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Durham hopes are wrecked
Lancashire v Durham (LV County Championship) : Day Two
FROM mayhem to mundane.
That might have been the reaction
of any recent convert to
cricket as sanity was restored at
Old Trafford yesterday until just
before tea.
That was when Durham
turned, apparently in desperation,
to the medium pace of
Garry Park, whose immediate
success suggested that the frontline
seamers had not done their
job.
This was confirmed when Andrew
Flintoff, fired up by bagging
a pair, quickly wrecked
Durham's slim hopes of reaching
a victory target of 323.
With an awkward 12 overs to
face, six of them were delivered
in hostile and accurate fashion
by Flintoff and he took all the
wickets as Durham finished on 28
for three.
Mark Stoneman was a little unlucky
to be caught down the leg
side by Luke Sutton, but both
Kyle Coetzer and Paul Collingwood
looked very uncomfortable
before also edging to the wicketkeeper
then nightwatchman
Mark Davies somehow survived
a torrid last over.
Flintoff was furious to have
been bowled by Park, who probably
would not have been brought
on but for the fact that Collingwood
had a sore back.
Until this season Park was
Durham's reserve wicketkeeper
and had not bowled in championship
cricket.
In his first over he beat Stuart
Law and in his second he
knocked out the Australian's off
stump. Five balls later Flintoff
shaped to drive through mid-off
and lost his leg stump.
As he awaits a Test recall this
weekend, Flintoff followed his
first-ball exit in the first innings
with a five-ball duck.
He had studiously blocked
the first ball, to the cheers of
the locals, which he acknowledged
with a raised bat. The
same bat was swishing furiously
as he departed.
Park, better known for his
fielding than his bowling, then
swooped from mid-wicket to run
out opener Paul Horton for 108
and Lancashire had lost three
wickets for one run.
Any threat of a resumption of
the first day's carnage, when 20
wickets fell, seemed to have been
averted by Kyle Hogg making 33.
But there was another rush of
wickets as Lancashire tumbled
from 189 for two to 293 all out.
There were four wickets for
off-spinner Paul Wiseman, who
turned the ball from his first delivery
and deserved his success.
Although Mitch Claydon topscored
in the first innings, he
was signed as a bowler and that
his only wicket has come courtesy
of a top-edged hook suggests
the gamble on allowing
him to justify his place has
failed.
It was after a three-over spell
by Claydon that Di Venuto
turned to Park, then when Claydon
returned after tea Hogg hit
him for four successive fours before
Davies took a good catch at
long leg.
Although Park has now staked
a claim as an all-rounder, he and
Claydon are playing only because
of others' absence, and with Dale
Benkenstein and Graham
Onions due back for next week's
visit of Yorkshire Durham can
begin to field a settled side.
But after their disappointing
start it could be that the best of
them will not be seen until the
second half of the season following
the arrival of Shivnarine
Chanderpaul.
It will also be interesting to see
whether Steve Harmison begins
to lose heart if the wickets don't
start to come soon.
His revelation that he will quit
if he doesn't get his Test place
back may just be his way of
stressing how much he wants to
play for England. But the way he
trooped off for a rub down after
bowling his heart out for an hour
after lunch smacked of frustration.
Harmison's attempts to unsettle
Horton through hostility were
largely futile, with several of his
bouncers passing over the Sydney-
born batsman's head.
He was out of luck when Mark
Chilton edged him between the
slips and gully and when Mohammad
Yousuf, on eight, edged
successive balls short of the slips
then through them for four. But,
like Claydon, Harmison has
taken only one wicket in the
match.
Durham turned to Wednesday's
seven-wicket hero, Davies,
after nine overs yesterday. But although
he again swung the ball
away the circumspect openers
were generally content to leave
anything they didn't need to play
at.
When Wiseman replaced
Davies his first ball turned and
brought a big shout for lbw
against Chilton, who edged to
Phil Mustard in the off-spinner's
second over to end a stand of 77.
Davies had another burst after
lunch before Wiseman returned
and Mal Loye went down the
pitch to his second ball and was
stumped.
Yousuf, one of the world's best
players of spin, swept Wiseman
for six in making his way comfortably
to 40 before he played
back and got an inside edge to be
caught down the leg side by Mustard.
Horton cut Claydon for his 16th
four to complete his century off
177 balls just before Park came on
to change the game. It may prove
to have been too late.
SCORECARD
Lancashire v Durham
At Old Trafford.
Overnight: Lancashire 143 (M Davies 7-33).
Durham 114 (A Flintoff 4-21,J M Anderson 4-31).
Lancashire Second Innings
M J Chilton c Mustard b Wiseman 37
P J Horton run out 108
M B Loye st Mustard b Wiseman 14
Mohammad Yousuf c Mustard b Wiseman 40
S G Law b Park 18
A Flintoff b Park 0
L D Sutton c Collingwood b Wiseman 13
K W Hogg c Davies b Claydon 33
S I Mahmood not out 5
G Keedy c Mustard b Davies 10
J M Anderson c Collingwood b Davies 0
Extras (b6 lb3 nb6 pens 0) 15
Total (81.3 overs) 293
Fall: 1-77 2-125 3-189 4-224 5-224 6-225 7-276
8-276 9-293
Bowling: S J Harmison 13-4-51-0. Claydon 16-
4-64-1. Davies 16.3-5-44-2. B W Harmison 4-1-
18-0. Wiseman 24-8-87-4. Park 8-3-20-2.
Durham Second Innings Close
M D Stoneman c Sutton b Flintoff 5
M J Di Venuto not out 13
K J Coetzer c Sutton b Flintoff 0
P D Collingwood c Sutton b Flintoff 1
M Davies not out 4
Extras (w1 nb4 pens 0) 5
Total 3 wkts (12 overs) 28
Fall: 1-12 2-18 3-20
Bowling: Anderson 6-1-21-0. Flintoff 6-5-7-3
11:14am Friday 9th May 2008
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