County Championship: Surrey beat Middlesex to return to top of Division One
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LV= County Championship Division One, Kia Oval (day four) |
Middlesex 209 & 240: Higgins 42; Clark 4-25 |
Surrey 380 & 73-1: Patel 37* |
Surrey (22 pts) beat Middlesex (3 pts) by nine wickets |
Surrey's relentless five-pronged pace attack, superbly supported by England Test wicketkeeper Ben Foakes, overwhelmed Middlesex as the county champions eased to a nine-wicket win.
Foakes took six catches, a record in a first-class innings for Surrey against their London rivals, two of them high-class efforts, while Jordan Clark's 4-25 headed an irresistible collective performance with the ball that also included day four wickets for Sean Abbott, Kemar Roach and Gus Atkinson.
Dan Worrall, who took 5-48 in Middlesex's first innings of 209, went wicketless second time around.
Only the combative Ryan Higgins, who hit 42 from 71 balls, and tailender Ethan Bamber, with a bright unbeaten 25, offered any fight with the bat as Middlesex slid from their overnight 128-3 to 240 all out.
That left Surrey needing a mere 70 for a third win in five County Championship matches, for a 22-point haul that took them back above Warwickshire at the top of Division One.
Surrey captain Rory Burns could add only 14 to his first innings 88 before nicking Tim Murtagh to slip but Ryan Patel and Dom Sibley, not out on 37 and 21 respectively, put on an unbroken 56 to ease Surrey to their first Championship win against Middlesex since 2012.
Clark claimed the final day scalps of Luke Hollman, Middlesex captain Toby Roland-Jones and all-rounder Higgins, while Abbott sent back John Simpson and last man Murtagh to earn himself three for 31. Atkinson added the wicket of Pieter Malan to finish with 2-37.
It took Surrey only 21 balls to make an initial breakthrough on day four, with Roach straightening one just enough from around the wicket to the left-handed Max Holden to brush the edge of his defensive bat on its way into the safe gloves of keeper Foakes.
Holden, who had battled hard to keep Surrey's five-pronged pace attack at bay on the third evening, scored 43 after adding just a single to his overnight score.
Roach tormented Simpson, another left-hander, with his ability to curve the ball away from the line of off stump and beat him several times, but it was Abbott who claimed the scalp of Middlesex's wicketkeeper, a brilliant diving leg-side catch by Foakes.
Higgins did his best to counter-attack, twice driving Roach for four between the bowler and mid-off when the West Indies fast bowler slightly overpitched, but an injured Malan - having come in at number seven with Mark Stoneman as his runner - lasted just 10 balls for one before falling to an excellent tumbling catch at point by Patel off Atkinson.
That wicket came from Atkinson's fourth ball, after he had replaced Abbott at the Vauxhall End, and it maintained the 25-year-old's significant impact on the game following his first innings three for 18 and the dismissal of Stoneman on the third afternoon.
Hollman was the next to go, on four, giving a diving Foakes his sixth catch of the innings when the left-hander thick-edged a superb ball from Clark - again from around the wicket.
Higgins, on 28, was dropped above his head by Sibley at first slip when he wafted at another sharp, lifting ball from the hostile Atkinson, but Clark then had Roland-Jones caught by Sibley.
Bamber unfurled some lovely offside strokes as he hung around gamely with Higgins but it took Surrey's bowlers just 2.4 overs after the lunch interval to wrap up Middlesex's innings.
Higgins top-edged a pull at Clark to Roach on the deep mid-wicket ropes and Murtagh was bowled for a duck as he stepped away to swing optimistically at Abbott.
Surrey captain Rory Burns:
"It's nice to be back at the top of the championship table. The way we came back into the match after not getting it quite right on the first morning was very impressive.
"To knock them over for 209 in their first innings, from where they were, was a truly great effort. Our bowlers did a great job in this game, after that first session or so.
"Jamie Smith then played a superb knock to help us get a sizeable first innings lead. Both he and Gus Atkinson, with the ball, showed again what fine young cricketers they are."
Middlesex captain Toby Roland-Jones:
"We have deservedly come out second best and the most frustrating thing for us is that we were not able to push on in the game from getting to 166-1 in our first innings.
"To then lose nine wickets for 43 runs is just not acceptable. We know these things can happen in cricket, and Surrey have a top-class attack, but we have to learn from that.
"Our bowling also did not have the consistency that we would have wanted and we left ourselves with too much to do in the third innings."
Report supplied by ECB Reporters' Network.
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- Published15 May 2018