Handscomb Hits Hundred As Leicestershire Control Second Day
Sat 25 May 2024
Sat 25 May 2024

By Jon Culley | ECB Reporters' Network
Peter Handscomb’s second century of the season helped Leicestershire
reach 280 for five in reply to Glamorgan’s 387 on day two of their Vitality
County Championship match at the Uptonsteel County Ground.
The Australian Test batter finished unbeaten on 102 after sharing a
fourth-wicket stand of 141 with captain Lewis Hill, who made 92, although
Glamorgan remain in a strong position in the match with a lead of 107 and the
chance to bowl with a new ball only five overs old when they resume on day
three.
Earlier, Leicestershire seamer Scott Currie had recorded the first five-wicket
haul of his first-class career, finishing with five for 64.
Handscomb, who signed a two-year contract last year after a successful first
season with Leicestershire, has started the season in impressive form, with 547
runs already to his name after scoring 51 or higher in six of his eight innings
so far in the first half of the Division Two programme.
He reached today’s hundred from 160 balls with his 12th four, driven down the
ground off James Harris.
Currie needed just one delivery at the start of the second morning to claim the
fifth wicket he had hoped might come his way after Glamorgan resumed on 352 for
eight.
Straying down the leg side, it was hardly the best ball Currie bowled in his 26
overs but it brushed Sam Northeast’s glove on the way through to ‘keeper Ben
Cox and umpire Neil Bainton raised the finger. Four for 109 for Hampshire
against Surrey in April 2021 was the 23-year-old’s previous best.
A fourth batting point eluded Glamorgan, but not until Mir Hamza had provided
some entertainment on his way to an unbeaten 24.
The Pakistan Test bowler’s vigorous hoicking at anything on the leg side
brought him a four and two sixes - one off a top edge - and a moment of comedy
when he mistakenly thought he had hit Currie to the midwicket boundary, unaware
that the ball had hit part of his body padding and was trickling along the
pitch just a few feet from him. Fortunately for him, after setting off
nonchalantly for a presumed unnecessary run, Currie’s shy at the stumps missed.
He and Harris thus added 35 for the last wicket before Harris was caught
behind.
It left Leicestershire needing first to reach 238 to avoid the follow on, which
looked a long way off when Marcus Harris and Louis Kimber were out in
consecutive overs to leave them 38 for two.
Australian international Harris - like Hamza in the last match of his county
stint - was leg before to a full-length ball from the Pakistan left-armer
before Louis Kimber edged behind off Timm van der Gugten. When Rishi Patel
perished in similar fashion after lunch - a second wicket for the Netherlands
international seamer on his first appearance of the campaign - Leicestershire
were in difficulty at 65 for three.
Hill and Handscomb were then thoroughly tested with the ball by Hamza, whose
growing frustration as a string of appeals were turned down led umpire Bainton
to speak to his captain.
Leicestershire’s fourth-wicket pair weathered the storm and, with the pitch
seeming to flatten out somewhat, Hill completed his second half-century of the
season off 98 balls and had progressed to 66 out of 161 for three at tea.
Handscomb followed suit soon afterwards, his coming off 90 balls just after he
had glanced Van der Gugten to the fine-leg boundary for his seventh four.
The pitch was looking increasingly unhelpful to the bowlers, and Harris’s
tactic of banging the ball in short did not look to be working until it
suddenly did, in a less conventional way, when Hill played a deliberate uppercut
to a delivery from round the wicket and was caught by Billy Root, scampering in
from third man.
Within reach of a first hundred of the season, the Leicestershire captain’s
dismay was palpable in every movement of his body as he trudged back to the
pavilion.
Nonetheless, his 141-run stand with Handscomb had taken his side much of the
way towards the follow-on point, which was passed, in the event, when new man
Ian Holland cut Zain Ul-Hassan through backward point for his first boundary as
a Leicestershire player.
In the event it was his only boundary of a debut innings that ended when he
followed one down the leg side to be caught behind soon after Glamorgan had
taken the new ball.