Rain Ruins Leicestershire's Victory Push In Home Finale
Fri 22 Sep 2023
Fri 22 Sep 2023

Leicestershire’s chances of adding promotion to their Metro Bank One-Day Cup success was
effectively washed away as their LV= Insurance County Championship match
against Yorkshire finished as a draw following more rain on day four at Grace
Road.
Every effort was made by the ground staff to make the playing area fit to
resume after heavy showers after lunch but after the teams had been off the
field for three and a half hours, umpires Neil Bainton and Neil Pratt found
that parts of the outfield were still wet and abandoned the contest just before
5pm.
The Foxes, in third place in the Division Two table, knew that only a win in
this match would be enough to keep alive their chance of travelling to
Chester-le-Street for the final round of fixtures next week with any realistic
chance of joining their hosts, Durham, in Division One next season.
With promotion rivals Worcestershire held to a draw against Durham at New Road
with the three bonus points, it leaves a 22-point gap between the sides going
into the final round next week.
That means Worcestershire - with five wins to Leicestershire’s three - need
only to pick up two bonus points in their final match against Yorkshire at
Headingley to confirm their own promotion and leave the Foxes disappointed even
were they to take maximum points at Chester-le-Street.
Leicestershire felt a win could be within their grasp as they reduced Yorkshire
to 140 for four in their second innings on the final morning, leaving the
visitors effectively 62 for four with still potentially 82 overs remaining in
the contest.
Yorkshire were 225 for four, 147 in front, with James Wharton unbeaten on 58
and George Hill on 32 when the players left the field for what turned out to be
the last time at 1.32pm.
After the final day began on time and in sunny conditions, Leicestershire’s
bowlers made two breakthroughs in the first 35 minutes and a third on the hour
but any notion that they might run through Yorkshire’s batting in short order
dissipated in what remained of the first session.
Chris Wright sent middle stump out of the ground to remove nightwatchman Ben
Coad, Tom Scriven claimed an important scalp when Shan Masood edged to second
slip, and Will Davis struck with his first ball of the day as Adam Lyth stepped
across his stumps to be pinned in front trying to work the ball to leg.
At that point, with Wharton having edged Scriven just short of second slip the
over before, Yorkshire were wobbling a little at 140 for four, just 62 in
front.
But after Hill had taken three boundaries in as many balls off Davis and
Wharton picked up three fours off Scott Currie in the next over, the momentum
shifted enough for Yorkshire to stretch their advantage to 131 by lunch with no
further losses.
A sumptuous cover drive gave Wharton a 10th four and his fifty - a third in
just eight first-class matches - immediately after the interval. There were
still 65 overs left in the match but even given good weather, the chances of a
positive outcome were shrinking, unless the captains were amenable to reaching
one via a contrived route.
But only 22 balls could be bowled in the afternoon before the first of three
heavy downpours forced the players off the field.
It meant that only 147 overs of cricket had been possible over the whole four
days, with no play possible at all on day two.