Afghanistan hold all the aces after Ibrahim Zadran, Asghar Afghan fifties

Bangladesh are already 374 runs behind with two second-innings wickets left to pick

The Report by Mohammad Isam07-Sep-2019Stumps Afghanistan were in complete control of the one-off Test against Bangladesh in Chattogram after stretching their lead to 374 runs by stumps on the third day. Play ended 20 minutes early after a power failure at the ground shut down the floodlights, which had to turned on because of the dark clouds above Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium.After Afghanistan ended the first-innings exchanges 137 runs in front, Ibrahim Zadran, the debutant 18-year-old opening batsman, and former captain Asghar Afghan put them in charge with a 108-run stand for the fourth wicket. Ibrahim made 87 and Afghan 50 as they not only lifted the innings from a precarious 28 for 3 but also put the home side under huge pressure.Ibrahim missed out on becoming the second youngest Test centurion when he fell trying to clear long-on, but his chancy innings provided positive signs for the future in what is a critical juncture in the game for Afghanistan. Afghan supported the youngster with his own brand of solid, stable batsmanship, at times ending up on the pitch trying to defend the spinners well in front of his front pad.Rashid Khan shows off the match ball after returning a five-for•BCB

Afghanistan started the day by taking the two remaining Bangladesh wickets within the first 16 minutes, Rashid Khan picking up a five-for when he sent back last man Nayeem Hasan. But then they ran into early trouble when Shakib Al Hasan removed Ihsanullah and Rahmat Shah, the first innings centurion, off consecutive deliveries in the first over. When Nayeem had Hashmatullah Shahidi caught at slip, for the second time in the game, Bangladesh must have been hoping to trigger a collapse and set up a moderate last-innings chase.But Ibrahim and Afghan were watchful against low, turning deliveries, and although they were fortunate to survive a number of chances that either popped towards the close-in fielders or slightly away from them, they rode their luck. Afghan struck two sixes and four boundaries in his 108-ball innings, but it was Ibrahim’s application that stood out.The tall batsman came down quickly on the ones that kept low, and did a good job of finding gaps to rotate the strike. He also struck six fours and four sixes in his 208-ball knock, the end coming against the run of play. Afsar Zazai’s reaction at the other end – mouth open in horror, seeing the youngster throw it away – when he saw Ibrahim hitting it down long-on’s throat was how most at the stadium felt at the time.Shortly after Ibrahim’s dismissal, Mohammad Nabi fell after hitting his last six in Test cricket, caught at square-leg off Mehidy Hasan.Rashid, however, was more successful in the quest for quick runs, hitting all his 24 runs in fours, five of them coming in a Nayeem over.Zazai remained unbeaten on 34 off 83 balls, and he had No. 10 Yamin Ahmadzai for company when the umpires called off play.

Gabriel commends bowlers for strong opening-day show

The West Indies pacer said hitting the right lengths helped extract good bounce from a slow surface

ESPNcricinfo staff15-Jun-2018Fast bowler Shannon Gabriel commended the West Indies bowlers for making best use of a pitch that was on the slower side, but had enough bounce to keep the batsmen on their toes. Gabriel led the way, snaring his third five-wicket haul in Test cricket and helping bowl Sri Lanka out for 253 on the opening day of the second Test in St Lucia.Dinesh Chandimal had chosen to bat first, the Sri Lanka captain judging the surface to be a good one. But Gabriel provided a preview of things to come when, with just his second delivery, he squared up the debutant Mahela Udawatte with a short of length delivery that jagged away, and had him fending to first slip. He finished with 5 for 59, while Kemar Roach took 4 for 49. Gabriel said hitting that ideal length to generate bounce was key to West Indies’ success.”I think I went out there this morning and concentrated on putting the ball in the right areas, because we knew there was a bit [in the pitch] this morning,” Gabriel said. “Thankfully, things went my way today. I think it was a little slow, but you’re still getting that bounce, so it was important to hit the right areas and the right length. Most of the guys did that today… Roach bowled well this morning, didn’t get the success he deserved.”West Indies took three wickets in the morning session – two for Gabriel and one for Roach. Gabriel could have had a third had Shane Dowrich held on to a leaping catch off the last ball before lunch. Kusal Mendis got an edge on an attempted ramp to a short ball, Dowrich jumped but could only tip the ball over his head for four.Gabriel claimed one more wicket in the post-lunch session by hitting the same back-of-length spot, when he found the shoulder of Roshen Silva’s bat and had him edging to third slip. Roach had more success as the day progressed, getting three wickets in the final session. Despite the dominance of the fast bowlers, Gabriel was also impressed with Devendra Bishoo’s performance and expected the spinners to play a central role later in the game.”I just thought Bishoo was good today, more consistent with his line and length, so hopefully as the game goes on he can play a bigger part.”After the bowlers had played their part, West Indies openers Kraigg Brathwaite and Devon Smith saw off the two overs before stumps without any damage. “I think once we get good weather and the sun comes out, it will dry out a bit,” Gabriel said. “And once our batsmen apply themselves and bat long, I think we will be capable of putting up a good score in the first innings.”

Ashwin bowls India to series-levelling win

India secured a 75-run win in the second Test in Bengaluru to level the series with Australia 1-1

The Report by Brydon Coverdale07-Mar-2017
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details2:48

Chappell: Second-day bowling changed game for India

India have applied a defibrillator to this series, surging to a dramatic victory on the fourth day against Australia in Bengaluru. After the first day of this Test, it was hard to tell what was deader: India’s hopes of regaining the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, or any stray blades of grass that were left on the dry pitch. Nathan Lyon had just taken eight wickets, India had been rolled for 189, and Australia had gone to stumps on 40 for 0. But then came three days of Indian fightback.It all culminated in a thrilling fourth day, which began with a six-wicket haul from Josh Hazlewood as India were bowled out for 274. That gave Australia renewed hope: on a cracking surface with variable bounce, a target of 188 would be tough but, they hoped, not impossible. And with the score moving quickly, at 42 for 1 Australia were perhaps favourites. The pressure was inescapable: on the batsmen, on the umpires, and on the Indians to live up to their dominant reputation at home.And then the wickets began to tumble, the DRS played its inevitable role, and by the time R Ashwin had Lyon caught and bowled in the 36th over, India had triumphed by 75 runs. Ashwin finished with 6 for 41 and it marked the first time in history that four different bowlers – Lyon, Ashwin, Hazlewood and Ravindra Jadeja – had taken six-wicket hauls in the same Test. It was that sort of match: wickets fell in quick succession and momentum was hard to stop.In many ways, this result was simply the resumption of normal service. There was a glitch in proceedings in Pune, where Australia ended India’s sequence of 20 home Tests without a loss. The malfunction looked like continuing after day one in Bengaluru, but for the remainder of the match India scrapped, wrestled, and fought their way back into the contest. And every time Australia looked like regaining the advantage, India wrested it back.Such was the situation on the fourth morning, when Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc delivered searing spells with the second new ball and India lost five wickets in 19 deliveries. But then India’s last pair, Wriddhiman Saha and Ishant Sharma, survived for nearly 10 overs to take the sting out of Australia’s charge. They put on only 16 runs but by slowing the speed of the match from breakneck to simply swift, they gave their team a chance to regroup.Australia knew that to succeed in their chase, they would have to score quickly. The loss of Matt Renshaw early, caught behind to a fine seamer from Ishant, did not stop them doing just that. David Warner launched one six on his way to 17 from 25 balls before he was adjudged lbw trying to sweep Ashwin. Warner asked for a review but by the barest of margins, HawkEye showed the impact in line with off stump and umpire’s call for clipping off, and Warner was gone.That moment had repercussions for Australia, for it left them with only one review and made Shaun Marsh hesitate when he was given out lbw shouldering arms to a delivery from Umesh Yadav around the wicket. An uncertain Marsh consulted with his partner, Steven Smith, who had been off the pitch to leg side and was in no position to make a definitive call. Unwilling to risk Australia’s final review, Marsh walked off: replays showed the ball was missing by a long way. But such is the pressure in a situation like this: umpire Nigel Llong had made a poor decision, and Marsh had made an equally bad one not to ask for a review.That left Smith as a key man for Australia, and he struck three boundaries on his way to 28 before he too was lbw to Umesh. Smith was done by a grubber and seemed to signal to Australia’s dressing room for advice on a review; umpire Llong stepped in to prevent the communication, and Smith walked off. A review would have been futile: he couldn’t have been plumber if he’d been wearing a Super Mario costume.From there, India were clearly in the box seat, and the wickets of Mitchell Marsh and Matthew Wade shortly before tea only made it more so. Marsh tickled a catch to short leg off Ashwin, and Wade inside edged onto his pad and a catch lobbed up for the diving wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha. The match was slipping away from Australia.It took India less than eight overs after tea to wrap up the win. Starc was bowled by a straight ball from Ashwin, and Jadeja was then rewarded for his outstanding second-innings bowling by rattling the stumps of Steve O’Keefe. Peter Handscomb, the last recognised batsman, knew he had to score quickly, and on 24 was caught skying a slog off Ashwin, who then completed the win by having Lyon caught and bowled two balls later. The series was level at 1-1, and very much alive.India’s margin might have been even bigger but for their own collapse early on the fourth day. Hazlewood’s 6 for 67 were the best figures by an Australia fast bowler in a Test innings in India for 37 years, since Geoff Dymock claimed 7 for 67 at Kanpur in October 1979. India started the morning at 213 for 4 and hoped to extend their lead past 200, but had to settle for an advantage of 187. They lost their last six wickets for 61 on the fourth morning.Starc started the carnage by swinging the new ball in to Ajinkya Rahane, who on 52 was rapped on the pad and given not out, but adjudged lbw on Australia’s review. Next ball, Karun Nair failed to handle Starc’s pace and swing and tickled an inside edge onto his stumps, and such was the ferocity of the delivery that the leg stump shattered on impact.Starc’s hat-trick delivery was negotiated by Saha, but in the next over Hazlewood had Cheteshwar Pujara caught fending a shortish ball to gully for 92. Three balls later, Ashwin was bowled by a Hazlewood delivery that stayed low. The Australians celebrated, but they must also have known that such a dismissal only highlighted how difficult their chase would be. And so it proved: all out for 112. Australia’s hopes in this match had expired, but the series was very much alive and kicking.

Tare plays down Mumbai's 'favourites' tag

Aditya Tare, the Mumbai captain, has dismissed suggestions that his team enters the Ranji Trophy final against Saurashtra as overwhelming favourites

Shashank Kishore23-Feb-2016Cricketers often talk about how pressure changes the equation in a knockout clash. Most times, they want to “keep it simple” and “stick to the basics.” It wasn’t any different ahead of the Ranji Trophy final between Mumbai and Saurashtra in Pune.The two sides have met 53 times, with Mumbai winning on 26 occasions, while also taking the lead in 22 out of the 26 drawn games. Going by the numbers, one would not be mistaken into believing Mumbai are the overwhelming favourites for this one. But Aditya Tare, the captain, insisted, like mutual fund advisories do, that past performances do not necessarily guarantee same results in the future.”Numbers are stacked in our favour, but the message is simple. We may have beaten them last time, but that was a team that had a few legends of Mumbai cricket,” Tare told ESPNcricinfo. “Sachin Tendulkar, Wasim Jaffer and Ajit Agarkar’s combined experience was much more than some of our players. We can only draw inspiration from the past; we can’t really take credit.”Barring three or four of them, no one has really won a Ranji trophy so I don’t think we have the right to carry the tag on us. The teams in the past have won it 40 times; we are still young and we haven’t won it yet so it will be a good challenge for us to do something special this season. Yes, we’re in the final, but we have a lot to do as a team still, so you can’t really judge us at the moment.”One of the things Tare underlined was the importance of driving it into everyone the fact that Mumbai were taking a fresh start after the disappointment two years ago, where they were ousted in the quarter-finals by Maharashtra. Last season, Mumbai were knocked out cold in their opener for the first time ever in Ranji Trophy history by Jammu & Kashmir, and were faced with a threat of relegation halfway into the season.Reports of tiff between a few players and an eventual captaincy shift from Suryakumar Yadav to Tare meant a team in transition was dealt another blow. The final nail last season was hammered by Karnataka when Mumbai slumped to their lowest-ever total – 44 all out – to be blown away inside three days. That prompted an overhaul of sorts, with Chandrakant Pandit taking over from Pravin Amre for his second stint as head coach after leading Mumbai to back-to-back titles, in 2003 and 2004.”I took over captaincy at a difficult time, but the boys backed me throughout,” Tare explained. “It was a challenge back then, but the team has shown tremendous character to bounce back like they did. We ensured the base that we have built with the younger group has been carried forward. We wanted to ensure everyone gets their opportunity. To that extent, the way the younger players have grabbed their chances has been brilliant, we couldn’t have asked for anything better.”Shreyas Iyer is currently on top of the Ranji run-charts, with 1204 runs from 10 matches•K Sivaraman

As part of their rebuilding exercise towards the end of last year’s campaign, the team rejigged their personnel. Balwinder Sandhu, who had last represented Mumbai in November 2013, was called up to complement Shardul Thakur and Dhawal Kulkarni, as was Nikhil Patil, who formed the bedrock of the team’s batting in Abhishek Nayar’s absence due to multiple injuries. Harmeet Singh, who impressed in the Buchi Babu invitational tournament, also seemed to have received second wind.At the top of the order, Wasim Jaffer’s absence for most parts of the season created a void. The side had already tried out three different openers in Kevin Almeida, Bravish Shetty and Sushant Marathe. As a part of the rotating wheel, Herwadkar’s inclusion came about by chance. Herwadkar, the burly left-hander, was in the wilderness after his debut in 2011-12 during which he was a part of the Indian team at two Under-19 World Cups. He returned to the Mumbai fold and immediately made an impression at the top with his solidity.”At the start of the season, we had defined roles to each individual, we wanted to see them flourish in their own space,” Tare explained. “Playing without a worry has helped us evolve as individuals and that has reflected well.”Almost in direct acknowledgment, Herwadkar has delivered, scoring 879 runs and is currently second on Mumbai’s run-charts, only behind Shreyas Iyer. With the ball, Sandhu and Thakur have been steady, if not spectacular, even as the spinners have come into their own. That they have used a pool of just 20 players, the least since they last won the title in 2012-13, points to growing signs of a settled unit.”Mumbai looks different in the five-day format because we have grown into that mentality,” Tare said. “Teams in the past have dominated the longer versions. Our support structure is really good; playing long form cricket from a young age has helped us evolve. Enjoying each other’s success has been a hallmark of our team. There is no bigger sign of a team’s evolution than when you see a young group of players put their hand up and deliver match.”Tare refers to youngsters often that it is convenient to forget he himself is just 28. But the manner in which he has turned around a team that was struggling to stay afloat to one that is gunning for a 41st title has been nothing short of remarkable. Now for them to reclaim silverware.

Jharkhand cricketer Santosh Lal dies aged 29

Jharkhand cricketer Santosh Lal, known as the man who taught MS Dhoni how to play the helicopter shot, has died aged 29 of pancreatitis

ESPNcricinfo staff18-Jul-2013Jharkhand cricketer Santosh Lal, known as the man who taught MS Dhoni how to play the helicopter shot, has died aged 29 of pancreatitis. He was a middle-order batsman and a medium-pacer who played eight first-class matches.Lal was a childhood friend of MS Dhoni and played alongside the Indian captain for Bihar and Jharkhand in a seven-year career that ended in 2010. He had been moved to Delhi for treatment earlier this week, after first being admitted to a Ranchi hospital last week due to stomach pain. Lal is survived by his parents, wife and a three-year-old daughter.

Petersen set to test injury against Kent

Alviro Petersen will play in South Africa’s second match of their tour to England against Kent

Firdose Moonda11-Jul-2012Alviro Petersen will play in South Africa’s second match of their tour to England against Kent, despite carrying an injury on his left foot but Marchant de Lange, the fast bowler, remains a doubt with a back problem. Petersen took no part in the two-day tour game against Somerset in Taunton after picking up the niggle during the squad’s first training day on Saturday. However, in the interests of ensuring he has game time before the Test series he will be part of the team that plays in Canterbury.”Alviro went for a scan yesterday and the results show a minor joint sprain but he will push on to play this weekend,” Lerato Malekutu, South Africa’s media manager told ESPNCricinfo. Petersen and his opening partner Graeme Smith have not batted together since March when they played in a Test match against New Zealand in Wellington. Petersen, though, has had competitive cricket since that tour as he represented Essex in the County Championship and scored a century for them against his former club Glamorgan.Smith had his first outing since recovering from ankle surgery on Monday but scored just 10 before a booming drive took the edge and he was caught behind. Jacques Rudolph, who joined Smith at the top of the order in Petersen’s absence, managed 5 and was out in the same way. Rudolph’s form as an opener does not seem to have improved since he was also unsuccessful in that role during his Test comeback last November. He played five matches without a half-century and was moved down the order to No.6, allowing for Petersen to return to the top of the line-up.Given the composition of the squad South Africa have brought with them to England, Petersen’s fitness is crucial to their plans because they do not have another proven opener. If his injury worsens and he cannot play the first Test, Rudolph may have to do the job and it could allow for both JP Duminy, who has been tipped to bat at No.7 in the first Test, and replacement wicket-keeper Thami Tsolekile to feature in the starting XI.De Lange’s injury is less serious from a team perspective, because he was unlikely to be called upon unless there any of the frontline seamers became unavailable. It could, however, have an impact on his longer term availability which will concern South Africa’s medical staff.In his short international career, De Lange has already had more than one back problem. He also broke both his ankles as a schoolboy and was unable to represent South Africa at Under-19 level. “Marchant’s back scan is scheduled for Thursday and we’ll know more after that,” Malekutu said.South Africa have back up in the bowling department, though. Left-arm seamer Lonwabo Tsotsobe is part of the squad and played in the tour match against Somerset. Although Tsotsobe had a poor first spell, he returned to take 2 for 9 in his second burst and finished with figures of 3 for 46 in the first innings. He also bowled again on Tuesday for three overs, showing marked improvement from his time in Zimbabwe when he appeared wayward.Allan Donald, South Africa’s bowling coach was pleased with the strides Tsotsobe had taken. “We worked very hard on his intensity,” Donald said. “That was the one thing that was missing in his approach – intensity. With that also comes a bit of shape and when he does that well, he gets a bit of swing.”Donald was also unconcerned about Morne Morkel, who was taken for 24 in his first over by Peter Trego conceded while conceding six an over overall and seemed to have gone backward from the progression in made in New Zealand and the IPL. “When you come on tour, the first thing you want to do is get that form, that confidence, that rhythm,” Donald said. “I’m not displeased about the performance.”

Australia take title in thriller

Australia A registered a thrilling two-run win against South Africa A in the final of the Zimbabwe A Team Tri-Series in Harare

ESPNcricinfo staff08-Jul-2011
Scorecard
Australia A defeated South Africa A by two runs in the final•Zimbabwe Cricket

Australia A registered a thrilling two-run win against South Africa A in the final of the Zimbabwe A Team Tri-Series in Harare, in a game that initially swung both ways and then seemed to be headed in South Africa’s direction towards the end, before wickets off the last two balls sealed it for Australia.Choosing to bat, Australia were off to a fine start, with their openers David Warner and Philip Hughes putting on 206 in 37.3 overs. Both completed centuries, with Hughes outscoring his partner in a run-a-ball 138, but the rest of the line-up failed to build on the start, as Australia stumbled from 206 for no loss to 293 for 6 at the end of their 50 overs. Roelof van der Merwe finished with the best figures, 3 for 58, though Justin Ontong was the most economical, conceding 36 runs in 10.South Africa’s chase began with a steady 68-run opening partnership, with in-form opener Jacques Rudolph going on to make 90, before he was run out. After a mini-collapse – South Africa went from 163 for 3 to 175 for 6 – the chase seemed back on track with Vaughn van Jaarsveld, who scored 70, combining with Vernon Philander for a 78-run stand.However, Mitchell Marsh removed both batsmen off consecutive balls, helping Australia get a foot in the door. In the final over, bowled by Marsh, South Africa required 15 runs to win but only managed to score 12 from the first four balls and required three from the last two. Marsh bowled Kleinveldt on the fifth and Rusty Theron was run out on the last ball to give Australia a thrilling win.

Price, Cloete help South Africa thrash Zimbabwe

South Africa Under-19 took an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series after delivering a 200-run thrashing of Zimbabwe Under-19 in Harare

Cricinfo staff07-Jul-2010
ScorecardSouth Africa Under-19 took an unassailable 3-0 lead in the five-match series after delivering a 200-run thrashing of Zimbabwe Under-19 in Harare. James Price and Gihahn Cloete made big centuries to send South Africa soaring to 346, before Keagan Rafferty took a five-wicket haul to send the hosts crashing out in the 36th over.South Africa dominated right from the start, after the openers had added a brisk 43.Cloete walked in in the ninth over and added 63 with the captain Keaton Jennings, who made 45. Price then added a massive 221 with Cloete to set up the big score. They were separated in the 49th over, after Prince blazed 135 off just 82 balls, hitting 13 fours and seven sixes. Cloete remained unbeaten on 115 off 113 balls with 13 fours.Zimbabwe had no answer to the seamer Rafferty who ran through the top order. At 61 for 7, the game was all but over. Nathan Waller and Simon Nugava delayed the inevitable with a stand of 47 for the eighth wicket. Rafferty took 5 for 31.

Ayub's all-round show, Hasnain's early strikes take Panthers into final

Ayub took a career-best 5 for 24 and then scored 33 to help Panthers chase down 138

ESPNcricinfo staff24-Sep-2024Mohammad Hasnain and Saim Ayub put in strong performances to take Panthers into the final of the Champions Cup with a seven-wicket win over Markhors. It was also the first win for the chasing team in the tournament.Batting first after winning the toss, Markhors had a poor start as Ali Raza dismissed Haseebullah Khan in the second over of the game. The real damage, though, was done by Hasnain, who sent back Fakhar Zaman, Kamran Ghulam and Mohammad Rizwan to leave Markhors on 25 for 4 in the seventh over.Salman Agha and Iftikhar Ahmed staged a mini-recovery, adding 77 for the fifth wicket but once Iftikhar was run out, Markhors collapsed again, to be all out for 137 in 36 overs. Their unlikely tormentor was Ayub, who picked up 5 for 24 with his part-time legbreaks. It was the first time he took more than two wickets in any form of senior cricket.Panthers lost Azan Awais early in the chase but Ayub kept them on track with 33 off 36 balls. And even though Ayub and Umar Siddiq fell in quick succession, Usman Khan smashed 54 not out off just 26 balls to take the side home in the 24th over.Markhors will now face the winner of the first eliminator, between Stallions and Lions, on Friday.

Sides evenly poised after rain-hit day at Gloucestershire

Only 36 overs possible on opening day as other games enjoy best of summer conditions

ECB Reporters Network11-Jun-2023Only 36 overs were possible on the opening day of the LV= Insurance County Championship game between Gloucestershire and Leicestershire at Bristol.While there was plenty of action at other venues around the country, heavily overcast skies greeted the players when they arrived at the Seat Unique Stadium and there was always the threat of a downpour until a curtailed final session.Rain caused two long stoppages after Gloucestershire had won the toss and elected to bat. By the close of a frustrating day, they had posted 108 for 3, Ollie Price unbeaten on 26.Openers Chris Dent and Ben Charlesworth failed to cash in on positive starts as Chris Wright, Tom Scriven and Callum Parkinson picked up wickets late on.What little play was possible before lunch saw 11.2 overs bowled and the home side progress with few alarms to 38 without loss.
Dent took a heavy toll on Leicestershire’s teenaged left-arm seamer Josh Hull, who was withdrawn from the attack having bowled the opening two overs from the Pavilion End at a cost of 22 runs. Five times Dent rocked onto the back foot to dispatch short-of-a-length deliveries from Hull through the off side for boundaries.Wright bowled a much tighter line and length from the Ashley Down Road End, but lacked penetration on a typically docile Bristol pitch.Scriven was introduced for the fifth over of the game. He also made the batters work for their runs, but Charlesworth, who has been in good form in the Championship and Vitality Blast, confidently helped Dent launch the Gloucestershire innings.At 36 for no wicket, Leicestershire introduced spin in the shape of left-armer Parkinson, but he had sent down only two deliveries for two runs when rain forced the first stoppage at 12.45pm.Lunch was taken at the normal time and after two inspections umpires Paul Baldwin and Graham Lloyd decided play could restart at 2.45pm.
With his score on 25, Dent edged Wright just short of Colin Ackermann at second slip. It was the nearest Leicestershire had come to a wicket and seven had been added to the total when the rain returned with Gloucestershire 45 without loss off 14.4 overs.Tea was taken at 3.10pm. Light rain persisted and by the time the covers were removed for a further inspection, the umpires ordered a 5.15pm resumption with 21.2 overs to be bowled.They were delivered in the brightest conditions of the day. Charlesworth brought up the fifty with a four through the leg side off Hull before Wright made a much-needed breakthrough. A ball that nipped back off the seam trapped Dent, on 29, in front of his stumps without getting forward and earned a merited lbw verdict with the total on 55.Parkinson turned one past the outside edge of Ollie Price’s bat before Leicestershire struck again, Charlesworth carelessly offering a catch to Hull at square leg, playing a ball from Scriven off his hip, and departing for 21.Leicestershire could reflect that, Hull’s early profligacy with the new ball apart, they had given little away. It was 83 for 3 when left-hander Miles Hammond fell for a duck, driving loosely at a wide ball from Parkinson that turned and hit his off stump.With the light closing in, Leicestershire opted for spin at both ends, Rehan Ahmed sending down some leg-breaks from the Ashley Down Road End, in tandem with Parkinson.