Gloucestershire v Sussex | Day Four | 87* from Miles Hammond helps save the game for Shire
30 April 2023
The weather was the only winner in the rain-ruined LV= County Championship match between Gloucestershire and Sussex at Bristol, which ended in a predictable draw.
Only 41.2 overs were bowled on a frustrating final day at the Seat Unique Stadium where the visitors might have secured victory, enforcing the follow-on after bowling Gloucestershire out for 248, from an overnight 198 for nine.
Miles Hammond finished unbeaten on 87, from 171 balls, with 12 fours, while Ajeet Singh Dale contributed ten to a crucial last-wicket stand of 61. Nathan McAndrew ended with figures of five for 63 before drizzle and poor light intervened.
With a lead of 207, Sussex asked Gloucestershire to bat again and when play resumed at 3.30pm, reduced them to 41 for four, left-arm seamer Sean Hunt claiming three of the wickets
But, with two runs added, more rain brought a second interruption to play. And, although it began again at 5.08pm with a possible 22.2 overs still to be bowled, only 18.2 were sent down before the players shook hands, the scoreboard reading 121 for four, with Graeme van Buuren 55 not out.
Sussex took 13 points after dominating what play there was in the match, while Gloucestershire had to settle for six.
The final day began with Hammond and Singh Dale looking to extend the home side’s first innings and bat for as long as possible.
With only a couple of overs until the second new ball, Sussex elected to start with spin at both ends and the decision should have paid quick dividends.
Hammond, unbeaten on 42 at the start, reached a 128-ball half-century with two fours off Jack Carson and then reverse swept a third boundary off James Coles.
But his valuable innings should have ended on 55 when he miscued a Coles full toss to mid-on where Hunt spilled a catch above his head that should have been taken.
The total was 211 for nine and the error cost Sussex time as well as 37 more runs as Hammond and Singh Dale batted comfortably against the second new ball, taken at 212 for nine, on what remained a flat pitch.
The pair had taken Gloucestershire to within two of an unlikely batting point when Dale fell lbw to Tom Haines. By then the floodlights were shining brightly under heavily overcast skies.
Hammond had suffered a painful blow attempting to pull a delivery from Hunt and the umpires were already showing concern about the light when Singh Dale was dismissed.
It was no surprise when, with both teams out and ready to start Gloucestershire’s second innings, they ruled conditions unfit for play to resume.
With heavy rain forecast during the afternoon, ground staff brought on the heavy covers. Lunch was taken and a draw seemed the only likely outcome.
But on the resumption, with a possible 44 overs left to bowl, excellent opening spells by Hunt and McAndrew plunged the hosts into trouble.
Chris Dent was pinned lbw by McAndrew’s second ball of the innings, while the impressive Hunt removed James Bracey, who edged a catch to wicketkeeper Oli Carter.
It was almost nine for three as Hammond nicked the ball at catchable height between Carter and first slip Tom Alsop.
Sussex needed to take such chances. But Hunt struck two more blows, removing Marcus Harris leg before and Hammond to another Carter catch before the weather closed in again with the total 43 for three.
Again the covers went on and were withdrawn for a final resumption. Gloucestershire skipper van Buuren, who had entered the fray at 16 for three on a king pair, went on the counter-attack and reached an entertaining fifty off 59 balls, with 11 fours.
Ollie Price provided solid support, but having been denied a probable victory at Worcester by rain in their previous game, van Buuren’s men had cause to be grateful to the weather this time.
Gloucestershire Head Coach Dale Benkenstein said:
“I’m gradually getting used to the Gloucestershire way. We have tendency to get ourselves into tight situations and then battle out of them.
“Today I was concerned when we were 41 for four, but then delighted at the fighting spirit shown to come out with a draw.
“In a way, it was a mirror image of our last game against Worcestershire. There we felt robbed by the weather and this time it helped us.
“After having our first home game against Yorkshire washed out, it was good to get onto the field and all credit to our ground staff for making conditions playable.
“It was not the way we like to play our cricket, but you will always get games like that in a season and the important thing is not to lose them.
“I always like to bat first when we win the toss and, with hindsight, perhaps we should have done. But there was still some dampness in the pitch at the start of the game and we weren’t sure how it would play.”
Gloucestershire skipper Graeme van Buuren reflected on a third draw of the season: