Date-stamped : 15 Jun97 - 10:17
Irani`s broad bat breaks hold of seam

Christopher Martin-Jenkins at Hove

First day of four: Essex (232-5) lead Sussex (140) by 92 runs

IT  WAS  not  untypical of Sussex`s recent luck (although perhaps
the word `recent` is superfluous)  that  their  first  experiment
with a late start for mid-summer championship matches should have
coincid- ed with a grey, breezy rather bleak day`s weather.

This and the fact that wickets were falling  fast  against  Essex
hardly  suggested  a  return to the carefree days of Fry and Ran-
ji, so it was not surprising  that  the  crowd  was  a  fair  bit
smaller   at   7pm than it had  been  at  3.20, the time at which
Sussex were all out for 140.

Nevertheless, they should and will persevere  with   the   excel-
lent  idea of offering free entry after 5pm for home- going work-
ers and schoolchildren. The 12 noon start in itself produced what
Tony Pigott, the chief executive, called "a  larger  than average
midweek crowd" - about 1,500.

Among  the  few  who  did take advantage of free  entry  was  the
chief  conductor  of  the  Welsh  National Orchestra, who saw the
freest batting of the day from Essex`s fifth-wicket pair.

Ronnie Irani put on 94 with Paul Grayson before  the  latter  was
run  out from cover by Rajesh Rao  and  he  continued  to present
the broadest and straightest of blades in an innings which may in
time prove a match-winner.

He   made   his   runs  on a pitch still giving seam bowlers more
help than the average Hove strip.  It  will   be   routinely  re-
ported   to  Lord`s, because  15  wickets fell, and it might have
been more had not Irani and Grayson been  missed  in  the  slips,
Irani when  50  and  Grayson second ball.

In   a   damp   atmosphere  the ball swung and with some residual
moisture below the surface - the pitch felt  cold  -  it   darted
about  a bit off the seam and sometimes bounced unevenly.

Neil  Williams  made  an outstanding return to the Essex side but
none put more zest into their efforts  than  two  of   the   best
young  fast bowlers  in the land, Ashley Cowan and James Kirtley,
who both enjoyed the conditions thoroughly. Cowan had the  better
figures,  which  was not surprising;  he  had  first  use  of the
conditions after Paul Prichard had preferred  to  field;  he  has
been in fine form all season and he is bowling for a good side.

Kirtley   is   a  fledgling in a side still feeling their way and
this is his first championship match of the  season  after recov-
ering  from  his  side-strain.  His length was variable and Irani
repeatedly hit him through the covers late in the day but he  had
forced   Prichard to play on to his stumps in his second over and
in his first after tea should have had  Grayson  at  second  slip
two  balls  after  bowling  a hitherto masterful Stuart Law.

Sussex`s  batting  troubles  started at once and were never alle-
viated.  Neil Lenham was lbw on the back foot to Williams`s first
ball, the seventh  of  the  match;  Rao  was caught at first slip
in the fourth over; Neil Taylor bowled off stump in the fifth  by
a  ball  he  ap- peared to be leaving;  and  Keith Newell leg be-
fore in the sixth to one he definitely was leaving.

Mark Newell lasted longer, taking his  cue  from  the  immaculate
technique  of  Bill  Athey, but two overs from Irani in which  he
was repeatedly  struck  around   the   inner  thigh  demonstrated
that  batting  was  not  easy. These two had added 34 in 18 overs
when Newell  mis- cued to midwicket  and  when  Athey  was  bril-
liantly  caught  in  the gully, driving at Williams, hope of pro-
longed recovery was gone.

Cowan wrapped up the innings either side of  the  2.15pm   lunch.
Facially he looks like Graham Dilley; in figure and his pink com-
plexion like a large version of Arnie Sidebottom. Raw  boned,  he
looks  untidy,  like a large  rag  doll, but he can bowl. He hits
the deck, swings it away, has a short run and vigorous  body  ac-
tion and a smiling,  uncompli- cated attitude.  He  catches  well
and hits the ball hard too.  Keith  Fletcher  and  Geoff  Arnold,
part-time  Essex   bowling  coach,  are  among those who think he
will play for England within two years.

No doubt Graham Gooch, who has a say in the  matter,  agrees.  He
dropped  a catch off Cowan and got a nasty cut and bruise for his
pains near to his  right eye but it was away  movement  from  the
faithful  Mark  Robinson which prolonged his own modest  start to
the  season,  while Nasser Hussain, hero of Edgbaston, was lbw on
the back foot.

Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/)

Rao in full flow before Cowan shakes Sussex

By Christopher Martin-Jenkins at Hove

Sussex (140 & 220-5) trail Essex (384) by 24 runs

JUST   for   a  while Jim Parks, organising the reunion of former
county players at Hove today, must have  feared  there  would  be
no  cricket  for  them   to  watch  but  sunshine  to  batsmen is
like water to a parched throat and Rajesh Rao took the opportuni-
ty   of   batting  on  a pitch which had  lost  all its devil and
pace to make an admirably patient and  correct  89  in  only  his
third championship match.

Sussex,  244  behind  when they began their second innings  imme-
diately after  lunch  after  some  handsome striking in the morn-
ing by Ronnie Irani and Robert Rollins, responded with an opening
partner- ship of 166.  Rao  and  Neil  Lenham  played  with  com-
fort,  both  scoring  freely off their legs, and they were parted
only  when  Lenham  narrowly failed to beat  a  direct  hit  from
the predatory Nasser Hussain after his partner had called him for
a sharpish single to wide mid-on.

Stuart Law was bowling his leg-breaks by then  and   Peter   Such
and  Paul  Grayson   also  had  long  bowls  as Essex settled for
fiddling rather than firing batsmen out.  At  a  time  when  most
county spectators were on their  way home, however, Essex sudden-
ly turned the game their way again and they should finish the job
today for their third championship win.

Even  they  will  be a little surprised by the events of the last
hour.  Rao,  22,  was  apparently on course for a maiden hundred,
the early birds in the deck chairs had stayed on, encouraged, and
a  few watchers had  even  drifted in free after 5 pm, one or two
having taken early trains home from London, when another 22-year-
old, Ashley Cow- an, shook them from their reverie.

First  he  made a difficult catch look easy,  lifting  his  hands
above his head, halfway back at mid-off, to catch a drive off the
always accurate Such at a time when Neil Taylor was  taking  com-
mand  of a second-wicket partnership of 65. Taylor was well  set-
tled  and timing the  ball sweetly, and he had middled this  shot
well enough to go for four over most fielder`s heads. Cowan, how-
ever, is 6ft 4in and his hands are as big as Alec Bedser`s.

Given  a  third  spell down the slope towards the  sea,  he  next
followed  Bill  Athey`s  amazed  departure,  leg before aiming  a
sweep  at his fullest  stretch, with two wickets  in  two  balls.
Rao, stretch- ing forward in defence, was beaten by away movement
and caught low at second  slip  by Graham Gooch, who then parried
another  flying edge to Nasser Hussain at third. Thus James Kirt-
ley upstaged the  Sus- sex chairman Robin  Marlar, once  famously
stumped  second  ball  for  six in the theoretical role of night-
watchman,  by  departing  first ball for a king pair.

The truth is that Sussex, with Paul Jarvis not  fit  again  until
next  week  and  Jason Lewry not until August, do not possess the
ar- moury when pitches  become as docile as this one had  beneath
the  sun  yes- terday afternoon. Danny Law fell early, to a bril-
liant low slip catch by Athey, the first of his four,  but  Irani
batted  with the same upstanding  authority  as he had the previ-
ous evening, driving and pulling his way  to  his  third  hundred
this  season,  and  Rollins proved that his career, too, is still
on an upward curve. His 82 came from only 104 balls and  included
nine  fours  and   three   sixes:  the right innings at the right
time.

Amer  Khan, who has served his new county well so  far,  had  two
more  rewards  for  leg  breaks which are almost the  opposite of
the departed Ian  Salisbury`s:  reliably accurate but  relatively
lacking  in venom. He did, however, turn two sufficiently to have
Irani and  Rollins caught at  slip.  Mark Robinson, equally reli-
able  in  this tiding-over period for Sussex cricket, also traded
two  more  wickets  for  some heavy punishment by Rollins.

The Newell brothers were at the crease at the close  with  a  ma-
jor job ahead, but they would be advised not  to  get  their pads
in front this morning. Dickie Bird was last heard  at  8.30  last
night demand- ing his release in stentorian tones after being ac-
cidentally locked in the umpire`s room.

Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/)

Cowan finds rhythm

By Clive Ellis at Hove

Third day of four: Essex (384 & 115-0) beat Sussex (140 & 356) by
10 wkts

THINGS could not be going much better  for  pace   bowler  Ashley
Cowan:  career-best   figures   in an efficient 10-wicket victory
inside three days for Essex and an invitation to  join  England`s
build-up for the Lord`s Test.

Graham   Gooch,   team-mate   and  England  selector, thinks very
highly of Cowan and it is not hard to see why. His recent success
rate - 17 wickets in his last two matches - is impressive enough,
but in his rhythmical and economical 12-stride  approach  to  the
wicket and fluent action there is the promise of much more.

Cowan,   22,   has   had  a well-established bank of knowledge to
draw on at Chelmsford. Bowling coach  Geoff  Arnold,  himself   a
master  of the out-swinger`s  art,  Keith Fletcher and Gooch have
all fed his appetite for cricketing knowledge.

He is delighted yet far from starry-eyed about the opportunity to
get  a  taste  of life with England, in much the same way as Sur-
rey`s Alex Tudor did before the first Test  at   Edgbaston.   "It
will   be great to get involved in the set-up, and feel the atmo-
sphere," he said.

Without straining for pace, he is probably a  yard  quicker  than
last  season  and  he also manages to give the impression that he
en- joys his work. "Some people think I`m a  bit  stupid  on  the
pitch but I`m just having fun," he says.

His  match  return  here  was nine for 123 and with  openers Paul
Prichard and  Gooch  utterly  dominant  in  an  unbroken  opening
stand of 115, Essex completed victory just after tea. It elevated
them, if only temporarily, to second place in the table.

It must encourage Essex to know that they   are   making   steady
progress without yet firing on all cylinders.

Gooch   has   yet  to make a big score this season and Danny Law,
returning to the Hove ground where  he  served   his  apprentice-
ship,   is bowling without  control  or confidence and also fail-
ing to do justice to an exciting batting talent.

At least Law pocketed the catch which ended a stubborn innings by
Amer  Khan  and  with it the Sussex second innings three quarters
of an hour after lunch.

Cowan`s first spell offered too much which  the   Newell   broth-
ers,  Keith and  Mark,  could watch pass outside off-stump and it
was Neil Williams who found the  right  line  to  persuade  Keith
Newell  to  edge  a low catch to Nasser Hussain in the slips.

The   new   ball   inspired Cowan to more direct action. First he
brought a ball back to disturb  Mark  Newell`s  off-stump  as  he
played  no shot, then he produced a perfect yorker to bowl Sussex
captain Peter Moores.

If Moores`s form with the bat this season  has  been  disappoint-
ing,  Vasbert  Drakes has been chronically short of runs. His in-
nings of 48 exceeded the combined total  of  his  previous  eight
championship innings.

Four   fours,   including   three  leg-side thumps, in five balls
from Williams lifted the tempo as Drakes and Khan frustrated  Es-
sex in a ninth-wicket stand of 63 in 20 overs.


Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/)

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