Saturday, 9 May 2026

Derbyshire v Northamptonshire day 2

Derbyshire 604-7d (Guest 141, Andersson 106,  Jewell 94, Madsen 59, Conway 3-102)

Northamptonshire 98-4 (Harrison 42*, Sales 33* Haydon 2-29, Aitchison 2-31)

Derbyshire lead by 506 runs

I saw the sun rise over the Central Co-op County Ground this morning and it stayed high in the sky and offered pleasant warmth for the rest of the day. One of those when you are glad there is cricket to enjoy and friends to enjoy it with.

Derbyshire had high hopes that their overnight pairing might progress their innings to centuries, but both were undone by Harry Conway, who once plied his trade in these parts for Ticknall, in his salad days. He has impressed me in this match, running in hard, uber-aggressive and appealing in stentorian style, like Brian Blessed at the football. He is a good bowler too, an advert for the merits of picking up a robust, time-served, grizzled Aussie quick as an overseas player.

He first trapped Wayne Madsen leg before, then Caleb Jewell edged behind just six short of his century. The landmark may have been missed but the value to both team and player should not be overlooked. 

It brought two new men to the crease, but Andersson and Guest followed on from the top order and were quickly into their stride. The occasional ball was keeping a little lower, but Andersson was, with keeper back, into his Chris Wilkins-style sashay down the pitch mode. For me, he would be a good call for opening in the fast-approaching Blast, a role he did well for Middlesex latterly. 

Derbyshire reached lunch at 447-5, with the lowest score of the top seven being 39.

In the afternoon session, Guest and Andersson took their partnership to 241, with a combination of good running and powerful strokes. It was perhaps a case of doing unto others as they have done to you, but the visitors wilted in proportion to the advancing score. Both reached fine centuries, Andersson dismissed soon after reaching his, while Guest finally went after an ungainly reverse hoik, diametrically opposed to the poise of his innings, for a superb 141. 

Derbyshire declared at that point on 604-7, with most around the ground feeling that the visitors would themselves commence a runfest in the remaining play.

How wrong we were. With clouds gathering, Aitchison and Haydon reduced them to 38-4 either side of the tea interval. It was good seam bowling in the age-old  Derbyshire tradition, good length, nipping it around and backed up by three fine catches by Guest, behind the stumps. He had enjoyed a special day and confirmed his value to the side.

it was as good as it got, as Harrison and Sales played out the rest of the day with a combination of common sense and a little luck. Tomorrow's first session will be key to whether the foot they currently have in the doorway can be followed by a headlong dive through it.

But this was a good day for Derbyshire, a restorative one after recent matches. There was a chirpiness in the field again

Maybe I should come down more often...

Once again, thanks to all those who shared some of their day with me today. It was a pleasure to see all of you, some for the first time, others once again after too long.

There is hopefully time for a few more tomorrow, before I head north and home on Monday.

9 comments:

  1. Before the game I called for Guest to be dropped. He played a great innings today & took some good dismissals. Really pleased for him. I didn’t see this coming but more than happy to admit I called it wrong.

    MarkB

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    Replies
    1. Fair play, mate. Big of you to admit that, well done!

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    2. I don't imagine MA even considered dropping Guest.

      However, his keeping this year has been a little below his usual standards, and I'm sure he would be the first to admit it. Hopefully this is him back to his best. I'm a big fan of his, delighted to see him in the runs.

      Delete
  2. Tim, Chesterfield9 May 2026 at 18:49

    I looked out for you on my laps of the ground but didn't see you. Was going to say hello. We batted well after the early wickets. Shame I missed the wickets leaving at tea and being behind the marquee as strolling round for the first!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We must have been chasing each other around, Tim, like the Keystone Cops! It would have been really good to meet you, as it was to meet many others today

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  3. Tim, Chesterfield9 May 2026 at 20:01

    I'll find you at Queen's Park - not so many hiding places there 😉

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  4. A very pleasing and enjoyable day’s viewing today. The two early wickets did make me fear that we were in for an inevitable collapse, but Brooke Guest and Martin Andersson’s excellent 241-run partnership not only steadied the ship, but their fast scoring rate pushed the innings along quickly. What happened next took me by surprise, like many others. I didn’t see a scenario where we would reduce Northamptonshire to 38-4 but some fine bowling was well-rewarded. The sight of a stump flying out of the ground never fails to delight (unless you are the batter!)

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  5. Great to see Guest hit his first ton in three years, and Andersson emphasising just what a good signing he has been. They both made batting look easy.

    The question is: can we polish off Northants today and make them follow on before close of play? It will require a lot of hard work from our bowlers.

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