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Dravid helped Kent complete a seven-wicket win |
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May
3, 2000 Rahul
Dravid helped Kent complete a seven-wicket win over top-flight new boys Northamptonshire at Canterbury in the English National League on Monday. In
a low-scoring contest, Northamtonshore put in by Kent captain Matthew
Fleming was dismissed for only 76 with Ben Phillips returning
competition-best figures of four for 25. Kent
then took less then 19 overs to make their target, indebted to a
third-wicket stand of 54 in 12 overs between Rahul Dravid (31 not out) and
James Hockley (26). Kent
Spitfires won with a massive 26.1 overs to spare. Ben Phillips took four
for 25 as Northants fell for just 76 before Dravid played the big hand in
achieving the target. The Indian star Dravid hit six fours in his 47-ball
innings after Kent had wobbled at nine for two. Matthew Walker was lbw to
the first ball of the innings from Devon Malcolm and then Robert Key went
the same way to Darren Cousins for three. But
Northants' pitiful total was never going to test the home side, for whom
David Masters and James Golding both on debut picked up two for 10 and one
for 18 off their respective nine overs. Warwickshire
fast bowler Allan Donald was taken to in an ambulance after colliding with
an advertising hoarding while attempting to take a catch during the 97-run
win over Hampshire. South
African Donald was positioned at long-on and as he stepped back underneath
a skier from Shane Warne he bounced against the boards which form the
boundary line and then collapsed on the field in obvious pain. Donald's
injury overshadowed his own formidable part in Warwickshire's Division Two
victory. Earlier he had taken three for nine in six overs to claim the
man-of-the-match award and peg Hampshire back as the prelude to a
middle-order collapse. Hampshire
lost four wickets for six runs in only 20 balls and was later all out for
118 in reply to Warwickshire's 215 for eight after being put in. Trevor
Penney was top scorer for Warwickshire with 51 while opening batsman Nick
Knight struck five boundaries in his 46. A
Southampton crowd of more than 3,000 came to witness Warne making his home
debut for Hampshire and he played his part with two for 31 from nine
overs. Warne also scored seven when Hampshire batted but he came in at a
time when defeat was inevitable. Only
four Hampshire batsmen reached double figures and top scorer was Lee
Savident, who made 25 and was only playing because of a warm-up injury to
Peter Hartley. In
Division One Leicestershire and Sussex tied the game at Leicester after
the visitor collapsed in its pursuit of the 165-run target. One-day
supremo Michael Bevan struck 59 alongside Richard Montgomerie (42) as
Sussex looked to be heading for a comfortable victory. Having
been 113 for two with Australian Bevan and opener Montgomerie at the
crease, Sussex closed on 164 for nine. Chris Lewis did most of the damage
with four for 34. Leicestershire
had made 164 for eight in the face of a spell of four for 23 from
ex-Yorkshire seamer Robinson. A
half-century from Keith Parsons saw Somerset Sabres get the better of its
derby against Gloucestershire Gladiators at Taunton. Parsons (66) helped
his team overcome a troublesome spell of five for 33 from the Gladiators'
Australian medium-pacer Ian Harvey and post a total of 181. That
proved eight too many for the visiting side, which finished on 173 all out
after seamer Steffan Jones had taken four for 32 and left Mark Alleyne
stranded unbeaten on 44 but unable to quite carry his team past its
target. Middlesex bounced back from Sunday's thrashing by Essex to record
its first victory of the season when it easily beat Derbyshire by 71 runs
in a one-sided Division Two game at Derby. Derbyshire
never threatened to overhaul the visitors' total of 185 for six on a slow
pitch and there were still more than eight overs to bowl when Kevin Dean
was run out. Off-spinner
Paul Weekes worked his way through the lower order to finish with four for
26, his best one-day figures and the bowlers were always on top in a match
where no batsman reached 40. Mark
Ramprakash made 38 but Owais Shah and former Derbyshire batman Robin
Weston shared the highest partnership of the match in adding 76 in 15
overs for the fourth wicket. Ramprakash
was superbly caught by wicketkeeper Karl Krikken standing up to Aldred,
but Shah and Weston carried Middlesex past 150. Shah
made 37 before he edged Cork to Krikken and Weston gave the wicketkeeper
his third victim when he dabbed at Mathew Dowman. Derbyshire suffered an
early setback when Australian Michael Di Venuto tried to run a ball from
Angus Fraser to third man and was bowled in the seventh over. But the home side was never in the hunt and only a spirited stand of 38 in six overs between Krikken and Tim Munton rescued Derbyshire from complete humiliation. Bangla2000 News |