Bean hits double century at Trent Bridge

Finlay Bean cover drives for four against Nottinghamshire
- Published
Rothesay County Championship Division One, Trent Bridge (day three)
Nottinghamshire 487: Slater 96, Kishan 87, Patterson-White 87; Moriarty 4-91
Yorkshire 414-6: Bean 224, Revis 54*; Patterson-White 3-129
Yorkshire (4 pts) trail Notts (4 pts) by 73 runs with four wickets standing
Opener Finlay Bean put a difficult start to the season firmly behind him, compiling a superb maiden double hundred spanning more than nine hours as Yorkshire fought back against County Championship leaders Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.
Replying to the home side's 487, Yorkshire - with only one win so far after winning promotion to Division One last season - closed on 414-6
Bean batted for 564 minutes for his 224, hitting 30 fours and one six before being caught at slip off spinner Farhan Ahmed, having shared partnerships of 130 with Matthew Revis (54 not out) and 101 with skipper Jonny Bairstow (41).
Left-arm spinner Liam Patterson-White took 3-129 from a marathon 52 overs.
Having been unable to make Yorkshire follow on after having them 154-3 overnight, Notts look likely to have to settle for a draw, which would see their lead over Surrey cut to six points after the champions won at Worcester earlier in the day.
Bean, with five career first-class hundreds against Division Two opposition, had found runs much harder to come by against Division One attacks this season, averaging a paltry 13.66 over his first 12 innings of the current campaign, with a top score of just 31.
Although he had a flat pitch and the less bowler-friendly Kookaburra ball in his favour here, he nonetheless had the Test-match quality and know-how of veteran Mohammad Abbas to contend with, not to mention the pace of Dillon Pennington and a couple of decent spinners in Patterson-White and Farhan Ahmed.
He came through each challenge impressively, giving away only one genuine chance before his dismissal when a shot travelling at speed was put down on 170, his return to form timely in that Yorkshire's next fixture, against Essex starting on Sunday, is being hosted by his own club side, York.
His innings - made barely half a mile from the scene of his Second XI record 441 against Nottinghamshire's second team in 2022 - was an essay in concentration and patience, one of the longest played by a Yorkshire batter in the county's history.
Having been 86 overnight, he was 50 minutes in the 90s before cutting Farhan to third man for his 16th four to reach 102 from 236 balls in the morning session.
After tea, he had to negotiate more than 40 minutes in the 190s before going to 200 from 450 deliveries, pushing a single into the leg side with 17-year-old Farhan by then in his 34th over.
Yorkshire lost only one wicket before lunch as Dan Moriarty, sent in as nightwatchman, went to drive Patterson-White but could only edge to Freddie McCann at slip.
The conditions demanded patience of Nottinghamshire, too, as Bairstow then bedded in with Bean on a pitch that was yielding some help for the spinners, but not as much as they had hoped for.
Two bursts with the second new ball before and after lunch could not unseat either and it was an hour into the middle session before another breakthrough came.
The introduction of the medium pace of Lyndon James almost yielded a dividend for Nottinghamshire as Bean chipped perilously close to short extra-cover on 152, moments before Patterson-White struck Bairstow on the front pad and had his lbw appeal upheld.
Swapping James for Abbas at the Radcliffe Road end likewise almost paid off, Bean surviving a hard chance to McCann at mid-wicket, but unperturbed, he drove Patterson-White through the off-side to overtake his previous best of 173 versus Glamorgan last year as he and Revis guided Yorkshire to 320-5 at tea.
His marathon innings came to an end 15 minutes before the close as Farhan turned one to have him caught at slip trying to work to leg, almost every spectator in the ground then rising to applaud as he walked back to the dressing rooms.
ECB Reporters' Network supported by Rothesay
Related topics
- Published31 January