Porter stars as Essex in charge against Sussex

Essex's Jamie Porter celebrates taking a wicket against SussexImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Jamie Porter missed Essex's last County Championship game as he was on paternity leave

Rothesay County Championship Division One, 1st Central County Ground, Hove (day one)

Sussex 204: Coles 52; Porter 4-30, Thain 2-40, Ahmed 2-46

Essex 152-4: Walter 47, Elgar 46; Carson 1-19

Sussex (1 pt), Essex (3 pts)

Match scorecard

Essex produced an opening day performance against Sussex which belied their disappointing County Championship season to date, bottom but one in Division One, with just one victory.

They bundled out Sussex – third in the table – for 204 in only 52.4 overs and at the close were powerfully placed at 152-4.

Essex's inability to pair up their opening attack of Jamie Porter and Sam Cook has been a major factor in their poor campaign. Cook has been involved with the England set-up and Porter, on paternity leave, missed the last championship match against Yorkshire.

Here, though, they were back in tandem, both hitting a length on a relentless line of third or fourth stump and Porter, with 4-30, was the star of the show. Sussex, though, knowing the Kookaburra ball gets softer, and batting easier, showed a lack of application.

Essex won the toss and bowled on a grassy pitch, with a canopy of clouds also promising to assist their seamers.

Sussex, who had dropped Tom Clark for the fit-again Tom Alsop, and brought in Ari Karvelas for the rested Ollie Robinson, struggled to overcome the conditions but were also guilty of some indulgent stroke play.

Porter broke through in the ninth over when Daniel Hughes, going for a lavish drive, edged to keeper Michael Pepper. And it was 31-2 in the next over when Alsop, playing forward defensively, edged Cook behind.

The relatively inexperienced Khaleel Ahmed replaced Cook at the sea end but there was no let-up for Sussex. Khaleel pitched one up to Tom Haines who went for the drive. But the ball nipped off the pitch and Simon Harmer took the catch at second slip. And it was 64-4 in the 18th over when Dan Ibrahim attempted an expansive drive against the same bowler and was caught behind. The players took an early lunch at 69-4 when a second, heavier shower swept over the ground.

The in-form James Coles and John Simpson launched a mini-revival with a stand of 56. Coles showed some of the fluency that had brought him 150 against Warwickshire in his previous championship innings.

When he played Cook to backward point for a quick single he had reached his half-century from 62 balls, with seven eye-catching fours. But then he played forward to Porter and edged to first slip, and four balls later Fynn Hudson-Prentice nicked off for a duck.

Yet again Simpson was required to make the most of diminishing resources. He added 49 for the seventh wicket with Jack Carson, whose five fours included a straight drive off Noah Thain that might have been the shot of the day.

The introduction of fourth seamer Thain saw the first drop in the keen accuracy of the Essex attack. But he, too, was good enough to get among the wickets. Carson had made 25 when he edged to Pepper and next ball it was 169-8 when Simpson prodded only half-forward to Harmer and was caught at slip.

When Karvelas flayed to cover for one Sussex had lost three wickets for two runs but last pair Henry Crocombe and Gurinder Sandhu put on 33.

When Essex batted Dean Elgar was caught at mid-wicket, Paul Walter, half forward, was lbw to Carson, Tom Westley was yorked by Sandhu, and nightwatchman Cook was caught at leg slip. But they could still be in a very strong position by the second afternoon.

Report supplied by ECB Reporters' Network, supported by Rothesay