Rain Curtails Day Two As Foxes Reduce Arrears
Tue 10 Sep 2024
Tue 10 Sep 2024

By Jon Culley | ECB Reporters' Network
Yorkshire remain on course for a victory that they believe may be enough
to realise their promotion ambitions despite bad weather washing out more than
half of the second day of their Vitality County Championship match at
Leicester.
Leicestershire will resume on day three at 35 for two in their second innings,
trailing by 246 after Yorkshire had posted 379 following an excellent 126 from
captain Jonny Tattersall and a career-best 88 from pace bowler Matthew Fisher,
who also claimed both Leicestershire wickets.
Rain forced the players off shortly before two o’clock and they were unable to
return. It meant 57 scheduled overs were lost but with two full days still to
come Yorkshire would be mightily disappointed should they fail to turn their
strong position into a win.
Ahead of this fixture, head coach Ottis Gibson predicted that one win from his
side’s final three Division Two matches would be enough to secure a top-two
finish, even though they trailed second-placed Middlesex by a point going into
this round.
In the play that was possible, Leicestershire’s hopes of limiting Yorkshire’s
lead after they were dismissed for 98 on day one went unfulfilled in an opening
session dominated by a 138-run ninth-wicket partnership between Tattersall and
Fisher, who could not be parted for an hour and a half, and only when home
skipper Lewis Hill had belatedly recalled Rehan Ahmed into the attack.
The England wrist spinner, who turned 20 last month and has been named in the
squad to tour Pakistan next month, was successful with his fourth delivery
(having struck with his second in his first spell on day one) as Tattersall’s
fine innings ended with an edge to slip. He finished with three for 60.
The Yorkshire captain had completed his second hundred of the season in the
sixth over of the morning from 170 balls. He celebrated with two lovely
straight driven fours off Scott Currie and had raised his boundary count to 14
by the time he was out.
The pitch appeared to offer far less to the bowlers than it had 24 hours
earlier, when the first dozen overs of the morning saw Leicestershire lose
seven wickets for 15. The corresponding period this time resulted in Yorkshire
adding 51 without loss as Fisher posted his maiden first-class half-century for
the county. Even the new ball, taken as soon as available nine overs into
the day, had little effect.
More to the point, in the broader context, the shift in the balance of the
contest had enabled Yorkshire to turn one batting bonus point overnight to
three, which may be vital as they bid to seal their return to Division One,
matching Middlesex’s haul against Gloucestershire. They were one short when
Tattersall was out, but Fisher and Ben Coad added another 31 from just 26 balls
before Ahmed dismissed Fisher, helped by a sharp catch snapped up at ankle
height by wicketkeeper Ben Cox.
Seamer Tom Scriven, still searching for his first five-wicket bag in
first-class cricket, finished with four for 103.
There was time for Leicestershire to face one nervy over before lunch, and
though they survived that one, they slipped to 34 for two for two shortly
before the rain arrived, Fisher continuing his productive day by taking both
wickets.
Opener Rishi Patel, whose approach to his side’s 281-run first-innings deficit
was to be ultra aggressive, profited only briefly from it before he was leg
before playing a horrible hoick across the line. Partner Ian Holland was more
cautious but departed quickly nonetheless, caught at first slip.