Northants and Glos draw as rain ends victory hopes

Cameron Bancroft hit 60 in both innings having failed to reach a half-century in his previous four matches
- Published
Rothesay County Championship Division Two, County Ground, Northampton (day four)
Northamptonshire 469 & 259-6 dec: Sales 70, Zaib 56; Bailey 3-55, Akhter 2-31
Gloucestershire 379-8 dec & 214-6: Hammond 80, Bancroft 60; Conway 2-33
Northants (5 pts) drew with Glos (5 pts)
Rain put paid to the prospect of an exciting finish at Wantage Road as Northamptonshire and Gloucestershire were forced to settle for a draw in the County Championship.
The Division Two contest had been nicely poised when the weather intervened, with Gloucestershire on 214-6, needing another 136 from a minimum of 24.2 overs.
Northamptonshire had set their opponents a target of exactly 350 after rattling up another 101 from the first 12 overs of the day to declare on 259-6, built around bristling knocks of 70 and 58, respectively, from James Sales and Saif Zaib.
Miles Hammond threatened to spearhead a successful Gloucestershire charge with his innings of 80, while Cameron Bancroft also posted his second half-century of the game before the home side fought back.
Having already shared a century partnership in the first innings, Sales and Zaib were soon speeding towards another in the morning as they extended Northamptonshire's overnight 248-run lead.
Sales quickly added the single needed for his second 50 of the match, while it was Zaib who really set the tone, banging two boundaries off the back foot and lifting Tom Price over the top for six.
The left-hander followed his partner to a half-century, from 58 balls, but perished hooking Archie Bailey (3-55) down the throat of deep midwicket – and Sales departed later in the same over, losing his middle stump attempting to ramp.
However, Lewis McManus and George Bartlett continued to throw the bat as they added another 44 runs, both belting Graeme van Buuren for leg-side sixes to lift their side's lead to 349 and trigger the declaration.
Gloucestershire began their chase solidly, scoring at around three-and-a-half an over, but lost two wickets prior to lunch, with Liam Guthrie moving one away from Ben Charlesworth to take the edge.
Calvin Harrison did well to scoop up a chance at second slip to dismiss Ollie Price, and the home side might also have removed Hammond without scoring, with a top-edged sweep off the spinner looping up but falling to safety.
Hammond was swiftly into his stride after the interval, dancing down the track to slam Harrison into the car park, and belting Luke Procter for successive cover boundaries as he overtook Bancroft en route to his fourth half-century of the season.
A swept four off Harrison took Hammond to that landmark from 56 balls, with Bancroft following suit in the next over and, aside from an appeal against Hammond for obstructing the field – rejected by the umpires – the Gloucestershire pair looked comfortable.
Having matched his first-innings score exactly, the captain attempted to hook Guthrie and swiped through to McManus – but Hammond continued to pile on runs, cutting and pulling with assurance.
Yet Northamptonshire's decision to introduce Bartlett's occasional off-breaks paid dividends as he claimed his maiden first-class wicket on the stroke of tea, trapping Hammond lbw with the visitors just under halfway to their target.
Bartlett made way for Harrison, who played a key role in securing two further wickets as he tempted Cameron Green to drive to short cover, and then sprang to take a thick edge at slip off James Bracey.
But just as Bracey's replacement Tom Price made his way out to the middle, the rain arrived and the covers were laid in place, stifling any chance of a positive result.
ECB Reporters' Network ed by Rothesay
Northamptonshire head coach Darren Lehmann:
"I thought it was a good declaration by Gloucestershire to open up the game a little bit. We played beautifully this morning to get the runs quick enough to give us enough time to get the overs in and it would have been a great finish to this game.
"We didn't think we'd get there until Saif and Sales got going this morning and that allowed us more overs in the game so both sides had a crack at it.
"They're going to be our batting middle order for a long period of time hopefully, so I'm pleased they got a few runs. I'd have loved Salesy to get a hundred but he played beautifully for the team today.
"They (Gloucestershire) played the right brand as well and it was really in the balance until we got Greeny (Cameron Green) out."
Gloucestershire head coach Mark Alleyne:
"I think chasing 350 was a more than fair declaration, both sides had a good opportunity to win the game.
"Our intention was to go all the way and in of run-rate, all was going well – we'd probably just lost one or two wickets more than we would have liked at that stage but we were still keen on giving it a go for those last 20 overs or so.
"For me and for any coach, it's the enterprise of the lads in the team that gives you the confidence to play in this way.
"There were times earlier in the season when we were a little more conservative, but we feel we're playing well enough now to take a few chances to win matches. Our declaration (on day three) was based on that premise."
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- Published31 January