Santosh Kumar, Dharmichand bowl Karnataka to knock out stage

Santosh Kumar’s six wicket haul on the final day propelled theKarnataka Under-19 team to enter the knock out stage of the CoochBehar Trophy with a 173-run victory on the third and final day overKerala in the South Zone league match at the KRL Ground in Ambalamugalon Monday. The other team to enter the knock out stage from the zoneis Andhra who scored an innings and 67 run win over Goa on Sunday.Resuming their second innings at 217 for 8, Karnataka were all out for246, leaving Kerala a stiff victory target of 300.Kerala folded up for 126 off 35.3 overs. The openers R Kapil (9) andMM Nathani (18) made a sedate start adding 24 runs in 9.4 overs. Offspinner Santosh Kumar who was introduced early into the attack thenbowled Kapil. Rejas joined Nathani and the two took the score to 38when Rejas was bowled by Santosh Kumar. The last ball of Santosh’snext over saw the exit of Nathani in similar fashion. Skipper VipinLal (19) and RP Sujith (39) took the score to 58. But at this junctureVipin was caught by Krishna off Kumar. Three balls later NJ John (0)returned to the pavilion after being bowled by Kumar.In the next over Dharmichand had AC Antony caught by KV Bhatt beforethe batsman had opened his account. At 59 for 6 in the 21st over,Kerala were staring at certain defeat. But Sujith found some goodcompany in the later order batsmen to take Kerala past the 100 runmark. Sujith after a 46-run seventh wicket stand with Aneesh (10) in7.5 overs, was caught by HTS Rao off Dharmichand. For his brightknock, Sujith faced 23 balls while hitting 6 boundaries and 2 sixes.Kumar now came back to claim the wicket of Aneesh by shattering hisdefences. Dharmichand then dismissed S Santh (12) and S Sooraj (7) offsuccessive deliveries. Santosh Kumar finished with six for 35 whileDharmichand had four for 64.

MRF in command against Associate Banks

MRF were in a position of considerable strength when bad light stoppedplay about an hour before the scheduled close on the second day oftheir Buchi Babu all India invitation tournament pre-quarterfinalagainst All India Associate Banks at the MAC stadium in Chennai onMonday.Resuming at 320 for five, MRF declared their first innings at 490 fornine. Associate Banks were 84 for three when play was first suspendedand then abandoned for the day.Tanveer Jabbar, 110 not out overnight, scored only four more runsbefore being dismissed. But N Gautam and the later order batsmenprolonged the bank team’s agony. Skipper M Senthilnathan, himself nomean batsman at one time, came in at No 8 and and scored 14, helpingGautam to add 27 runs for the seventh wicket. Then Gautam and Testleft arm spin bowler Venkatpathi Raju (21) were associated in aneighth wicket partnership of 49 runs off 11 overs. Finally, Gautam andZaheer Khan put a tired and dispirited attack to the sword by adding90 runs for the ninth wicket off 20.2 overs. Gautam, who batted ashade under three hours was then caught by Akhil off Sridhar for 83.He faced 121 balls and hit five fours and three sixes. Zaheer remainedunbeaten on 43, scored off 66 balls. He hit four fours and two sixes.The innings was declared when Gautam was out.If Associate Banks were to pose a serious challenge to MRF’s total, agood start was imperative. But they never got it. Opener CP Sahu (12)slipped while trying for a single and was run out by a direct hit fromKanitkar at point. Daniel Manohar and Devendra Bundela battled alongbut batting was generally a struggle. Finally Manohar who battedalmost two hours for 27, was caught by Raju off Gautam.Pankaj Dharmani decided a counter attack was the best method andquickly hit two boundaries. He then lifted the first ball off anAashish Kapoor over high into the stands on the pavilion terrace. Theformer Indian off spinner however kept him guessing for the rest ofthe over and then off the last ball had him edging a quicker one toMSK Prasad behind the stumps. Dharmani’s 17 came up off only 23 balls.Hardly had VST Naidu joined Bundela when the light worsened and theplayers came off. Bundela has so far batted 102 minutes and faced 62deliveries for his 12. It goes without saying that Associate Banksface a herculean task to overhaul the MRF total on the morrow.

Khadka positive despite Nepal's record batting rout

Making their World T20 debut last year in Bangladesh, in front of the whole world, Nepal put on a commendable performance with two wins over Hong Kong and Afghanistan as well as a gritty loss to Bangladesh. There was no sign of stage fright on the biggest platform they had encountered to date and their spin-heavy attack was right at home on subcontinental decks.In possibly their biggest match since then, in unfamiliar conditions against Ireland – the premier Associate nation of the last decade – stage fright against the opposition’s canny medium-pacers who thrived in the wet and cold conditions sent Nepal tumbling to their worst defeat in T20 cricket. The total of 53 was their lowest in T20 cricket and only the second lowest T20 international total by any team. Paras Khadka, the Nepal captain, said the team’s failures with the bat could not be blamed on losing the toss.”Today was a very bad day for us,” Khadka told ESPNcricinfo after the eight-wicket loss. “Getting bowled out for 53, I don’t think there’s much that you can talk about. All we can think is that we should just forget this game even happened. We would have loved to have had a better game today. If we had 130-140, which we were targeting, we thought we could have pushed them but we just couldn’t bat at all.”Nepal has not played in the British Isles since 2008 in the World Cricket League Division Five at Jersey but Khadka says the tour to the Netherlands and 10 days in Ireland before this match should have been adequate to get the team acclimatised for today’s encounter.”Playing in different conditions you have to prove yourself,” Khadka said. “If you want to have that aim of becoming an ODI nation, we’re in the World Cricket League [Championship] now so we expect to play against all these teams. We can’t make excuses about the conditions so we have to prepare accordingly. We want to play good cricket wherever we go.”Obviously the conditions are not similar to what we’re used to, but that’s what the beauty of cricket is, playing international cricket in different regions. That’s how you become a better cricketer, playing in different conditions and adapting to that and performing at that level. So we are looking forward to it. We’ll not put in excuses that the conditions are different. Of course conditions are different. They’re different for all teams except for the hosts. It’s very important we think positively.”Khadka defended the decision to drop vice-captain Gyanendra Malla down from No. 3 – where he had scored 52 in a win over USA – to No. 5 in the batting order, saying that it was a plan that didn’t come off.”We knew this would be an important game moving forward. Ireland is probably the strongest team in our group. We thought that we had to take the chance for us to get a good decent score early. Unfortunately it didn’t fire for us but it’s very important we come back to basics. We shouldn’t be stuck with numbers saying you need to bat at one, two, three or four. Whatever number, you should be ready to go out there especially in T20 cricket.”Despite the heavy margin of defeat, Khadka remained positive about the team’s prospects and hopes they can make up ground over the next few matches to close the gap in the net run rate tiebreaker.”We’ve seen more than any other team what it takes to get into a World Cup, how every match and every run, every wicket is so important when it comes down to run rate, having come through the World Cricket League from Division Five, Division Four and Division Three. We’ll go out there and play with whatever we have and give the best of what we have and the results will be there definitely.”The tournament is pretty wide open for all teams. It’s very important that we keep the focus going. The opportunities will be there so it’s about how hungry you are. The more hungry you are the more the results will come in our favor. We have the talent and the potential, now it’s about putting in the numbers and performances. With the kind unity and team spirit that we have, we hope to make it through.”

Broad and Root bury feeble Australia

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsAlastair Cook had called for England to “etch their names in history” as they sought a victory in the fourth Investec Test that would regain the Ashes and ease the memory of their whitewash in Australia 20 months earlier. But even Cook, an England captain brimming with expectation, would not have anticipated the rout that came to pass as Stuart Broad carved through Australia’s batting at will in one of the most startling opening sessions in Ashes history.Australia, utterly bereft, were dismissed for 60 in only 18.3 overs, with cricket statisticians wading through damning numbers either achieved or narrowly avoided. Broad, carrying an onerous responsibility in the absence of James Anderson, returned his best Test figures of 8 for 15 in 9.3 new-ball overs amid scenes of general delirium. Only Jim Laker, twice in the same match, has bettered that for an England bowler in the Ashes.Then order was mightily restored. England came out, so did the sun, and the lead at their lead at the close was 214 with six wickets remaining: the Ashes surely as good as won after a single day. After Broad’s feeding frenzy came Joe Root’s serene imposition of reality – an unbeaten 124, sagacious where Australia had been so disorientated, his mind crisply attired for the task as he sparkled with a succession of drives and late cuts and a beaming sun taunted Australia for their inability to bat long enough to benefit from easing conditions.Broad loves Trent Bridge, his home ground, and he must have sensed it making eyes at him on an overcast morning carrying great significance. The occasion stirred him, his competitive zeal allied to faultless execution. Long before the first drinks session of the day, he was brandishing the ball, a rudely red one only 6.1 overs old, to the crowd to mark a five-wicket haul.Five wickets in record time: the curdled cream of Australian batting secured by the first delivery of his fourth over. Australia’s batsmen were awash with paranoia. He bowled a perfect, inviting length on a good old-fashioned English seamer, finding just enough movement and leaving a systematic close-catching cordon to do the rest.Stuart Broad saluted a turbo-charged five-wicket haul before the drinks break on the first morning•Getty Images

“Lack of batting technique leading to collapses,” was the considered opinion of Geoffrey Boycott, prominently placed on ESPNcricinfo as the Test began. Australia can’t say they weren’t warned. Within 35 minutes, they were 29 for 6 and the batsman walking off was Michael Clarke, who had tried to stare down his lack of form with jaw-jutting defiance and who had just had an almighty swipe at a wide one.Australia did not play and miss all that much, but they went hard at the ball, nicked often and when they did, England’s catching was exemplary, nine of the 10 wickets falling in the cordon.Broad’s first wicket, that of Chris Rogers, made him the fifth England bowler to reach 300 in Tests. When Clarke departed, Broad’s run of five wickets in 19 balls became the most prolific start to an innings in Test history.Australia’s inability to adapt to English conditions had never been more striking. An era where so much Test cricket is attritional on sedate pitches, and where T20 holds sway, has eaten into defensive techniques. From the first ball, as Broad scratched the crease, the brown earth revealed some residual dampness. But the movement was not excessive, not as extravagant as Edgbaston where England had won within three days.England, for all that, won a good toss to have first bowl on an overcast Nottingham morning, aware that the Trent Bridge groundsman, pilloried for a stultifying surface officially marked as “poor” 12 months earlier against India, would feel obliged to provide something a little spicier. The Test pitch had been dug up and its replacement thought it was housing a county match in April.Rogers has been one of the staunchest members of this Australia batting line-up but, as the series has progressed, Broad has found his measure, hounding the left-hander from around the wicket. When he found a little movement to expose a furtive push at the third ball of the morning, the tone was set.By the time the first over was completed, one of cricket’s prettiest scoreboards was looking uglier: 10 for 2. Steven Smith square drove Broad to the boundary boards – one of only seven boundaries in the innings – but then he edged to third slip. Broad had squared up left and right-hander in turn.England preferred Mark Wood to Steven Finn with the new ball, aware of his excellent Trent Bridge record, and his insistent line was enough to draw an inside edge from David Warner to a ball that came back. Clarke, demoted to No. 5 in an attempt at protection, must have been scurrying around the dressing room for bat and thigh pad, feeling no protection at all.Shaun Marsh, preferred to his brother Mitchell to give Australia six specialist batsmen, became the third duck in the top four, Root the latest sharp knife in the England slip box, standing at third. Adam Voges knows Trent Bridge from county cricket, but Broad knows Voges and knows he is a theory that has not come off. Resistance was beyond him as Ben Stokes flung himself rapidly to his right to hold a spectacular one-handed catch that will join Ashes folklore.Broad ran down the pitch holding his hands to his face like a blushing deb who had just received an entirely unexpected present. England’s wicketkeeper and four of the slips had all held catches in the first 4.1 overs.Clarke’s mind must have been swirling. A wideish delivery from Broad was tempting to a desperate man. Clarke was a desperate man. The ball flew to his rival captain, Cook, holding the catch above his head. It was a rash attempt to remedy matters with a single statement and it brought him only further misery. He might have fallen earlier, too, a statuesque flip-pull against Wood that fell short of Finn at deep square.And so it went on, a collapse that was impossible to arrest. Finn joined the fun, bringing one back to strike Peter Nevill’s off stump. Then three more to Broad. Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson – his 25-ball 13 the height of Australia’s resistance – giving two more slip catches to Root and the final one to Stokes as Nathan Lyon became the ninth batsman to fall in the close-catching cordon.Broad had begun the morning hoping for 300 Test wickets. He finished level with Fred Trueman’s 307. And as Fred would have said, pipe a puffing, it was hard to know what was going on out there.Consolidation for England did not come automatically. By tea, Starc had taken three wickets in return: Adam Lyth undone by late swing; Ian Bell falling into a big inswinger; and Cook, who apart from one flirtation with the slips had looked intent on batting long, so exposing Australia’s four-strong attack, unaccountably falling lbw to a floaty, full one. But Australia had opted for only four specialist bowlers to stiffen their batting (so much for that theory) and two of them, Starc and Johnson, are not exactly designed for long spells.Only a dicky back, not for the first time in this series, disturbed Root in an assertive fourth-wicket stand of 173 in 34 overs with Jonny Bairstow, his Yorkshire confrere, whose 74 was less precise but a punchy innings designed nevertheless to establish him in England’s middle order before he chipped Josh Hazlewood to square leg. Root saw out the day, but as adroitly as he batted, it was a day that belonged to Broad, a day when he looked a pugnacious and quarrelsome Ashes record in the eye and pronounced himself a winner.

Absorbing finish cut short after captains set game up

ScorecardChris Dent gave Gloucestershire a handy start to their chase•Getty Images

Declarations by both sides set up a potentially exciting finish, but bad light forced an early close with Gloucestershire, chasing 302 to win, still 90 runs short with five wickets and just under nine overs of their match against Leicestershire at Grace Road remaining.Resuming on the final day with their first innings on 249 for 8, Gloucestershire captain Will Tavare called his batsmen in as soon as the follow-on had been saved, with the visitors still 146 runs adrift of Leicestershire’s first innings score.With the Leicestershire batsmen looking to score quickly, Tavare’s bowlers then took four wickets before lunch. Liam Norwell had Ned Eckersley caught off a top edge, a fine effort from David Payne running back from midwicket, and Angus Robson caught behind with a delivery that bounced and left him.Mark Cosgrove hit a swift 21 before trying to hit Benny Howell over midwicket and being given leg before, and Aadil Ali, looking to drive, gave Kieran Noema-Barnett a straightforward return catch.Wickets continued to tumble after lunch, with Niall O’Brien, Wayne White, Ben Raine and Clint McKay all falling cheaply, but Dan Redfern hit his highest score of an injury-hit season, allowing Cosgrove to declare in turn.Tavare and Chris Dent gave Gloucestershire the ideal start, compiling an opening partnership of 108 at over four an over, but left-arm seamer Rob Taylor picked up Dent caught and bowled off a leading edge.Tavare gloved an attempted hook at Ben Raine behind the wicket to Niall O’Brien behind the stumps, but Peter Handscomb and Neema-Barnett had added 40 for the sixth wicket to reignite the chase when the light became unplayable.

East Zone wants own candidate to replace Dalmiya

The early signs of who will replace Jagmohan Dalmiya as BCCI president point to someone from within the East Zone, which has first right to pick a candidate. Since it is the East Zone’s turn to nominate the next president, as Dalmiya died while serving his term, a majority of its six members – comprising Bengal, Assam, Jharkhand, Odisha, Tripura and the Kolkata-based National Cricket Club – believes that a candidate of their own, rather than one from outside, should fill the vacancy.Four of the six East Zone members ESPNcricinfo spoke with, however, asserted that it was too premature to sit together and decide on a candidate, and wanted the BCCI to first call the Special General Meeting to pick an interim president. The BCCI’s Memorandum and Rules and Regulations stipulate that the notice to hold the SGM needs to be sent by October 5 with a 21-day notice.

Ganguly meets West Bengal chief minister

Former India captain Sourav Ganguly met West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday amid speculation that he may take over as the Cricket Association of Bengal president to succeed Jagmohan Dalmiya. Currently the joint secretary of the CAB, Ganguly arrived to meet Banerjee with Dalmiya’s son Avishek.
“To discuss something like this [three days after his death] is not right,” Ganguly said. “Speculation will be on, someone will run CAB. It’s too early to comment because it has just been three days… It’s very early to say.”

As for who can stand for election, the rules say presidential candidates should have attended at least two AGMs and been an office bearer (president, secretary, treasurer, joint secretary) or vice-president. That makes Arindam Ganguly and Gautam Roy (Assam), Chitrak Mitra, Gautam Dasgupta, KP Kajaria (Bengal), and Amitabh Choudhary (Jharkhand) top of the long list of eligible candidates to replace Dalmiya.Choudhary, currently the BCCI joint secretary, acknowledged his desire to stand for election, but also took care to say he was willing to support any other member from the East. “It is in keeping with the philosophy behind the provision in the [BCCI] constitution,” Choudhary said.A senior official at the Cricket Association of Bengal, where Dalmiya was the president, said it was too early to finalise a name. “But this is the East Zone’s term so it will not be good if somebody [from outside the zone] is hijacking that. I would prefer a person from the East naturally, doesn’t matter who.” Asked if Choudhary could emerge as front runner, the CAB official said there were “question marks” about such a decision, but he would keep an open mind.The CAB and the NCC (another club where Dalmiya was the president) are two important votes that could tilt the balance not just for an East Zone nominee, but even for an outsider wanting to throw his hat in the ring. The CAB official pointed out that according to the constitution an election for the president’s post has to be convened within 60 days preceded by an SGM. The date for the SGM and road map for the election, he said, would be chalked out after the condolence meeting for Dalmiya, which is likely to take place next week.The official said he would also consult Dalmiya’s son Avishek about whether his father had suggested any names that were eligible to lead CAB and the NCC. According to the official, Dalmiya’s word always meant the last word and that would not change even after his death and the reason Avishek was being kept in the loop was because he had been working closely with Dalmiya after he became the BCCI president in March 2015.

Amir docked 150% match fee for on-field spat

Mohammad Amir has been fined 150% of his match fee for a disciplinary breach while playing for Sui Southern Gas Corporation against Pakistan International Airlines in a qualifying fixture of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy in Faisalabad on Thursday.Amir, who is under observation since being cleared to play first-class cricket in January, was booked under article 45.4 and 45.5 of the PCB’s domestic Code of Conduct which relates to “intimidating a player using crude or abusive language to sledge, and making offensive remarks.”Amir, whose five-year spot-fixing ban ended in September, has been in good form for his domestic side, picking 27 wickets in three matches so far.”Amir was penalised for violating the code of conduct,” a PCB spokesman told ESPNcricinfo. “He was fined 50 and 100% for two difference offences. He was found to be sledging around and later was found exchanging crude language with PIA batsman Faisal Iqbal. The batsman has also been fined 50% of his match for engaging in exchange of harsh words in between them.” Iqbal, though, denied this to ESPNcricinfo, saying that he had only been warned not fined.In a separate incident, Mohammad Irfan, playing for Khan Research Laboratory, was fined 50% of his match fee for an altercation with the umpire during a match against State Bank of Pakistan at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.Irfan was reportedly caught changing the condition of the ball by the opponent’s secret camera. State Bank of Pakistan’s manager, who leveled the allegation, was also handed a fine.

South Africa slam 438 to flatten India in decider

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details4:51

Agarkar: AB the best batsman in the world in all formats

South Africa won their first-ever bilateral series in India after Faf du Plessis’ first, Quinton de Kock’s second and AB de Villiers’ third centuries of the series helped the visitors soar to the highest total in the five matches, the highest at the Wankhede and the highest against India. They did not subject India to their biggest margin of defeat, but they did bowl them out more than 200 runs short of the target, no mean feat in batsmen-friendly conditions.South Africa’s line-up enjoyed the track, which offered almost no bounce or turn, and applied aggression in waves reminiscent of the day nine years ago when they scored this exact number of runs against Australia at the Wanderers. Then, South Africa were chasing, this time they were making India’s bowlers do that. India have never conceded more runs in an ODI; South Africa have scored more but only by one. This was their sixth score over 400 and fourth in 2015 alone, and it underlined their ability to dominate opposition on their own turf.India will be disappointed by the way their challenge died in both departments. Their bowlers began with an over-reliance on the short ball and then just ran out of ideas while their batsmen showed the right intent upfront but lost wickets trying to sustain the scoring rate. In the end, they conceded a second series to South Africa on the tour with the main event, the Tests, still to come.The signs of South African authority were evident from the start. They raced to fifty inside six overs during which Hashim Amla became the fastest batsmen to 6,000 ODI runs. Amla was dismissed cheaply for a fifth time in the series but that did not have an impact on South Africa’s morale.De Kock owned the pull shot and with the seamers failing to generate anything, MS Dhoni introduced spin in the seventh over. Harbhajan Singh kept things tight at first but the tension was routinely broken at the other end. South Africa grew in confidence, brought up 100 in the 15th over and appeared unstoppable until de Kock hit Amit Mishra in the air to mid-off and presented a chance. Mohit Sharma got fingertips to the ball but could not hold on. De Kock was on 58 at the time and Mohit’s mistake would prove costly.He was seeing the ball well and found the rope so regularly, there was barely a need for singles. More than two-thirds of his runs came in boundaries but he reached his century, his fifth against India and eighth overall, with a single.Du Plessis had almost been a spectator in the proceedings and allowed de Kock most of the strike but when de Kock was caught on the long-off boundary, he knew he had to take over. With de Villiers egging him on, du Plessis upped the ante, assisted by Dhoni using part-timers Suresh Raina and Virat Kohli against South Africa’s two most destructive batsmen. They pierced the gaps and hit with power as the intensity increased.De Villiers injected impetus into the innings with his scoring rate – his fifty came off 34 balls – and du Plessis followed suit. After taking 61 balls to score fifty, he needed just 44 more deliveries to get a century, even as he battled cramps to get there.South Africa entered the last ten overs on 294 for 2 but would have been wary of the squeeze that can strike with the new playing conditions. This time, they were not strangled. Du Plessis plundered 24 runs off the 43rd over, bowled by Axar Patel, even though he could barely stand up and had to retire hurt on 133.Then, it was de Villiers’ turn. His century came off the 57th ball he faced to chants of “ABD” from the Wankhede crowd. South Africa were on the brink of 400 when de Villiers edged an attempted pull and was caught behind and India had finally got through the senior batsmen. Farhaan Behardien and David Miller had free reign to slog as hard as they wanted and they made the most of what time they had. South Africa scored 144 runs in the last ten overs. By the time India had that many, it looked as though a thriller might just play out.India lost Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli in the first eight overs of the reply but Shikhar Dhawan, who had been middling until this match, and Ajinkya Rahane kept them in it. Rahane was particularly severe on Dale Steyn and Imran Tahir but neither of them targeted South Africa’s fifth bowler, Behardien, as much as they should have. Still, they applied pressure, forced mistakes from South Africa in the field and were on track despite the length of the journey.Then it all changed when Kagiso Rabada proved there is no substitute for pure pace. He was brought back on in the 23nd over, angled a fuller ball across Dhawan and drew the leading edge. Hashim Amla fell face first taking the catch and India were faltering. In Rabada’s next over, he dished up a leg-stump yorker than snuck past Suresh Raina and broke the back of the Indian chase.Rahane, who batted with composure and class and scored 50 off 41 balls, was feeling the heat. He holed out to midwicket off Dale Steyn, whose veins popped. In South Africa, the corks would have been doing the same as the series was all but sealed. India lost their last five wickets for 29 runs and South Africa secured a second limited-overs series on their longest-ever visit to India.

Minor Counties Championship Round Up

Lincolnshire were again frustrated by the weather when day two of their MinorCounties championship match with Northumberland at Sleaford was called offfollowing heavy overnight rain.Conditions at the London Road venue were already sodden following the weekenddeluge that accounted for both days of the scheduled Bank Holiday fixturewith Bedfordshire.It means that Lincolnshire have now lost four of their opening six days inthe championship this season, and skipper Mark Fell admitted: “It going to bevery hard for us to now challenge for the title.”Sleaford: Northumberland 176-6 Lincs 178-4. Abandoned as a draw. Lincs 4, Northumberland 1

Good fightback by Middlesex

Middlesex bowled well to reduce Gloucestershire to 157 for 7 in 82overs with Phil Tufnell taking 3 for 16 and Angus Fraser 2 for 43.Only opener Dominic Hewson (43) and wicket keeper Reggie Williams (30not out) put on a decent score. Earlier Middlesex made a disappointing207 after being 151 for 5 overnight. Middlesex got a bonus battingpoint thanks to Richard Johnson’s quickfire 31. Martyn Ball took 3 for31 for Gloucestershire.Gloucestershire’s reply started off very badly when they lost TimHancock their opener for a duck to Fraser, then lost Hewson, Windowsand Mark Alleyne to Tufnell and were at one stage 83 for 5. But theGloucestershire lower order hung on grimly to keep the match even.

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