County Championship: Surrey close on win at Middlesex as hosts struggle with bat

Surrey's Jamie Overton (left) and Sean Abbott celebrate a wicketImage source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Surrey bowlers Jamie Overton (left) and Sean Abbott inflicted much of the damage on Middlesex

LV= County Championship Division One, Lord's (day three)

Surrey 433: Smith 138, Burns 79, Clark 78; Helm 6-110

Middlesex 238: Simpson 60, Holden 55; Abbott 3-37 & 272-9: Stoneman 72; Abbott 3-60

Middlesex (2 pts) lead Surrey (6 pts) by 77 runs with 1 wicket remaining

Middlesex's batting frailties were ruthlessly exposed by London rivals Surrey as the reigning champions closed in on a big win on day three of their County Championship Division One match at Lord's.

Aussie seamer Sean Abbott, Jamie Overton and Tom Lawes claimed three wickets apiece as the hosts crumbled from their overnight 179-5 to 238 all out in their first innings, John Simpson making 60 and Josh de Caires 30 not out.

The latest collapse means Middlesex still have only two batting bonus points out of a possible 45 so far this season.

Following on 195 behind, stand-in skipper Mark Stoneman led the resistance with 72, but others came and went before a career-best 46 not out for Ethan Bamber ensured there would be a fourth day.

Abbott (3-60) bowled De Caires with what proved to be the last ball of the day to leave Middlesex 272-9, a lead of only 77, meaning Surrey will expect to wrap up a sixth win of the season early on Saturday.

The home side's chances of saving the follow-on depended heavily on Simpson continuing his resistance from day two, but the half-centurion added only five before gloving one from Lawes (3-57) down the leg-side to a diving Ben Foakes.

Nightwatchman Bamber was undone by extra bounce from Overton (3-45) and looped a catch off the leading edge back to the bowler, who then castled the in-form Ryan Higgins for three.

The piece of theatre of the morning was provided by Tom Latham, the New Zealander pulling off a reflex grab at slip after Will Jacks in the gully had twice parried an edge from the bat of Tom Helm.

The fact Middlesex clawed their way to 238 was down to De Caires, who as an opener by trade can rarely have batted with a number 11.

He struck a six into the Tavern Stand and protected Tim Murtagh so that the pair added 38 for the 10th wicket.

However, with a precious batting point tantalisingly within reach Abbott (3-37) returned to uproot Murtagh's middle stump.

As expected, the championship leaders enforced the follow-on and struck second ball when Dan Worrall's delivery beat Pieter Malan's tentative prod and crashed into the stumps. It was the South African's fifth duck of a miserable campaign.

Fellow opener Stoneman adopted a more positive approach, hitting four successive boundaries off Jordan Clark's first over as the hosts got through to lunch without further damage.

Stoneman continued to attack after the break and Sam Robson looked organised in defence, but shortly after driving Abbott for his only boundary the latter prodded the same bowler into the glue-like hands of Latham to end the stand at 65.

Stoneman's eighth four raised his fifty from 57 balls, only for him to play a shot too many and lift a Lawes delivery into the hands of Overton on the mid-wicket fence.

By that stage Jack Davies had come and gone and, when Simpson gave Foakes more catching practice at 127-5, the prospect of an innings defeat loomed large.

Cameos by Holden and Higgins came close to achieving parity, the former making his runs despite being struck on the jaw by a return from the outfield when he was on seven.

De Caires and Bamber then further frustrated the Surrey bowlers with a stand of 64 before Abbott's late intervention.

Report supplied by ECB Reporters' Network.

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