County Championship: Sam Whiteman steers Northants to draw with Somerset at Taunton

Northants batter Sam WhitemanImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Australian batter Sam Whiteman joined Northants in January

LV= County Championship Division One, Cooper Associates County Ground, Taunton (day four)

Northamptonshire 255 & 311-8: Whiteman 130* Taylor 53; Leach 3-77, Gregory 2-59

Somerset 412: Kohler-Cadmore 130, Rew 89; White 5-103

Somerset (12 pts) drew with Northants (9 pts)

Skipper Sam Whiteman's first Northamptonshire century batted them to safety on the final day of the County Championship match with Somerset at Taunton.

The visitors managed to extend their second innings from an overnight 66-1 to 311-8, with the rock-solid Whiteman leading from the front with an unbeaten 130 off 269 balls, which included 14 fours and a six.

The Yorkshire-born Australian left-hander, in his first season as a Championship player, batted throughout the day, receiving excellent support from Tom Taylor, who contributed 53 to an eighth-wicket stand of 79 that finally frustrated a Somerset attack.

Jack Leach finished with 3-77 and match figures of 6-92.

By the time the players shook hands in the early evening, Northamptonshire had a lead of 154, with a possible 11 overs remaining. They took nine points from the rain-affected contest, while Somerset, yet to win this season, claimed 12.

The home bowlers expected to have to toil for every wicket as Northamptonshire began the day needing 91 to avoid an innings defeat, with nine wickets in hand. So it proved on a pitch which had offered little in the way of seam movement or turn on day three.

The opening attack of Craig Overton and Lewis Gregory went past the bat several times early on, but Whiteman and nightwatchman Jordan Buckingham survived and started to look increasingly comfortable.

Buckingham marked his Northamptonshire debut with an invaluable contribution, sharing a half-century stand with his skipper and facing 66 balls for his 17 runs before being bowled advancing down the pitch to Leach.

By then Whiteman had reached a 104-ball 50, with five fours and a six over mid-wicket off Leach. More importantly, 20 overs of the day had elapsed before Somerset made the breakthrough.

There was no shortage of effort or accuracy from the bowlers. Leach struck another blow when Hassan Azad, who had retired hurt with a hand injury the previous evening, offered a low return catch having made only four.

It was 147-3 at lunch, with Northamptonshire still 10 runs behind. A Saif Zaib reverse sweep off Leach early in the afternoon session levelled the scores.

A draw was looking increasingly likely, but, having moved confidently to 33, Zaib carelessly lifted a ball from Overton to fine leg where Leach held a testing catch.

At 174-4, Northants were only 17 in front. But Whiteman was well set and a pulled boundary off Gregory brought up the 200. With a further 10 added, Rob Keogh, on 14, failed to keep down a leg glance off Kasey Aldridge and Gregory held a sharp catch at backward short leg.

It was 211-6 when a thinner glance saw James Sales depart for one to Gregory, wicketkeeper James Rew diving full-length to his left to hold a one-handed catch inches off the ground.

Harry Gouldstone quickly followed for a duck to another fine catch, this time by Tom Kohler-Cadmore at first slip, his task made more difficult by Overton diving in front of him to try and take the ball at second slip.

The lead was only 62. But Whiteman had just completed his hundred, a study in concentration occupying 179 balls, and found a more reliable partner in Taylor, who helped take the score to 254-7 at tea.

Somerset's last hope was the second new ball, available one over after the interval. A chance slipped by with three runs added as Cameron Bancroft failed to hold a low catch offered to his left at second slip by Taylor off Gregory.

It was an error the hosts could not afford. Taylor progressed to a 96-ball half-century, with eight fours and a six, and by the time he was well caught by Rew down the leg-side to give the tireless Peter Siddle his first wicket, the lead was 141.

But it was Whiteman's day. Unbeaten on 29 at the start of play, by the close he had occupied the crease for more than six-and-three-quarter hours, offering just one difficult chance to slip off Leach with the draw all but secured.

Report supplied by ECB Reporters' Network.

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