06-09-2023, 14:12
(This post was last modified: 27-09-2023, 22:50 by Ska'dForLife-WBA.)
County Championship, Division Two
Back to back defeats against New Zealand and Hampshire - the latter a desperately close-run thing that hinged on an ill-judged big hit from Jake Libby with thirteen balls to go - brought the white-ball summer to a sad conclusion, and nothing now remains but to go great guns in our three remaining Championship matches.
Day One: Glamorgan won the toss and put the Pears in to bat on a baking Sunday morning that heralded an unlikely early-September heatwave. Perhaps mindful of how early moisture assists bowlers on the banks of the Severn at the season's extremes, and how many first-innings collapses New Road witnessed in the One-Day Cup (including their own), the Welshmen got to work and were rewarded with three quickfire morning wickets as the Worcs top order struggled against the movement of the new ball, but Gareth Roderick survived a drop at slip to shepherd the Pears to lunch on a respectable 72-3. Yet he departed LBW immediately after the resumption for 43, while Kashif Ali and Adam Hose fell to poor shots on 9 and 43 respectively, again tilting the balance in Glamorgan's favour early in the session. It required a patient rebuild by returning skipper Brett D'Oliveira and Logan van Beek - the latter making his first Championship half-century for the county - to take the Pears to tea on 202-6, pulling the match right back to even stevens. The sun perhaps gave the century partnership a helping hand, but there was enough in the pitch to continue causing problems for the tail, and Van Beek fell caught and bowled to Kiran Carlson for 53 immediately after the milestone, leaving Essex loanee Ben Allison (playing in his home county's trousers, emblem and all) to support Dolly to his fifty in the course of a half-century stand, before he chopped on for 37. From there the end came rapidly, and Dolly was stranded on an unbeaten 74 as Worcestershire were bowled out for 284, with Glamorgan weathering two overs to close on 3-0.
Day Two: An indian summer continued to roast the West Midlands, but the morning moisture at New Road played its part as ever; Joe Leach set the tone with the second ball of the day, producing some outswing from a full ball to have Eddie Byrom caught at first slip for 1, then had Zain ul Hassan caught behind. James Harris went LBW to Dillon Pennington to put the shine on the first half-hour with the new ball, and the departing quick had Sam Northeast caught at slip for 7 to keep Glamorgan on the ropes before Logan van Beek wrapped up a productive session with his first Pears Championship wicket, Colin Ingram edging to slip for 30. 101-5 at lunch, the score continued to mirror Worcestershire's innings with a first for Ben Allison after the break seeing off Carlson for 24 and reducing the visitors to 101-6, followed by a rebuild; however, Glamorgan's middle order couldn't extend their recovery as far as Worcestershire had, and after making the breakthrough on 163-7 with Chris Cooke caught behind for 44, Van Beek ran through the tail like a steam train, skittling the Welshmen for 170 and finishing with four-fer. But the Pears weren't to have everything their way in the three-hour evening session; losing Rodders LBW to the first ball, the hosts went slow and steady until 81-2, which soon became 90-3, 97-4, 116-7 and 121-8 as the middle order collapsed against a lively bowling spell from Harris and Ul Hassan. Closing on 127-8 with a lead of 241, all question of killing the game off with a huge total was gone; it only remained to be seen whether the pitch would continue to offer enough assistance to make the current target enough.
Day Three: With pears ripening symbolically on the trees during another day of rich sunshine, a couple of early boundaries were enough to carry Worcs to 145 all out, setting Glamorgan a stiff 260 to win. Just how stiff became apparent when Leach had Eddie Byrom LBW for a duck, Van Beek had Colin Ingram caught at slip for 14, Allison bowled Zain ul Hassan and Van Beek had the incoming Kiran Carlson LBW for a duck, leaving the visitors 49-4 at lunch. A couple of middle order partnerships in the afternoon threatened to make a game of it, but each time a stand got going, a crucial wicket fell; the huge wicket of Sam Northeast was snaffled low at first slip for 30 off Leach, while Allison had Chris Cooke caught for 12 at third slip making it 129-6. That became 130-7 courtesy of Van Beek - or rather, courtesy of Ben Kellaway's dubious footballing skills as he tried to kick away a ball trickling back towards the stumps and completely miscued, earning himself a pair for the match - and while Billy Root continued to fight with the highest innings of the match, he simply ran out of partners as Pennington had James Harris caught at second slip for 14 and Leach saw the injured Timm van der Gugten caught at first slip. One wicket short of victory but behind on the over rate, a slightly ludicrous passage of play followed as the Worcs spinners came on to rattle through a harmless ten minutes of swift deliveries batted back to the bowler - the County Championship par excellence - but it was only a matter of time until victory came, and with his second four-fer of the match, Logan van Beek was, fittingly, the man for the job.
Worcestershire WIN by eighty runs
The Verdict: Glamorgan have been a sharp and persistent thorn in Worcestershire's side for many a year now, and this first win against them for four years is also our third on the trot in the Championship, leaving us in 2nd place 24 points clear of Leics (who have a game in hand). It's far from job done, with Durham and a resurgent Yorkshire our last two opponents of 2023, but this has already been Worcestershire's finest red-ball campaign since 2017, and like the belated heatwave, we're just basking in every minute of it.
"I would rather spend a holiday in Tuscany than in the Black Country, but if I were compelled to choose between living in West Bromwich or Florence, I should make straight for West Bromwich." - J.B. Priestley