
In-form Foakes helps Surrey into lead against Yorkshire
Rothesay County Championship Division One, Kia Oval (day two)Yorkshire 255: Bairstow 89; Clark 3-31, Lawes 3-77Surrey 384-7: Foakes 86, Patterson 85; Hill 4-58Surrey (6pts) lead Yorkshire (3pts) by 129 runs with three wickets remainingMatch scorecard
Ben Foakes maintained his fine form with the bat by hitting 86 to fashion a solid Surrey lead in their County Championship encounter with Yorkshire at the Kia Oval.Foakes, who hit a career-high 174 not out against Warwickshire earlier this week, followed it up with another vital knock to guide the home side to 384-7 at stumps on day two, 129 in front.Australian left-hander Kurtis Patterson also sparkled on his Surrey debut with 85 but after he and Dan Lawrence fell in rapid succession, they needed Foakes – aided by the lower-middle order – to cement their advantage.Medium-pacer George Hill (4-58), fresh from recording a nine-wicket match haul in Yorkshire's previous game at Essex, was again the pick of the visitors' bowlers.Rory Burns and Dom Sibley resumed in the morning with a deficit of 209 and shaved off just another 10 runs before the skipper departed, nudging a Jack White delivery that left him into the hands of slip.That brought Patterson to the crease for the first time in Surrey colours, taking a while to settle before he unveiled his ruthless cover drive and dispatched both White and Jordan Buckingham to the rope.Buckingham was expensive, conceding two boundaries in quick succession to Sibley – who appeared nicely set at 29 until he failed to get forward sufficiently to Hill and was trapped lbw.However, Patterson was into his stride by then and advanced to his half-century from the penultimate ball of the morning session, ably supported by some wristy leg-side strokeplay from Dan Lawrence.Yorkshire might have removed Patterson on 60 soon after lunch, when he miscued a hook off Buckingham – but James Wharton, moving in from long leg, was unable to cling onto the catch.After receiving treatment for a back problem just before the interval, Lawrence still looked uncomfortable in the middle, but he stuck around for almost two hours helping Patterson to add 112.However, Surrey's momentum was dented when they lost both batters in the space of three deliveries, with Ben Coad returning for his second spell of the day to pin Lawrence in front of the stumps for 31.Hill's impact was even more immediate, removing Patterson in the same manner with the first delivery of his stint from the Vauxhall End and that left Foakes and Jason Roy to regroup as they closed in on the visitors' total.Foakes struck the ball cleanly and crisply, particularly on the leg side, while Roy employed a greater degree of brute force, punching Jordan Thompson off the back foot for four and slamming Adam Lyth into the pavilion to secure his side's first batting bonus point.The final say went to Lyth, who had his fellow ex-England opener pouched at slip for 26 in the first over after tea, but Foakes progressed past 50 for the fifth time this season with one of his looser shots, slashing White just past the slips for two.Yorkshire captain Jonny Bairstow handed his wicketkeeper's gloves to Jonny Tattersall for the final session, having sustained a finger injury, but continued to direct proceedings in the outfield.It was Tattersall who snapped up an outside edge off Foakes late in the day to provide Hill with his fourth wicket, but Jordan Clark – having almost chopped on twice early in his innings – swung the bat to reach 41 not out with a clutch of boundaries.ECB Reporters' Network supported by Rothesay.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
'What a player we've signed': Man City wonderkid's first goal for the club likened to iconic Zinedine Zidane strike
Claudio Echeverri scored the first goal of his Manchester City career on Sunday night by nailing a brilliant free-kick against Al Ain. The 19-year-old — making only his third appearance for City following a £12.5million move from River Plate in January 2024 — found the net in the 27th minute when he aimed a dipping effort over a five-man defensive wall from 21 yards. Al Ain's keeper was unmoved and fans on social media were quick to hail an outstanding strike. 'What a player we've signed,' exclaimed one excited City supporter. Another called it an 'insane free-kick', while a third fan declared: 'Claudio Echeverri has arrived'. Meanwhile, multiple fans on X (formerly Twitter) compared Echeverri's maiden City goal to an iconic free-kick scored by France legend Zinedine Zidane against England at Euro 2024. 27' GOLAZOOOOO @ManCity Watch the @FIFACWC | June 14 - July 13 | Every Game | Free | | #FIFACWC #TakeItToTheWorld #MCIAIN — DAZN Football (@DAZNFootball) June 23, 2025


Times
3 hours ago
- Times
Carlos Alcaraz credits Ibiza trip for helping him win Queen's title
Two weeks after his French Open victory, Carlos Alcaraz completed part two of his bid for a rare summer treble in men's tennis by winning the HSBC Championships at the Queen's Club. The next stop is Wimbledon. Not only is Alcaraz bidding for a third consecutive title at the All England Club, he has the chance to become only the second man in the open era to win three of the sport's most historic tournaments in the same year, following in the footsteps of the great Rafael Nadal in 2008. Ominously for his rivals, Alcaraz did not need to be at his best in west London to win the Queen's Club trophy for the second time in three years. He was pushed to three sets by Jiri Lehecka, the world No30 from the Czech Republic, before prevailing 7-5, 6-7 (5-7), 6-2 in two hours and eight minutes. 'It's really special this trophy and this tournament,' Alcaraz, the world No2, said. 'I'm happy to lift this trophy once again. It has been an incredible week. I came without expectations and just wanted to play good tennis and to get used to the grass. It's really special playing here every year and I can't wait to come back next year.' The key weapon for Alcaraz here was his serve. Lehecka is renowned for his serve, regularly firing it down and clocking speeds of up to 140mph, but it was Alcaraz who was achieving more success with better accuracy. In total the Spaniard hit 18 aces to Lehecka's seven and did not face a single break point. At the age of 22, Alcaraz is already so accomplished at adjusting between the sport's three surfaces of hard, clay and grass. He is also a bundle of energy, which helps when you are arriving at the Queen's Club only 48 hours after being seen dancing at an Ibiza club in celebration of his fifth grand-slam singles triumph at Roland Garros. 'I'm a player who needs days off to enjoy, days for myself to spend with my friends, with my family, just to turn off my mind,' Alcaraz said. 'The days in Ibiza helped me a lot, just to feel like I'm not a tennis player, just to enjoy life a little bit with my friends, have fun, enjoy those days, and then come back to the court with more energy and be more hungry to play again. 'It's really complicated to switch from clay to grass in just a few days. I came here with no expectations at all. I just came here with a goal to play two, three matches, try to feel great on grass moving, and give myself the feedback of what I have to improve. But I just got used to the grass really quick, and I'm just really proud about it.' A double fault from Alcaraz allowed Lehecka to take the second set after a tie-break, but the world No30 was outclassed in the third set EPA Alcaraz was well aware beforehand of the challenge that Lehecka poses after losing to the 23-year-old in the quarter-finals of the Qatar Open in February. Holding serve is of greater importance against a player who makes it so difficult to hit a clear return, and Alcaraz did a fine job from the outset by cruising through his first four service games without losing a point. When the opportunity came on the Lehecka serve at 5-5, Alcaraz pounced with a break before serving out the first set. Bringing up another chance in the second set, however, proved more difficult as there was not a single break point for either player in 12 games before the tie-break. A double fault by Alcaraz at 5-5 allowed Lehecka to level the match at one set all, but the decider was not as close as the two sets that had preceded it. Alcaraz typically raised his level with some tremendous shot-making to take control and claimed a double break to seal an 18th win in a row. While Jack Draper was not part of finals day after his three-set defeat by Lehecka in Saturday's semi-final, there was at least a British doubles victory for the home crowd to savour. Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool became the first all-British pairing since Pat Hughes and Frank Wilde in 1938 to win the Queen's title, defeating Croatia's Nikola Mektic and New Zealand's Michael Venus 6-3, 6-7 (5-7), 10-6 after a deciding tie-break.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
The Lions Rampant: Mail Sport casts an eye over Scotland's proud links to the iconic red jersey and asks who would make an all-time Scots-only Lions select?
The death of Ian McLauchlan over the weekend makes it a compelling time to consider the rugby legends Scotland has contributed to the Lions cause over the years. From leading Lions points scorer Gavin Hastings to men like Ian McGeechan and Jim Telfer — both of whom contributed so much in terms of playing and coaching — Scottish grit has been central to large chunks of what the Lions have achieved in the post-war era.