Leicestershire beat Northants despite Van der Merwe ton

Liam Trevaskis (right) joined Leicestershire from Durham
- Published
Rothesay County Championship Division Two, County Ground, Northampton (day four)
Leicestershire 429 & 260-5 dec: Patel 76, Cox 51*, Budinger 50; Keogh 2-20
Northamptonshire 189 & 333: Van der Merwe 116, Zaib 58; Trevaskis 6-85
Leicestershire (23 pts) beat Northamptonshire (3 pts) by 167 runs
Northamptonshire's Stuart van der Merwe held up Leicestershire's Division Two trophy presentation with a century on debut on the final day of their County Championship match at Wantage Road.
Already assured of promotion and the Division Two title, Leicestershire finally wrapped up victory by 167 runs just before tea, bowling out Northamptonshire for 333, with Liam Trevaskis taking a career best 6-85.
Van der Merwe, who trialled at Leicester earlier this season, was recently awarded a two-year rookie deal by Northamptonshire after impressing in the One-Day Cup and duly celebrated by scoring 116 off 209 balls.
The 20-year-old shared a sixth-wicket stand worth 80 with Saif Zaib, who rounded off a spectacular year with 58, finishing as county cricket's leading run scorer with 1,425 runs.
With six centuries and seven half-centuries, Zaib has scored the third most runs in a Championship season for Northamptonshire this century.

Leicestershire receive the Division Two champions trophy
Northamptonshire resumed on 120-5, chasing an improbable 501 to win and van der Merwe was dropped off Trevaskis by Rishi Patel at wide first slip, but Zaib soon worked Holland off his legs to bring up the 150 in the 53rd over.
He straight drove Holland for four before running a single off the next delivery to reach his 50, before bringing up the 50 partnership with van der Merwe in style by pulling Trevaskis over mid-wicket for six.
Van der Merwe also started to locate the boundary ropes, dispatching two short balls through the off-side in the first over of a fresh Josh Hull spell before driving Holland through the covers.
Zaib's long summer of batting finally ended though when he drove loosely at one from Hull, Stephen Eskinazi taking the catch at gully.
Trevaskis had two lbw shouts turned down against van der Merwe as he went to sweep but the Northamptonshire youngster deposited him over deep mid-wicket when he served up a juicy full toss.
After lunch, van der Merwe drove Patel through mid-wicket to bring up Northamptonshire's 250 and then pulled him for another four next ball.
George Bartlett hit a wide ball from Wright over the vacant gully position to the ropes before driving Ian Holland straight down the ground as the partnership gathered pace.
Van der Merwe had a couple of nervous moments during a testing spell from Wright, playing his final game before retirement, but drove Holland confidently through the covers, while Bartlett punched Holland off the backfoot through cover to bring up the 100 partnership off 160 balls.
In an eventful over from Logan van Beek, van der Merwe hooked for four before Bartlett ran a single to reach his half-century.
And van der Merwe reached three figures off the final ball of the over as he pulled to fine leg, becoming only the third man to score a century on first-class debut for Northamptonshire after Alastair Storie in 1985 and David Sales in 1996.
Bartlett fell for 50 to the very next ball though when he steered Hull straight to backward point, ending a seventh-wicket stand of 128, and Trevaskis soon trapped both George Scrimshaw and Ben Whitehouse lbw.
Finally, the left-arm spinner then had van der Merwe brilliantly caught by Budinger at short leg to allow the celebrations began.
Match report supplied by ECB Reporters' Network, supported by Rothesay
- Published9 hours ago
- Published16 August
Northamptonshire batter Stuart van der Merwe:
"I was just trying to bat as long as possible. Probably, when I got to 90, the heart rate started going on a bit.
"It was definitely a dream come true. I've just wanted to be a professional cricketer my whole life, and to get 100 on debut is unbelievable.
"I came to the UK in 2021 with the goal of getting into pro cricket. It's just a goal I've tried to really achieve. And it's so good to finally do it.
"I'm going back to Leeds for the winter, back to uni for hopefully another two years - and just going to have a big winter, try and work hard, get fit, get stronger, and let's see what next year holds."
Leicestershire head coach Alfonso Thomas:
"It's a fantastic moment to now finally get the trophy. It's just a symbol of what it's meant throughout, the demands we've put on the players throughout the season. We kept challenging them and even more so in this game.
"It's been a phenomenal season. It's been fantastic. I think before today, it's taken us four or five years to win seven games. To go and do that in one season has been a remarkable achievement from this group of players, and it's just so nice to see.
"There's a lot of guys here that haven't hit their ceiling. So, we are in a good place, but I think, and I can't stress this enough, we can't be complacent. We've just seen Durham go down today. Two years ago, we saw them lift the trophy.
"Just give me a couple of weeks. Let me just go to Spain and enjoy a bit of sunshine, and then I'll come back, and then I'll try and mastermind a plan that can make us competitive next year."