Mulder Takes Five Again As Foxes Face Fight To Save Game
Sat 13 May 2023
Sat 13 May 2023

By Jon Culley, ECB Reporters' Network
Leicestershire ended day three on the back foot, despite a second successive five-wicket haul for Wiaan Mulder and a resilient batting display from all-rounder Rehan Ahmed.
Sussex gave
themselves an opportunity to secure a second win of the season that may see
them top the LV= Insurance County Championship Division Two table after forcing
the Foxes to follow-on.
The home side were dismissed for 270 in reply to Sussex’s 430 on day three at
Grace Road, Ari Karvelas and Fynn Hudson-Prentice taking four wickets each as
Leicestershire fought back from 160 for seven thanks largely to Ahmed (59
not out) and Chris Wright (48) but still fell short. They are 16 without
loss following on.
A superb unbeaten innings of 182 by Tom Alsop, who shared a stand of 169 with
James Coles (70) for the fifth wicket, was responsible for putting Sussex in
such a strong position despite Mulder’s five for 63 and Tom Scriven’s
three for 75 on a better day for Leicestershire’s bowlers.
Should Sussex fashion a victory on the final day, they will move at least into
clear second place in the table, top should Durham fail to secure victory over
Yorkshire at Chester-le-Street, where they had two wickets in hand overnight
but still required 33 runs to win.
Resuming in Leicester on 319 for four, Sussex’s morning was developing along
the lines they had hoped for the first 10 overs as Alsop and Coles raced along
at almost five an over, extending their partnership by 48 to 169.
After 19-year-old Coles miscued Scriven to mid-off for a fine 70, the last six Sussex
wickets fell in 17 overs for 63, which felt like an anticlimactic end to
an innings they had hoped might top 500 runs, although 430 after being put in
was hardly an under-achievement.
There was no dislodging Alsop, who overtook his previous best of 150, which he
equalled against Leicestershire at Hove last summer, in the over after Coles’s
demise. But he needed more support and none was forthcoming.
Generating more swing than they had been able to find on Friday, Wright quickly
had Oli Carter caught at second slip, Scriven dismissed Hudson-Prentice leg
before with a ball that kept a tad low and Wright picked up a second wicket
when Karvelas had no answer to a full delivery that took out his off stump.
Mulder wrapped up the tail to complete his second five-for in as many innings,
having Henry Crocombe caught at slip, seeing off Bradley Currie for a 15-ball
duck.
Nonetheless, Sussex had doubled their batting points from two to four thanks to
Alsop’s impressively measured and chanceless innings, and 430 looked a
formidable total as Hudson-Prentice reduced Leicestershire from 70 for one to
79 for four by taking three wickets for one run in the space of 11 deliveries.
The former Derbyshire all-rounder brushed the outside edge to have Rishi Patel
caught behind for a bright 34 and dismissed Colin Ackermann for a two-ball duck
as the former Leicestershire captain was beaten by one that struck him on the
back pad.
The current captain, Lewis Hill, suffered the same mode of dismissal, although
perhaps unluckily given that his front leg looked well forward and across.
All this after Hudson-Prentice had appeared to have injured himself bowling his
first ball, limping back to his mark flexing his left leg, although somehow by
the end of the over all was well. When he did take a rest it was with figures
of three for 12 from seven overs.
Deprived of both their leading wicket-takers, Ollie Robinson at England’s
behest and Nathan McAndrew to free up an overseas slot for Smith, there is an
inexperienced feel to this Sussex seam attack.
Yet Cheteshwar Pujara, the Sussex captain, used his resources well, maintaining
attacking fields and rotating sensibly. Karvelas and Currie, both making
their first appearances of the season, removed Mulder and Australian wicketkeeper-batter
Peter Handscomb in the first four overs after tea, leaving Leicestershire six
down for 135.
Mulder was pinned in front by Karvelas before Handscomb, who has been the
bedrock of Leicestershire’s improved form this season, edged behind off Currie.
When Crocombe produced the ball of the day to bowl Scriven, Leicestershire were
160 for seven.
Wright looked to hit his side out of trouble and threatened to do so, racking
up 48 from 41 balls in an entertaining flurry of six fours and a six into the nets
over square leg as he and Ahmed put on 69 for the eighth wicket.
But Karvelas, who had seen Ahmed dropped at gully on 34, removed Wright via an
edge behind, putting the pressure back on Leicestershire with the follow-on
target still 52 runs away.
Another 40 added by Ahmed with Will Davis took Leicestershire tantalisingly
close, but Davis was taken at first slip off Hudson-Prentice and Ahmed’s
efforts to protect last man Josh Hull from Hudson-Prentice by taking a leg-bye
off the fifth ball of a Karvelas over backfired as the last one hit Hull’s
front pad squarely in front.