFive needed off four balls!19.3 Mehran Khan to Green, OUT, O man, Oman are in this! Green tries to play a cheeky leg-side scoop over short fine leg but he misses. Mehran’s full ball on off stump hits him on the pad and the umpire gives him out LBW. Namibia review. Crashing into the stumps!19.4 Mehran Khan to Kruger, 1 run, Kruger gets Wiese on strike with a single. Full ball outside off and pushed to cover’s left19.5 Mehran Khan to Wiese, 2 runs, Full ball on off and he creams the straightest of straight drives. Ball smashes into the stumps at the bowler’s end and it ricochets away towards cover for a couple of runs. The stumps have probably saved a boundary there!19.6 Mehran Khan to Wiese, 1 bye, WE ARE GOING TO A SUPER OVER! Good length ball outside off. Ball takes extra bounce and Wiese can’t cut. Keeper can’t grab cleanly either, and the ball falls to his left. Wiese and Kruger run across and the keeper tries a reverse throw while diving. He misses, and Kruger completes the run. We finish on a tie.

Prest's maiden ton holds up five-star Harmer

Hampshire avoid follow-on as 20-year-old takes down Essex spinners

ECB Reporters Network21-Sep-2023Tom Prest scored his maiden LV= Insurance County Championship century to frustrate title hopefuls Essex, despite Simon Harmer’s 35th first-class five-wicket haul for the county.Former England Under-19 skipper Prest masterfully scored an unbeaten 102 to guide Hampshire past the follow-on score with vital contributions from Toby Albert, Fletcha Middleton, James Vince and Keith Barker.Harmer claimed 5 for 143 as he churned away from the River End for 36 overs but Hampshire ended the day on 322 for 8 – and 125 runs adrift – with the potential to set up a result on the final day.Albert and Middleton had seen out seven overs the previous evening and combined on the third morning with a mix of patience and skill to clear the new ball with little problems.

Middleton survived a missed stumping, the first of a few missteps from Essex, on 17 as the 21-year-old openers put on 68. But the arrival of Paul Walter’s tall left-arm pace to the attack immediately saw the back of Albert, when he pinned him lbw with an in-swinging yorker.Nick Gubbins pushed to second slip to give Harmer his first before the offspinner bowled a slog-sweeping Middleton for 47.Vince had arrived with intent to counter and smashed 46 in 45 balls, capped by hitting Matt Critchley back over his head for six.He and Liam Dawson fell in consecutive overs playing aggressive shots, Vince skying a top edge to long off, while Dawson slogged a sweep from well outside off stump to square leg.Essex’s title hopes looked bright with Hampshire 141 for 5 and in a prime follow-on position, and Surrey collapsing at The Kia Oval against Northamptonshire. But Prest flipped the script by partnering up with the lower-middle order to defy Harmer and bat Hampshire towards a position of strength.Prest has long been talked about in the same breath as Vince, with his powerful shot-making and wonderful ability to find boundaries. His red-ball form, in his first six outings, had been disappointing, especially compared to his sparkling white-ball record – which included two List A centuries and four Vitality Blast fifties.Prest has previously impressed in white-ball cricket•Getty Images

Here, he scored 36 of his 69-ball half-century in boundaries with plenty of resilience shown in a dodgy situation for his team. Prest put on 54 with the uneasy Brown – who survived a simple catch at square leg when on one before he was caught off the bat-pad for Harmer’s fourth.Prest was dropped by Harmer at second slip the ball after bringing up his first Championship fifty but was otherwise chanceless, amid turn and invariable bounce from Harmer.Barker utilised his well-honed reverse=sweep and dipped into his experience to join forces with his young seventh-wicket partner, the pair putting on 89 together. Barker fell trying to pull Sam Cook before Felix Organ gave Harmer his fifth with a misjudged slog-sweep.Kyle Abbott then stewarded Prest to make sure Hampshire averted the follow-on, which he managed with a pair of sixes in the 77th over. Prest then reached three figures in 119 balls after the second new ball had been taken.Bad light took the players off just before 4.30pm before rain kiboshed any hope of any more play, as those who stayed in the ground watched Surrey’s improving situation being played on the scoreboard.

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