County Championship
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Edgbaston, Birmingham

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Warwickshire

Warwickshire

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Warwickshire

Kent

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Report: Warwickshire v Kent, County Championship

Day Four

Kent took a huge step away from the lower reaches of the LV= Insurance County Championship Division One with a thumping 177-run victory over struggling champions Warwickshire at Edgbaston. 

After resuming on 28 for two, in pursuit of a target of 325, the home side folded to 147 all out before lunch. Matt Milnes led the demolition with a destructive burst of 6.5-1-11-4 but Kent’s quartet of seamers all played their part in building the pressure under which the Bears buckled. 

The result leaves Warwickshire, who visit leaders Surrey next week, in real jeopardy of following their title triumph in 2021 with relegation in 2022. Kent, meanwhile, spring into mid-table after an excellent performance by a team galvanised by the arrival of overseas pacemen Navdeep Saini and Matt Henry.   

Their seam attack possessed the cutting edge that the depleted Bears, without the injured Liam Norwell, Olly Stone and Chris Woakes, sorely lacked. Kent’s bowlers also were supported by fine work in the field, led by captain and wicketkeeper Sam Billings who took 12 catches in the match, surpassing the previous Kent record of ten (Fred Huish, 1911, and Jack Hubble, 1923). 

The final day had a helter-skelter start as Sam Hain hit his first three balls for four but then edged a fine delivery from Saini to Billings. 

Dom Sibley and Will Rhodes dug in to add 35 but then came a moment which summed up the old cricket truism that it’s when things are going against you that Lady Ill-Luck will give you another good kicking. Rhodes, having looked in decent nick and started to sow the seeds of a partnership with Sibley, was strangled down the leg-side off Quinn. 

That’s always an infuriating way to get out – all the more so when it triggers a collapse of 61 for seven in 91 balls. 

Kent seam depth in this game showed itself as, with spearheads Saini and Henry grazing, Matt Quinn and Milnes took up the attack and took five wickets in 30 balls. 

Quinn followed the wicket of Rhodes with that of Dan Mousley who edged behind. Milnes produced an unplayable lifter to take Michael Burgess’s edge and then forced Dom Sibley (33, 74 balls) to play on. Milnes had three for seven after taking a return catch from Danny Briggs. 

With Warwickshire’s last two wickets needing to find 196, Kent turned to the spinners to improve their over-rate. Jack Leaning disposed of Craig Miles, caught and bowled, before Milnes returned to round off the rout when Olly Hannon-Dalby edged to first slip. Kent’s visit to Birmingham simply could not have gone any better.


Day Three

Joe Denly’s 30th first-class century gave Kent a strong scent of victory over Warwickshire on the third day of their vital LV= Insurance County Championship match at Edgbaston. 

Kent shrugged off the loss of the first session to rain to advance their second innings to 384 for nine before declaring to leave the Bears a victory target of 325 with nine awkward overs to bat on the third evening. 

Warwickshire reached 28 for two to set up a fascinating final day if the forecast rain stays away. 

Denly’s accomplished 141 (269 balls) was his first championship century since 2019 and was well supported by Jordan Cox (79, 159 balls). The pair added 196 in 56 overs, a Kent fifth-wicket record against Warwickshire, surpassing the 182 by Jack Mason and William Rashleigh at Catford in 1899.  

It was a bitter-sweet day for the descendants of Mason and Rashleigh. They will no doubt feel wistful at the loss of their beloved relations’ record, but no doubt also some joy that the partnership which displaced it has levered Kent into a potentially winning position in such a crucial match. 

After rain washed out the morning session, the visitors resumed on 198 for four and Denly and Cox advanced in unhurried fashion. Cox passed 50 in 96 balls and Denly reached his century in 183 as Warwickshire’s depleted attack plugged away with defensive fields and diminishing assistance from the pitch. 

There was little that home captain Will Rhodes could to except rotate an attack in which, as has been the case for much of the season, Olly Hannon-Dalby towered above the rest – and not just because he is 6ft 8in tall. 

Denly and Cox batted throughout the afternoon and into the evening. They had just consigned Mason and Rashleigh’s Catford masterclass to history when Cox chipped Danny Briggs to short extra. 

Denly then edged the persevering Craig Miles to slip before Matt Henry smote three sixes, taking his match tally to 60 from 44 balls, to expedite the declaration. 

Warwickshire’s openers went out for nine overs with very little to gain and everything to lose and Kent took just 12 balls to strike. Alex Davies edged a lifter from Navdeep Saini to wicketkeeper Sam Billings and the visitors, their tails well and truly up, delivered another big blow in the last over when Henry trapped Chris Benjamin lbw.  

All results remain possible but Kent, their pace attack galvanised by the arrival of Henry and Saini, will strongly fancy their chances if an ominous weather forecast proves faulty.  


Day Two

Joe Denly’s compact unbeaten half-century dug Kent out of trouble and left their vital LV= Insurance County Championship tussle with Warwickshire finely poised at the halfway stage. 

Trailing by 60 on first innings, the visitors closed the second day at Edgbaston on 198 for four – 138 ahead – with Denly unbeaten on 70 (149 balls). Kent were in peril at 105 for four but the former England batter joined forces with Jordan Cox (40 not out, 80 balls) to add an unbroken 93 to keep their side in with a chance of a vital victory in a tussle between the two sides just above Division One’s bottom two. 

In the morning they bowled Warwickshire out for 225 with the impressively pacy Navdeep Saini taking five for 72 on his debut. Four of the Indian’s wickets were among seven catches in the innings for wicketkeeper Sam Billings. It was Billings’ second haul of seven, though the Kent record remains eight (Steve Marsh v Middlesex at Lord’s in 1991). 

Sam Hain defied discomfort from a sore back to lead Warwickshire’s batting. He was last to fall, for 99 (215 balls), as the home side acquired a lead that was useful rather than commanding. 

During an overcast morning, Warwickshire made bitty progress as Hain battled to cajole runs from the tail. As Kent’s refurbished seam attack plugged away manfully, the last four wickets were all snaffled by Billings. Danny Briggs edged Matt Henry and when Henry Brookes and Craig Miles nicked Saini, it was left to number 11 Olly Hannon-Dalby to try to escort his team to a batting point and his partner to 100. The former happened but the latter did not as Hain bottom-edged a cut at Matt Milnes. 

Second time round, Kent again started falteringly and lost both openers before the deficit was erased. Ben Compton edged Hannon-Dalby to third slip and Zak Crawley chipped Will Rhodes to mid-wicket. 

Daniel Bell-Drummond collected 27 from 44 balls but fell lbw to Hannon-Dalby and when Craig Miles hit Jack Leaning’s off-stump with a beauty, Kent were 105 for four – just 45 ahead. 

Denly and Cox played with composure and patience to first stabilise the innings and then accelerate gently against the softening ball as the pitch appeared to start to flatten. Denly continued his return to form by reaching 50 in 92 balls and celebrated with a straight six off Briggs. Cox batted impressively for the second time in the match and that the sixth-wicket pair stayed intact to resume in the morning tilted the balance of power in this fluctuating contest narrowly Kent’s way.   


Day One

High-class bowling from Olly Hannon-Dalby put Warwickshire in charge before Kent hit back on a wicket-strewn opening day in the LV= Insurance County Championship at Edgbaston. 

In a crucial game, with both teams perched precariously above the relegation zone, the home side prepared a green wicket to expedite a result. They then won the toss and their seamers exploited the conditions to bowl Kent out for 165. Only Jordan Cox (48, 69 balls) passed 40 as Hannon-Dalby took six for 40 and Henry Brookes three for 56.  

Warwickshire struggled in turn and closed on 155 for six, having leaned squarely on Sam Hain (68 not out, 130 balls). India paceman Navdeep Saini had an eventful first bowl for Kent, his spell of 10-2-59-3 including some seriously quick away-cutters and 13 no balls.  

Hannon-Dalby was magnificent. As leader of a severely-depleted seam attack (Nathan McAndrew the latest withdrawal after he went down poorly) the pressure was firmly on the Yorkshireman to exploit the conditions. He rose to the challenge with an opening spell of 7-4-15-5. 

On potentially the hottest day ever in England, Warwickshire’s decision to bat drew an incredulous reaction from their fans on social media, but those fans hadn’t seen the pitch.

Hannon-Dalby struck third ball when Ben Compton nicked to wicketkeeper Michael Burgess and, after Kent advanced to 28 for one, added two more wickets in four balls. Daniel Bell-Drummond fell lbw and Joe Denly sliced a loose drive to second slip.  

Hannon-Dalby won two more lbws: Jack Leaning and Zak Crawley who eked 17 from 53 minutes then fell, hit on the back leg, offering no shot. Cox and Sam Billings added 72 in 20 overs before Hannon-Dalby returned to have the former caught behind. 

After Billings (33, 71 balls) edged Brookes, Matt Henry plumped for a spot of gung-ho. He socked three fours and three sixes in a merry 34 (23 balls) before slogging Brookes to deep mid-wicket where sub fielder Kobe Herft took a superb catch. 

Saini steered Brookes to second slip and Matt Quinn joined the list of Kent batters whose quixotic aggression contributed to their downfall when he chipped Danny Briggs to mid off.  

Kent hit back hard with three wickets in the first ten overs as Dom Sibley, Alex Davies and Chris Benjamin edged into the cordon off Matt Milnes, Henry and Aini respectively. 

Hain moved fluently to a 64-ball half-century and added 90 in 28 overs with Will Rhodes (32, 99 balls) before Kent struck three times in 17 balls. Rhodes lifted Milnes to point and Dan Mousley and Michael Burgess edged Saini behind before Hain and Briggs gritted through the last 13 overs to leave their side ascendant, just.

Preview: Warwickshire v Kent, County Championship

Mark Robinson wants Warwickshire’s “big players to lead” when they face Kent in a crucial LV= Insurance County Championship tussle at Edgbaston. 

The Bears and Kent sit seventh and eighth in Division One, separated by just five points, and with only west country pair Somerset and Gloucestershire below them in the table. 

Defeat at Hampshire last week has left the Bears looking over their shoulders at the relegation zone, both occupants of which they have to play in September. Victory over Kent would ease the pressure considerably on a side which continues to be badly depleted, particularly in the pace-bowling department with Liam Norwell, Olly Stone and Chris Woakes still not ready to return. 

The Bears have won only one championship win this season and at times like that confidence can be affected, particularly among younger players. So first team coach Robinson is looking for leadership from the senior members of the squad. 

“You have to show character and belief and confidence and in those times you look to your big players to lead,” he said. “The young players’ job is to come in and give things a red hot go and play with abandon. The older players are there to steady the ship and lead.  

“Self-doubt is the biggest enemy of all sportsmen and women. It’s the same for a team when players were not achieving what they want to achieve individually. Confidence gets affected and that’s where a proper team and a proper squad and a proper club stick together. You quieten down noise and you don’t allow self-doubt to come in. 

“The first thing you do is get back to basics and stop the bleeding and get into a position to build again. We know the Warwickshire members and supporters want to win on the big stages. We all want that but sometimes you’ve just got to hold and regroup.” 

Squad

Will Rhodes (C)
Chris Benjamin 
Danny Briggs
Henry Brookes
Michael Burgess (WK)
Alex Davies 
Sam Hain
Olly Hannon-Dalby 
Nathan McAndrew 
Dan Mousley  
Craig Miles 
Dom Sibley 

How to Follow

Members and supporters can follow the match live in our new-look Match Centre at edgbaston.com, which will include a free to watch Live Stream, with BBC commentary, and a live text commentary.

Supporters can get involved by sending their match day comments and thoughts to matchday@edgbaston.com, and we’ll publish the best ones on our live text commentary in the Match Centre.

Supporters can also watch the Live Stream and get instant push notifications of all wickets, innings and match results via the Edgbaston app, which is free to download on iOS and Android.

Match updates will also be available across the Club’s social media accounts, simply search for @WarwickshireCCC.

Rewind: Warwickshire v Kent, 2010

Kent’s County Championship visit to Edgbaston late in the 2010 season was literally a must-win match for Warwickshire.

They needed a victory to sustain their great escape from relegation trouble and the seemingly hopeless position they had been in a few weeks earlier.

They did win, by 95 runs…thanks to two Bears through and through. It was the Woakes and Carter show as the two all-rounders shared 19 wickets in the match and contributed important runs in the low-scoring contest.

As a true Brummie, in the Edgbaston system since early boyhood, Chris Woakes is as Bears as they come. Neil Carter was born in Cape Town but bought wholly into the Bears as soon as he arrived at the club in 2001 and served brilliantly for over a decade.

In that crucial match in 2010 the two seamers – Woakes right-arm and Carter left – dovetailed to perfection.

First came a bit of vital tail-wagging with the bat. The Bears chose to bat but were in distress at 107 for seven before Ant Botha (76) and Woakes (30) began a revival which was then taken to unexpected heights by the unlikely figure of number 11 Imran Tahir. He thrashed 69 from 72 balls in a tenth-wicket stand of 118 with Botha which lifted the Bears to 294.

Woakes immediately bit deep into Kent’s reply, bowling openers Joe Denly and Rob Key for ducks. The visitors’ recovery was only ever partial as the former Aston Manor player took six for 52 and Carter three for 46 to dismiss Kent for 111.

There was some assistance from the pitch for the seamers and the Bears, whose batting had not distinguished itself all season, then slumped to 54 for eight second time round. To the rescue came Woakes (51, 41 balls) and Carter (26) who counter-attached for 72 in ten overs. The Bears reached 140, setting Kent a target of 324.

That total looked a very distant prospect after Woakes again took out both openers for single figures. This time he and ‘Carts’ shared all ten wickets to follow their nine in the first innings. Martin Van Jaarsveld batted skilfully for an unbeaten 110 but his partners were steadily unpicked by Woakes (five for 45) and Carter (five for 60).

Two great Bears had kept the Great Escape on track.

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