County Championship: Alex Lees' second century gives Durham chance to beat Foxes

Alex Lees hits a cover driveImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Alex Lees became the sixth Durham player to score hundreds in both innings

LV= County Championship Division Two, Uptonsteel County Ground, Leicester (day three)

Durham 517-6d: Robinson 167*, Lees 101, Clark 92, Jones 78 & 296-2: Lees 138*, Bedingham 112*

Leicestershire 422: Ackermann 146, Mulder 56, Handscomb 55, Budinger 51; Raine 4-114

Durham 8pts, Leicestershire 5pts

Division Two leaders Durham will seek to turn a lead of 391 runs into a fifth win of the season on the final day of their County Championship meeting with Leicestershire after opener Alex Lees posted his second hundred of the match.

Lees, who made 101 in the first innings, was stranded on 99 when bad light threatened to end play, but after stewing in the dressing room for almost three quarters of an hour, he was able to celebrate shortly after the resumption.

The left-hander, scoring tons in each innings for the first time in his first-class career, finished on 138 not out with David Bedingham unbeaten on 112, the third-wicket pair having added 212 so far as Durham closed on 296 for two.

Earlier, Leicestershire made 422 but were still 95 behind on first innings, despite Colin Ackermann's fine 146, with Ben Raine taking four for 114 and on-loan leg spinner Matt Parkinson three for 115.

Durham skipper Scott Borthwick will look to declare early, bearing in mind it took his bowlers almost 110 overs to take 10 first-innings wickets on a pitch still holding together, and with the seemingly batter-friendly Kookaburra ball.

Durham were able to replace 19-year-old Stanley McAlindon with Matthew Potts following the latter's release by England. Leicestershire's young leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed, who had been named as a potential substitute in this match, remained with Ben Stokes' squad.

The addition of Potts, who took 13 wickets in the corresponding fixture last season, added to the challenge facing Leicestershire after resuming on 335 for four.

Nonetheless, while they avoided the follow-on and picked up a couple more batting points, they would have been disappointed to lose their last six wickets for 77.

Potts too often dropped short to no great effect in his opening six-over burst while Raine demonstrated the virtue of bowling at the stumps by dismissing Wiaan Mulder, Tom Scriven and Chris Wright leg before, lifting his tally of wickets to 34 for the season.

Ackermann, with whom Mulder shared a 106-run stand for the fifth wicket, was much harder to dislodge, yet with the sixth 150 of his first-class career just one boundary away, a rather weary-looking cut at a ball from Matt Parkinson outside off stump saw him caught at gully.

Potts returned after lunch, bowled full and straight and nipped out Callum Parkinson and Matt Salisbury in the space of three deliveries, knocking off stump out of the ground in each case, to grab a third bowling point for Durham in the nick of time.

Durham had doubled their lead by the 20th over, although at a cost of a couple of wickets.

Michael Jones was well caught in the leg-side deep by Ed Barnes as he pulled the ex-Durham seamer Salisbury. Scott Borthwick pulled Salisbury for six over the shorter boundary but misread a ball from off-spinner Ackermann, who took an almost casual return catch one-handed above his head.

Meanwhile, Lees combined muscle and innovation to post 50 from 65 balls before Bedingham launched into Ackermann and then Callum Parkinson with driven sixes.

Bedingham drove Barnes for a couple of boundaries, the first of which took him to 53 from 56 balls, and the pair had extended the lead to 315 when bad light forced a 44-minute interruption.

After his tantalising wait on 99, Lees blocked out a maiden from Ackermann before lofting Parkinson over long-on for his 10th four from 158 balls, picking up his first six in the over afterwards, although he was dropped on the midwicket boundary in doing so.

As the pair sought to score quickly, Bedingham joined him in reaching three figures from 105 balls, having hit eight fours and four sixes.

Report supplied by the ECB Reporters' Network.

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