Byrom and Carlson boost Glamorgan at Leicester

Eddie Byrom in action for Glamorgan against MiddlesexImage source, Huw Evans Picture Agency
Image caption,

Eddie Byrom signed a two-year contract extension with the club in 2023

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Vitality County Championship Division Two, Uptonsteel County Ground, Leicester (day one)

Glamorgan 352-8 (96 overs): Byrom 86, Carlson 80, Northeast 61*; Currie 4-53

Leicestershire: Yet to bat

Leicestershire 2 pts, Glamorgan 3 pts

Match scorecard

Glamorgan reached an impressive 352-8 on the opening day against Leicestershire thanks to Eddie Byrom’s 86 and a sparking 80 from Kiran Carlson.

They were put in to bat on a very green wicket which looked set to benefit the seam bowlers.

Scott Currie (4-53) was the pick of the home attack as Glamorgan fell away before tea, following Carlson’s attacking blast.

But Sam Northeast’s composed 61 not out helped revive their fortunes in the final session.

Glamorgan rested top scorer Colin Ingram to field Pakistan paceman Mir Hamza for his final game alongside Marnus Labuschagne, with fit-again Timm van der Gugten playing his first match of the season, while Leicestershire gave a debut to on-loan Hampshire all-rounder Ian Holland in place of the rested Rehan Ahmed.

Byrom and Billy Root had to battle for survival under cloudy skies on the heavily-grassed wicket, which seemed designed to produce a positive result after six draws for the Foxes.

Despite surviving a few edges and lbw appeals, they put away the odd bad ball and were not put under consistent pressure in the early stages as they added 90 before Root (40) smashed Ben Mike to point.

Labuschagne was bowled for eight leaving one from Currie which took his off-stump, but Carlson got his score moving at better than a run a ball while Byrom also found his touch, driving fluently in his best innings of the season.

After hitting 13 fours and two sixes and being dropped on 49, Byrom dragged a wide ball from Matt Salisbury onto his stumps.

But Carlson continued his assault and Glamorgan looked in control- especially since seamer Tom Scriven went off injured after his first four over spell.

That changed rapidly just before tea as Carlson holed out on the mid-wicket boundary off spinner Louis Kimber, Currie removed Chris Cooke’s middle stump for two and Zain Ul Hassan was bowled in freak fashion for one by Mike, the ball eventually spinning back onto his stumps after an lbw appeal had been turned down.

Currie continued his threat by trapping Mason Crane lbw for 14, the batter so plumb he virtually walked, but Northeast was still there on the ground where he scored a club record-breaking 410 not out two years previously.

He added a serene 62 with van der Gugten (32) to stop the home momentum before Currie returned to dismiss the Netherlands international leg-before.

James Harris’s boundary in the final over of the day took Glamorgan to a third batting point, with Leicestershire not making best use of the green wicket.

Leicestershire bowler Scriven revealed afterwards that he has a hamstring injury and is not expected to bowl again in the match.

Glamorgan’s Eddie Byrom told BBC Sport Wales:

“It’s nice to finally get some runs after coming back into the team (following a dislocated shoulder), I’ve had a few starts, so nice to make a slightly bigger contribution even if I’m disappointed not to go on.

“At the start of play we looked at the wicket and knew it was going to do quite a lot, it was pretty green so we’re pretty happy with where we stand.

“We expected a lower score to be par but we all pulled together, Kiran is batting beautifully and taking the game to the opposition.”

Leicestershire’s Scott Currie told BBC Radio Leicester:

“It’s probably too early to say whether we had a good day, taking eight wickets is a bonus but they got the three batting points and there’s still a lot of work to be done.

“The middle session, we got our rewards as we stuck to the plan. I’ve done Ok this year, asked some good questions and I’ve benefitted from being selected week after week, hopefully repaying the faith put in me as a loan player (from Hampshire),

“I really felt for Tom (Scriven), he’s probably propped up this attack over 18 months or so and he’s been waiting all season for a wicket like that which would have suited him.”