Surrey dominate on Flintoff's Lancs red-ball debut

Rocky Flintoff walks off, out for 32Image source, Rex Features
Image caption,

Rocky Flintoff became Lancashire's youngest Championship debutant, aged 16 years and 137 days

Vitality County Championship, Division One, Kia Oval (day one)

Lancashire 204: Hurst 46, Balderson 33, Flintoff 32; Clark 4-57, Worrall 3-31

Surrey 83-0: Burns 44*, Sibley 37*

Surrey (3 pts), trail Lancashire (0 pts) by 121 runs with all 10 wickets remaining

Match scorecard

Rocky Flintoff made a creditable 32 on his County Championship debut, but it was champions Surrey who ruthlessly took first-day honours at The Oval.

After being put in, Lancashire were bowled out for 204 inside 59 overs, before Surrey replied with 83 for no wicket.

Bad light ended play 15.4 overs early with skipper Rory Burns on 44 not out, including straight driving George Balderson's medium pace for successive fours, and Dom Sibley on 37.

Jordan Clark (4-57) and Dan Worrall (3-31) had earlier continued their fine red-ball form as they spearheaded a five-pronged seam attack.

They were aided by Conor McKerr, who took two wickets and Sam Curran one in what were, for both, their first County Championship appearances of the summer.

Matty Hurst, with 46 from 64 balls, played Lancashire's best and most assertive innings, while Balderson's 33 and Josh Bohannon's 26 were other worthy efforts in seam-friendly overhead and pitch conditions.

But most eyes were on the teenage Flintoff.

After making 167 runs in seven One-Day Cup innings to become his county's youngest player in any format, this time he rewrote the Lancashire history books as their youngest first-class cricketer at the age of 16 years and 137 days.

Flintoff Jr, son of former England captain Andrew, came in at 33-2 in the 11th over after both Luke Wells and skipper Keaton Jennings, back from Hundred duty, had fallen to the new ball.

On a day when most 16-year-olds around the country were more concerned about getting their GCSE results, he was off the mark first ball, clipping Worrall confidently for two off his pads.

Uncannily like his father, who was watching proudly from a hospitality box, Flintoff saw off Worrall's fine opening spell and helped Bohannon to add 40 for Lancashire's third wicket in tough, overcast conditions.

He did have some moments of good fortune, being dropped at third slip on 13 when he edged Tom Lawes and later also flailing a returning Worrall just over the cordon for four as lunch approached, but otherwise he looked comfortable at the crease and mature beyond his years as Lancashire reached lunch on 98-3.

But Flintoff then sliced a drive at the first ball after lunch from Clark – and Sai Sudharsan dived forward at backward point to scoop up a brilliant catch.

Report supplied by the ECB Reporters Network