Lewis Hill Hits Hundred In Blistering Bristol Heat
Tue 13 Jun 2023
Tue 13 Jun 2023

By Richard Latham, ECB Reporters' Network
Lewis Hill maintained concentration in energy-sapping heat to
score his seventh first class century as Leicestershire battled for first
innings parity on the third day of their LV= Insurance County Championship
match with Gloucestershire at Bristol.
The visiting skipper’s 103 occupied nearly five and a half hours
and led his side to a total of 350 in reply to 368. Rishi Patel cracked 59 off
70 balls, while Louis Kimber contributed 34 before being given out for
obstructing the field.
Seamer Zaman Akhter was the most successful Gloucestershire bowler
with four for 33 from 17 overs in only his third first class match. By the
close, the hosts had made nine without loss in their second innings and a draw
looks by far the most likely outcome tomorrow.
A sweltering day began with Leicestershire 23 without loss. Openers
Patel and Sol Budinger set about the task of reducing the deficit of 345 in
positive manner.
Patel looked in prime form, timing the ball sweetly and pulling a
six off Tom Price as the
pair brought up fifty in the seventh over of the morning.
They looked set to build a significantly larger stand when, with
the total 66, Budinger, on 21, aimed an ugly cross-batted swing at a wide
delivery from Akhter and edged to wicketkeeper James Bracey.
Patel struck fours off successive deliveries from Danny Lamb to
reach an impressive 56-ball half-century and followed up with a straight six
off Zafar Gohar’s first over, the 19th of the innings.
It was a surprise when Patel fell in the following over, edging a
defensive shot off Akhter to second slip with the score on 85. A watchful Hill
took 24 balls to get off the mark, before sweeping 2 fours off Gohar.
Akhter’s initial five-over spell from the Ashley Down Road End
finished with figures of two for five, reward for the 24-year-old generating
sustained pace and bounce.
At lunch, the scoreboard read 132 for two off 37 overs, with Hill
unbeaten on 34. The afternoon session was interrupted at just after 2.15pm by a
fire alarm, triggered by the effects of the high temperatures, which resulted
in the pavilion being evacuated.
Among those required to leave the building were the scorers, so
play was held up. But after a ten-minute delay, normal service was resumed.
Colin Ackermann contributed 21 to a stand of 66 with Hill before
cutting at a wide delivery from Akhter and edging to Ben Charlesworth at first
slip.
Two runs off Tom Price took Hill to a half-century off 108 balls,
with 6 fours, out of a total of 182 for three. Slowly but surely,
Leicestershire moved to within striking distance of their opponents’ first
innings total.
They lost former Gloucestershire player Peter Handscomb for 25
with the score on 193 when off-spinner Ollie Price squeezed a delivery through
his back-foot defence to clip off stump.
But by tea Kimble had helped the indefatigable Hill add 40 for the
fifth wicket and their team looked comfortably placed at 233 for four.
The pair took the score to 258 before Kimber, on 34, departed in
unusual fashion, given out after playing a delivery from off-spinner Ollie
Price defensively into the ground, up onto his shoulder and then flicking the
ball away with a hand.
Price immediately appealed for obstruction and umpires Graham
Lloyd and Paul Baldwin consulted before quickly sending Kimber on his way.
Hill had an anxious moment on 83 when he played a delivery from
Tom Price with the second new ball to gully and was called for a suicidal
single by Rehan Ahmed, Miles Hammond’s throw to the bowler’s end lacking the
necessary accuracy to run him out.
It was all the assistance Hill required to move to three figures
off 205 balls, with 12 fours. But Akhter wasn’t finished and produced a brute
of a short ball, which Ahmed, having breezed to 28 off 32 balls, could only
fend to second slip.
Hill’s long vigil ended when he gave a return catch to Ollie Price
and Gohar quickly sent back Chris Wright and Callum Parkinson. But Tom
Scriven’s 30 before falling lbw to Ollie Price (three for 40) ensured a third
batting point for Leicestershire.