Surrey relegated by Javid and Woakes

Warwickshire 120 for 0 dec (Chopra 69*) and 281 for 4 (Javid 119*, Woakes 79*) beat Surrey 400 for 5 dec (Solanki 162, Davies 103, Amla 77) and forfeit by six wickets
Scorecard

Surrey went down tamely in the end, their optimistic plan to take 10 Warwickshire wickets in less time that it took to concede 281 runs falling a long way short as Ateeq Javid and Chris Woakes built a magnificent partnership that saw the home side's requirement met with more than 25 overs to spare of the final day.

Javid, a neat right-handed batsman of only 21 years who has come into his own in the second half of the season, played superbly, applying himself with considerable patience and diligence on the third evening, with his side 19 for 2, and again as the final day unfolded and Surrey momentarily glimpsed a chance when they removed Laurie Evans and Rikki Clarke in the morning session.

Evans threw his wicket away by chasing a wide long-hop from Stuart Meaker and Clarke deflected a drive on to his own stumps, at which point Warwickshire were still 155 from their target, a point at which another wicket or two might have had them looking at their long tail and getting jittery.

But Javid never wobbled for a moment, and once Woakes was settled and timing his shots confidently the scoreboard was seldom static and Surrey's morale steadily weakened. The pitch offered nothing that the spinners, Gareth Batty and Zafar Ansari, could use to much effect, and the threat posed by the quicker men was never more than fleeting. Chris Tremlett, who has ended doubts over his future by signing a one-year extension to his contract, did not look like a bowler champing at the bit, even with an Ashes squad due to be announced.

Thus ended a grim year, the second in a row, for Surrey, who reached the final of the FLt20 but saw little else for their investment in a squad that has, at different times, seen Graeme Smith, Ricky Ponting, Kevin Pietersen and Hashim Amla pulling on a Surrey sweater.

The departure through injury in May of South Africa captain Smith, who had been hired to bring order and purpose to a dressing room still feeling the pain left by the Tom Maynard tragedy, was a severe blow, effectively requiring the plans for the season to be redrawn. Within a few weeks came the sacking of team director, Chris Adams, but Alec Stewart, the executive director who has been in temporary charge since then, offered no excuses.

"We did not look like a relegation squad on paper but we don't play on paper," he said. "If you look at the lack of batting points, the lack of times we haven't bowled sides out - the win column says one and if you only win one game you are going to finish near the bottom.

"Losing Graeme Smith was a blow. You don't want to lose your leader, no side would want to lose their captain, no one would want to lose someone of the calibre of Graeme Smith. He had only been there three games or so but had a huge impact, not just as a batsman -- we knew he was a fine player, a fine leader - it was the impact he had on the dressing room.

"But that's not an excuse. We lost him. Other sides lose players, other sides lose their captain for a while. We have not played well enough. You can't stand here and defend something you can't defend.

"We needed to have played better. It was not a question of one person not being here. Collectively the performances were not good enough, which is why we are sat rock bottom."

Stewart accepted that there would be some supporters of other teams who would revel in Surrey's demise, burdened as they are with the label of county cricket's fat cats. He questioned whether it was entirely fair but took it is as inevitable.

"There are plenty of people out there who will be pleased to see us go down," he said. "We are looked upon as a big club, we have been tagged as this cheque-book county. But people forget there is a salary cap.

"There is expectation of Surrey but who brings that expectation? Is it from within Surrey, or from outside of Surrey because it is a Test match ground, because it is London, because as a club it makes a lot of money, with the Test match revenues, the T20 revenues and the way they market the club? That's maybe a reason. There is the history as well.

"You have to look at the here and now and the immediate future, and the future is to make sure we have good people, who can improve as individuals, and good people at the top who can help nurture those younger players through.

"For us now it is about how you plan for one to five years, so that you don't come up and go down again, and stay strong for a length of time.

"I don't want to stay in Division Two for longer than one year but when you do get promoted you want to make sure the foundations are there so that you can stay in the first division and then challenge at the top end rather than trying to survive at the bottom end."

Permanent replacements for Adams and first-team coach Ian Salisbury will be announced in the coming weeks, Stewart said. "We are getting closer, but there was never any rush. Stuart Barnes in the head coach role has been outstanding, with his work ethic and his attention to detail, and David Thorpe, our team analyst who has been involved with our academy, has stepped up well.

"They have done all they can, the players have done all they can in their work ethic. That has not been transferred to the middle, with bat and ball."

The future, meanwhile, looks brighter for Warwickshire. Failing to defend their title has been a disappointment, but an understandable one given terrible luck with injuries, a headache that has not yet lifted after Jamie Atkinson broke a thumb, giving them another problem over who keeps wicket.

Yet Javid and Woakes, both former players with the inner-city Aston Manor club, have given them the chance to finish their season in the top three for the third year running, should they condemn another team to relegation with a win at Derby next week.


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Loubser, Lee power South Africa home

South Africa Women 153 for 4 (Lee 77, Tul Kubra 3-43) beat Bangladesh Women 149 for 8 (Hoque 63, Loubser 3-28) by six wickets
Scorecard

An incisive spell of 3 for 28 from offspinner Sunette Loubser, followed by a patient fifty from opener Lizelle Lee powered South Africa Women to a six-wicket win over Bangladesh Women in Benoni.

Loubser took the middle-order wickets of Salma Khatun, Nuzhat Tasnia and Shaila Sharmin during a five-over period that cost only eight runs, to restrict Bangladesh to 149 for 8 in 50 overs. Chasing a low score, Lee hit seven fours during her 130-ball 77, and added 80 for the opening wicket with Trisha Chetty, who made 39, to all but secure the win for the hosts.

South Africa, after choosing to bowl, were comfortable throughout the game, and a 108-ball 63 from Fargana Hoque did little to change Bangladesh's fortunes. They had been put on the back foot in the 11th over, when Ayasha Rahman was run out for 13.

Hogue aside, none of the other Bangladesh batters could produce big scores, as tight bowling from South Africa kept the run-rate under three an over to set up an easy chase.

Offspinner Khadija Tul Kubra took three wickets for Bangladesh, including that of Lee, but couldn't prevent defeat, as Alexis le Breton and Dane van Niekerk took South Africa home with 12.1 overs remaining.

South Africa captain Mignon du Preez praised the opening pair of Lee and Chetty, who had laid the platform for the victory. "I'm really proud of the way Lizelle batted today," she said. "It was quite difficult batting upfront and she and Trisha set us up for the target with a good opening partnership. She structured her innings really well and adapted with ease to the conditions. The rest of the batters in the order also chipped in."

The teams will play the second ODI at the Wanderers on Sunday.


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Rogers removal confirms Yorks in second

Yorkshire 210 (Gale 66, Williamson 52) and 194 (Ballance 90) beat Middlesex 128 (Sidebottom 4-27) and 196 (Rogers 65, Brooks 4-33) by 80 runs
Scorecard

The last Australia Test player to leave these shores departed in high dudgeon. Chris Rogers left the field with a look of consternation and hands outstretched as he was adjudged to be caught at the wicket. With Rogers went Middlesex's improbable hopes of chasing 277 and Yorkshire were confirmed, as everybody had presumed they would be, as Division One runners-up.

Leaving with exasperation and a sense of wrongdoing is the way the last Australian cricketer in the building should always turn off the lights. But Rogers' commitment to Middlesex has remained unquestioned, either side of his first Ashes series, and if his innings had a little end-of-term skittishness to it, his 65 from 85 balls represented Middlesex's only lasting threat. Ryan Sidebottom bowled him on 28, but was called for a no-ball, whereupon he stared fiercely at the white line like a gardener suspecting caterpillar trails on his cabbages

Adopting such an enterprising approach was probably the best policy because this pitch never lost its liking for seam bowlers. All the quick bowlers on show had their moments and while that should ensure praise of Middlesex's debutant, Tom Helm, is tempered, his match figures of 5 for 78, without a tailender in sight, revealed him to be a bowler of promise. An England Under-19, he is strikingly tall and rangy with a good, high action - just the sort of description for England's bowling coach, David Saker, to make a mental note to monitor his progress.

Rogers and Sam Robson, his opening partner, have bolstered Middlesex's season. But Rogers won an Ashes call-up and Robson's form slumped the moment that Australia changed their regulations and encouraged a debate over where his loyalties would like. He failed twice here, outdone by Steve Patterson on both occasions and passed 50 only once in 15 goes after the Ashes series got underway in mid-July - albeit an eye-catching 166 against Sussex at Hove.

With Middlesex's season now over, both Sussex and Warwickshire can still overhaul them in third place if they win their final match next week. Not for the first time, Middlesex's middle order went walkabout - literally in the case of Eoin Morgan, who was tweeting about the beauty of the west coast of Ireland around the time that their collapse began. Morgan is expected to lose his England central contract next week, leaving Middlesex with a potentially expensive player who is rightly treasured by England and in the IPL but whose county worthy is not immediately apparent.

Up in what passes for the Yorkshire media box, Dickie Bird briefly held court while Middlesex wickets fell. Yorkshire's change bowlers, Liam Plunkett and Jack Brooks, have traded runs for wickets all season, and the first two overs they shared spilled 17. But Plunkett had Dawid Malan lbw to the second of two yorkers and Brooks took the first of four wickets when Neil Dexter fell to a brilliant slip catch by Kane Williamson. Their trading terms were more than acceptable.

"I tipped Durham to win the title and Yorkshire to finish second in April," Bird revealed. He did, too, but it seems that Dickie did quite a lot of tipping. News of Dickie's prophecy was somewhat undermined when a video was unearthed from the Scarborough Festival, where he confidently assured everybody that a Yorkshire Championship win was a formality. There again, he was interviewed outside the hospitality marquee, so he probably had good reason for his optimism.

That confidence in Yorkshire collapsed, as we now know, when Durham beat them at Scarborough that very week. But there is probably also a video where the World's Most Famous Test Umpire (retired) waxes lyrically about the batting prowess of Gary Ballance. Ballance's pugnacious 90 was the top-score of the match, his hopes of a hundred ending when he hauled Helm to long leg.

Dickie remained impressed and wandered off to find James Whitaker, the England selector, and tell him to put Ballance in England's Ashes squad. Whitaker kept schtum. He will join the England selectors for what could be lengthy deliberations this weekend.


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Lancashire secure Division Two title

Lancashire 310 for 8 dec (Procter 106, Smith 88, Gidman 5-61) and 195 for 2 (Reece 97, Horton 55) drew with Gloucestershire 209 (Smith 4-49, Newby 4-71)
Scorecard

Lancashire will have to wait for the coup de grace of their season after a tame draw at Bristol but the champagne moment arrived in a literal sense as they lifted the Division Two title.

It was also a sunny September day in the west country when Lancashire won the Championship two years ago. But while the celebrations at Taunton were exhilarating after an achievement the club had been waiting 77 years for, here, 50 miles up the M5, they toasted relief at easily dealing with a potentially tricky year.

"The season has panned out really well for us, winning a league is no easy thing to do," Lancashire captain Glen Chapple said. "There are some good teams and we've had some really good games of cricket but we've got to be really proud of the cricket we've played virtually the whole way through.

"We started off a little bit slow and then came on really strong. The Glamorgan game set us off but to win the league so convincingly were the two wins against Northants and the two wins against Essex. They were double-point games against the next two top teams.

"We've grown as a team, we've had young players pushing for places and proving themselves and it looks great for the future. The experience of winning a trophy will be great for us and will help us kick on next year."

Lancashire have been comfortably the best side in the division - their nearest challengers, Northamptonshire, were swept aside twice by eight wickets - and, like Yorkshire in 2012, provided a stark reminder of the gulf between the two divisions of the County Championship. Confirmation of second-placed Northants' draw with Kent ensured Lancashire couldn't be caught.

It hasn't been a vintage year by any means. Their batting line up has disappointed and changes were needed after poor returns from the likes of Paul Horton, Stephen Moore and Karl Brown, who all excelled in the Championship winning season. And without overseas signing Simon Katich, who made 1,097 runs at 73.13 over 12 matches, Lancashire may have struggled to mount a promotion challenge.

Lancashire are keen to bring Katich back for 2014 and he will make a decision following the Champions League T20, where he went to play for Perth Scorchers and missed the end of the county season. But Katich has been offered a job by AFL franchise Greater Western Sydney and he may choose to secure his future in Australia.

Katich's runs and the less-intense nature of Division Two cricket have allowed Lancashire to promote younger players and the experience gained by Andrea Agathangelou, who has played 10 matches this season, and especially Luis Reece, second in the Lancashire averages, will provide them with more options back in Division One.

Reece is an attractive strokemaker, who is very good off his legs and has an air of Alastair Cook about him. He made brisk progress on the final afternoon as Lancashire batted out for a draw and accelerated after tea in pursuit of a maiden century for Lancashire. But trying to flick David Payne to leg, he was bowled for 97 and the match ended with a tinge of disappointment. Reece will be back for more, though, and may have played himself onto the England Lions squad.

While the batting order has developed this season, the bowling unit has needed plenty of wickets from 39-year-old Glen Chapple. Should Chapple be unfit to play next season, Lancashire will have a giant hole to fill. Only one other seamer - Kyle Hogg with 60 wickets - has made an impact this season. It is of course not Lancashire's fault they have only needed two seamers but they will be disappointed no-one else has had the chance to come through.

But perhaps that isn't too much of a concern, with former Zimbabwe quick Kyle Jarvis ready to make his debut. Jarvis turned his back on international cricket to sign a Kolpak deal with Lancashire and is likely to make his first appearance at Kent, with Chapple expected to miss the final fixture.

"He's very keen to get started and show us what he can do," Chapple said. "He's already a proven performer but I'm sure he wants to prove himself for us. He's a really exciting signing."

They hope Tom Smith - who took four wickets on the final morning - will develop into the allrounder he has threatened to become. He was left out at the start of the season and then struggled with injury but since returning to the Championship XI has averaged 53.20 with the bat and 21.55 with the ball.

Smith's wickets had Gloucestershire scrambling on the fourth morning to save the follow-on. Having moved into a comfortable position at 132 for 3, they collapsed losing 6 for 23 in 12.3 overs. It took a run-a-ball 26 from Matt Taylor, in his first innings in a first-class match, to avert what would have been a considerable embarrassment. He and Payne dashed up a 10th wicket stand of 54 in 53 balls to give their side a most-unexpected batting point.


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BCCI floats tender for series-title sponsor

The BCCI has retained a base price of Rs 2 crore (approx. $320,000) per international match while inviting bids for a series-title sponsor for all the major matches played in India, in place of Bharti Airtel, the telecommunication company that decided not to renew its contract for the same.

The board decided to float a tender for the period beginning October 1 to March 31, 2014, which includes at least 13 international matches. The winning bidder, though, will then get the first right to extend the agreement till March 31, 2018.

After Bharti Airtel decided not to extend their contract, the BCCI's marketing committee, which was presided over by president N Srinivasan in the absence of its chairman Farooq Abdullah, finalised the invitation to tender (ITT) document. The ITT will be available to "only corporate entities with a turnover of Rs 100 crore, for performance deposit of Rs 3 crore" at Rs 2 lakh. The bids will be opened in the presence of all the bidders on October 3.

While the media statement issued by BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel didn't specify the base price, a summary of the ITT document that was finalised at the meeting, accessed by ESPNcricinfo, recommended "to have the same base price of Rs 2 crore as the tender done in 2010".

While barring agents from representing corporate houses, the BCCI decided to allow consortia bids. "It is recommended that the consortia is allowed to bid for the title sponsor with consortia members nominating the title sponsor and other associate sponsor during the time of the bid," the marketing committee suggested.

Besides being awarded the title sponsorship of all the senior domestic tournaments barring the Challenger Trophy, which will be played in September, and the domestic Twenty20, the winning bidder will also be able to avail 28 other rights. Some of the prominent ones include: "Integration into the event logo and the use of all official marks; right to put up to 12 advertising boards of standard size (approx. 3ft x 20ft) in the stadium at all matches and the right to nominate the positioning of these 12 boards; exclusive branding on the stumps; and non-exclusive branding on the BCCI's website".

The marketing committee also took into consideration the current title sponsorship deals of Cricket South Africa, Cricket Australia and the ECB. It noted that CA awards Test sponsorship for $2.4mn and ODI sponsorship for $0.8mn, the ECB awards Tests for $1.07mn and ODIs and T20s for $0.25mn, and CSA's sponsorship is priced at $0.45mn per Test, $0.5mn per ODI and $0.3mn per T20.


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I'm standing for elections - Srinivasan

N Srinivasan has said he will stand for re-election as BCCI president at the Indian board's annual general meeting, to be held in Chennai on September 29. The announcement is not a surprise but his success, a foregone conclusion a few months ago, is now hostage to several legal and judicial issues that are beyond his control and may crystallise formal opposition to him.

Under BCCI rules, any presidential candidate has to be nominated by two associations from the incumbent's home zone - south zone in Srinivasan's case, and that is where the focus is shifting.

As Srinivasan left the BCCI headquarters in Mumbai on Thursday after attending a meeting of the board's marketing committee, he was asked if the other members from south zone were standing besides him. His response was succinct: "I am going to stand," he said, before taking a dig at the media for speculating on the numbers game in the event of an election.

While Srinivasan has made his candidature public, it cannot be ascertained at this point if the murmurs within the board opposing Srinivasan's stubbornness to hold on to the chair will turn into a credible organised lobby sufficient to match Srinivasan both in terms of stature and power. The early runner seems to be Shashank Manohar, Srinivasan's predecessor, a lawyer with a no-nonsense yet low-profile attitude.

Manohar hasn't yet made any concrete or public move towards returning to job he left in 2011 but it is believed that efforts are on to persuade him to contest against Srinivasan. One official privy to the developments told ESPNcricinfo that Manohar has shown interest but he is still gauging his support, especially from the south zone.

Manohar, who hails from the central zone, will need a proposer and a seconder from the south zone - most of whose members are staunch Srinivasan loyalists. It is believed that the anti-Srinivasan lobby - comprising senior politicians in New Delhi who are also part of the BCCI top brass - has been exerting political pressure on the Goa Cricket Association to shift its allegiance from Srinivasan.

The same lobby is also working on the Andhra Cricket Association to be the other member needed to set up a candidate. "Our stand is still undecided. We will discuss with our member units and then decide, since there is no hurry as such," an ACA official said on Thursday.

Both sides also have an eye on two important legal developments that could impact the election. One involves the IPL fixing case, in relation to which Srinivasan's son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan was arrested in May. Mumbai Police is expected to file its chargesheet any day and the gravity of the charges against Meiyappan could play a part.

Srinivasan himself has already been chargesheeted - in his capacity as managing director of India Cements - in a corruption case involving a top political leader from Andhra Pradesh. If he is arrested in this case - and it is not impossible, given the high-level political machinations at work - then the board might agree to replace him as the BCCI president, even though the issue has nothing to do with cricket. "If that happens, we will have to find a new face," a Srinivasan confidant conceded.

It is these uncertainties that the Cricket Association of Bihar has sought to tap into through a public appeal to the BCCI members. The CAB - which is not a part of the BCCI - had filed the petition in Bombay High Court against the constitution of the IPL probe commission and on Tuesday made a "sincere appeal" to BCCI members to reject Srinivasan's candidature. "He continues to be in a 'step aside' situation as president," the appeal said. "The BCCI cannot afford to have a president who will be in a permanent state of 'step aside' and not be involved in its day-to-day affairs."

Despite all this, Srinivasan remains the most powerful person in the board and the man to beat in the elections. He has the support of many member associations but, as the BCCI AGM draws closer, the equation within the board could yet change dramatically.


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'Please don't make this about me' - Cook

What the key figures in Durham's success said about their season:

On Geoff Cook's heart attack midway through the season:

"Please don't go making this all about me, will you?" - Geoff Cook, head coach

"There were about 10 of us went into the hospital and saw Geoff. We all came out and the surgeons told us that it was looking ominous: because that was the kind of language they were using. It was devastating for everybody that went in. So for him to pull through was a miracle in itself. And then for Durham to win the title three times in six years - many good players don't win it at all - a lot of it has to go down to Geoff Cook." - Paul Collingwood, captain

"We did it for Geoff. We were shocked when we heard what had happened. We sat down, we talked about it and we took those thoughts on to the field with us. We were doing it for him." - Paul Stokes, emerging England allrounder.

"The club didn't seem right when Geoff wasn't here. We were missing someone that IS this club, really. So we did this for Geoff Cook. We knew the type of cricket he wanted us to play and a lot of this success is down to him." - Graham Onions, Durham and England fast bowler.

"Geoff knows his body better than I do. He says he felt ready to come back so we welcomed him back. He's very driven. So you do worry if the pressures of this type of role are healthy, but you can't stand in his way." - David Harker, CEO.


On north-eastern pride:

"You talk about team spirit and sometimes you have to do a little bit to try and manufacture it. But this year we found ourselves with the majority coming through the academy so they've already got a lot of Durham in their blood. They've gelled brilliantly and supported each other." - Geoff Cook.

"It's been unbelievably satisfying. Something happens that just keeps testing us and somehow we keep showing the resolve. I don't know what it is. I don't know if we can bottle it. It seems to be inside the north-east people. They just want to fight. And these youngsters have just fought all year, through adversity, whether it be financial situations or Geoff Cook's illness. People have grown. Seeing the youngsters blossom has been absolutely wonderful." - Paul Collingwood.

"I don't like to talk about it too much, because it came seem arrogant or parochial, but I believe there is something special. There is a sense of camaraderie; there is a sense of belonging to something that extends beyond the 11 guys in the dressing room. There is a sense of roots and pride. Culture is a consistent pattern of behaviour over time and these guys have grown up together, they know each other and they are comfortable with each other, they have similar background so there is a cohesion here that helps fuel team spirit." - David Harker.


On Paul Collingwood's captaincy:

"Phil Mustard took that job on when no-one wanted it and the last thing I want to do is criticise him. But there is no denying the team weren't performing like we wanted. Colly is the largest single difference in that time zone. In so far as there is a magic bullet, that was it. I was delighted he came back and gave it a go. Credit to him for continuing to endure those long journeys." - Dave Harker.

"What have I provided? Hopefully a little bit of calmness. I just go about my business. I'm not going to blow my own trumpet. I've always been a believer that bowlers win you big tournaments. For only one team this year to come to the Riverside and got a batting bonus point; that's a ridiculous stat, and that shows how powerful we are in the bowling department." - Paul Collingwood.


On cutting your cloth:

"I'm sure a lot of this team wouldn't be playing first-class cricket if we weren't a first-class county. That was the whole raison d'ĂȘtre: too many players had been lost to the first-class game. There are a couple of guys involved this year who won't be next year, but young guys are coming through. Our budget for next year will be about £1.2m compared to £1.9m when we went over the salary cap. That puts us about mid-table in the spending. We can't be top of everything." - David Harker.

"It has been a really hard six months. It is hard to comprehend the amount of travel that you do or the workloads you face. But when you stick together as a side it's amazing what you can achieve. It is the last year of my contract, so it will soon be time to find ways to keep improving this side. I am not happy just winning it once. I want to do it again." - Paul Collingwood.

"You don't want to pick one title win from another. The first one was very special, we had a team of very talented cricketers. This one's from the other end of the spectrum. They rely a lot on discipline and team-work without having any really outstanding players." - Geoff Cook.


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Former BCCI secretary Jaywant Lele dies

Jaywant Lele, the former BCCI secretary, has died of a heart attack in Baroda on Thursday. Lele was the board secretary when the match-fixing scandal broke out in 2000.

Lele was gearing up for a return to cricket administration in the forthcoming Baroda Cricket Association (BCA) elections. Lele lost his post as BCCI secretary to Niranjan Shah during the 2001 elections.

A former engineer with Sarabhai Chemicals, Lele became the honorary secretary of the BCA in 1969. In 2003, he was expelled from the BCA, alongwith two other administrators, for alleged financial irregularities and administrative lapses.

Lele was also a qualified umpire.


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Solanki's masterclass comes too late

Surrey 400 for 5 (Solanki 162, Davies 103, Amla 77) v Warwickshire
Scorecard

Days like these have been rare for Surrey this season, which goes a long way, of course, to explaining why they are on the brink of relegation. Vikram Solanki's second hundred for Surrey is the first in the Championship by any of the county's batsmen since Ricky Ponting's 169 against Nottinghamshire at The Oval in July.

Unless Rory Burns or Steven Davies has an exceptionally good match at Derby next week, when Surrey's return to Division Two will almost certainly be confirmed, Solanki is likely to be the only batsman close to 1,000 first-class runs.

His brilliant 162, of which 106 runs came in boundaries, confirmed, even at 37, that the ability to play a high-class innings is still with him. Amid all the criticisms aimed in Surrey's direction in the analysis of their current state, his signing did not escape attention. It was was by some commentators to represent the wrong approach, a player close to the end of his career signed on a expensive contract, barring the way, it was supposed, of some home-grown talent with much more cricket ahead of him.

"People are entirely entitled to their opinion," he said. "I pride myself at trying to work as hard as I can at my game and trying to do my best for the team I'm involved with. I've thoroughly enjoyed being part of the group and I hope they have enjoyed having me around."

It was an answer typical of Solanki's natural modesty and diplomacy. Indeed, asked if his form was close to his best, he suggested he could have done better, drawing attention instead to occasions when he disappointed himself.

"I'm pleased with the way I played today," he said. "I've worked hard in the last two weeks in particular to make sure I'm moving well enough and I was pretty pleased with the way I moved today.

"I'd like to hope that the ability is still there to deliver runs at this level but I would have dearly liked to have made far more runs than I have, and it is not for the lack of trying.

"I recall a number of occasions when a partnership at a particular time would have been just what we needed and I missed an opportunity. So while I'm happy with how I've played today, and while there were another couple of knocks I was quite pleased with, I look back at some of those other games with disappointment."

He cannot be the only one reflecting with similar frustration. Surrey's collective batting malaise has been such that before this match they had not managed maximum batting points once. Indeed, in the last two dismal defeats against Middlesex and Somerset they did not take any at all.

"That says it all about our season," Solanki added. "There is no question that we are very disappointed with the way we have played in Championship cricket, although we can be proud of the fact that we played well in the Twenty20 and only fell at the last hurdle, in the final."

In a manner of speaking, Surrey's failure to turn the season around is vindication for Chris Adams, who was sacked in June. Under Adams, who was team director, Surrey were promoted in 2011, when they also won the CB40, but the tragedy of Tom Maynard blighted the 2012 season and Adams was sent on his way after completing five years at the helm, along with first-team coach Ian Salisbury. Fearful even then that they would go down, Surrey's chief executive Richard Gould - the son of a football manager - announced that the club "had decided it was time to make a change in order to progress further."

Alec Stewart has been in charge on a temporary basis ever since, with no sign yet of a permanent successor to Adams. If there was much wrong about what he was doing, his removal has clearly not proved to be the solution. How different might the season have been, one can speculate, had Graeme Smith not suffered his season-ending injury after only two matches as captain, denying Adams the experience and stature on the field he hoped would bring unity and purpose to an undeniably talented group of players.

Their performance so far in this match, against the side that won the title last year, only underlines the point. Hashim Amla's 77 might be seen as counting for little, in that he has appeared only as a desperate last throw of the dice, but Davies showed his quality too with his second hundred of the season. Thanks to his partnership with Solanki, which added 182 in 40.3 overs, the 400 was reached in the 98th over.

Solanki's 162, which began with Surrey 18 for 2 in the 11th over, ended in the 93rd, when he attempted to guide a ball from Chris Woakes towards the third-man boundary and instead deflected it into his stumps via a bottom edge. He had hit 25 fours and one six, over long-off, against the spinner, Jeetan Patel.

Davies, similarly displaying a touch of class not revealed often enough this year, completed his second hundred of the season before pulling a ball from Maurice Chambers to the midwicket boundary, where Ateeq Javid took the catch. Amla had become a third victim of the innings for Keith Barker when he drove loosely amid the general desire for quick runs and was caught at slip.


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Durham prove upstoppable

Durham 256 (Collingwood 88*, Mustard 77, Adams 4-69) and 7 for 0 need 62 more runs to beat Nottinghamshire 78 and 246 (Mullaney 72, Hussey 57, Onions 3-50, Stokes 3-55)
Scorecard

A potent bowling attack and a strong team spirit developed through shared goals and experiences has taken Durham to the brink of a third County Championship title.

When the weather allows, Durham will resume on the third day of the match against Nottinghamshire requiring only 62 more runs for victory.

They might have won in two days. The option of claiming an extra half-hour was discussed at the end of day two, before Durham, in consultation with the umpires, decided there was no need to hurry their second innings run chase of just 69. The weather forecast suggests that rain may prevent play until late in day three, but there is no reason to think it will do anything more than delay the inevitable.

Any chance that Durham may be penalised for a poor pitch were scotched when Jack Birkenshaw, the ECB's pitch liaison officer, left at lunch time having declared himself satisfied.

It was the right decision. The manner in which Paul Collingwood, the Durham captain, helped add 49 runs for Durham's final two wickets and reached his own highest score of the season suggested that, with proper care and attention, this pitch was demanding but not unfair. Nottinghamshire's lowly first innings total owed as much to batsmen who were unwilling or unable to graft for their runs as it did the conditions.

Most of all, it owed rather a lot to some mature and skilful bowling. Graham Onions, in particular, is a desperately tough proposition on such surfaces. His pace is no longer quite as sharp as it once was, but it is brisk and, allied to his remarkable consistency - it is doubtful than anyone in county cricket demands a batsman play a shot so often - is the ability to move the ball both ways in the air and off the pitch. It is a wonderful package of skills and, while it is surplus to demands for England, it is a precious asset for Durham. Averaging six wickets per game, he would, if he played a whole season - and he has missed only one game through a finger injury - come very close to 100 wickets.

Nottinghamshire produced more fight second time around. Steven Mullaney, badly dropped on 14 and 59, generally showed the technique and discipline to prosper in such conditions, while David Hussey also prospered against the softer ball and support bowlers.

But the fact that Andre Adams was caught at deep point, Luke Fletcher at mid-off and Samit Patel attempting a lavish drive underlines the impression that Nottinghamshire's batsmen simply lack the stomach for the fight. It will not do to excuse their recklessness with 'that is the way we play' any more than it will excuse rash driving in fog. Sometimes you have to work for your runs and, too often, Nottinghamshire bat as if they can't be bothered. They may escape relegation this year, but it will be an issue again next year unless they sharpen up significantly.

Nottinghamshire's faults should not deflect from Durham's success. Ben Stokes, who had to leave the pitch twice to have a hole drilled in a toe nail to release pressure in it, bowled with pace and Chris Rushworth, something of an unsung hero, produced beauty that nipped back to punish James Taylor for a lack of balance and a shot aimed across the line. Michael Lumb was beaten by a beauty that nipped back and Chris Read by one that nipped away.

There are some remarkable and revealing statistics associated with Durham's success. For example:

  • Durham have conceded only one batting bonus point at home all season at home. Warwickshire were the opposition.
  • The highest opening partnership against Durham in the Championship all season is just 47.
  • Since the end of 2008, when Ian Blackwell joined the club from Somerset, Durham have utilised just two new players from any nation that have not developed through their own academy system: Ruel Brathwaite and Shivnarine Chanderpaul. Neither are with the club now.
  • Since Paul Collingwood took over captaincy and, presuming that Durham complete victory over Nottinghamshire, they will have won 14 Championship matches out of 21 and five in succession.
  • Six of their 10 victories this season (presuming this game is won and bearing in mind there is one game remaining at Hove) have come at home, meaning they have also won four out of seven away from home.

    What do such statistics tell us?

    They tell us that Durham possess a remarkably good attack, that they have relied upon home-grown talent - the only man in the current side who did not develop through the club's own academy system (or similar) is Will Smith, and he attended developed through what is now known as the Durham MCCU scheme - and that, since Collingwood took the helm, they have been united into a team worth more than the sum of its parts.

    While it is true that Durham may have made a virtue out of necessity - they did try to bring in new players ahead of this season, but lacked the finance to do so - they key point is that they did make a virtue of it. Other sides might have wilted.

    What such stats cannot show is the true value of shared experiences. As just about the entire team developed through the county's system, they have all known the head coach and former academy director, Geoff Cook, since boyhood and owe much of their success to his ability to recognise their talents and his support of them.

    So when he experienced a serious heart attack in June, it shocked this tightly-knit squad. Knowing how much this club means to him, the team came together, discussed how they could help and used the experience to inspire them to redouble their efforts in tribute and in the knowledge it is what he would have wanted. When Stokes, at 22 developing into a senior player in this side, spoke at the end of play, his words had the ring of truth than no amount of press officers could ever supply.

    "We did if for Geoff," Stokes said. "We were shocked when we heard what had happened. We sat down, we talked about it and we took those thoughts on to the field with us. We were doing it for him."

    Kolpak signings, overseas players and big-name additions from other counties all have their place. But time and again the game shows us that there is no substitute for 11 good men playing with one purpose, with shared experiences and values, delighting in each other's successes and in the knowledge of their role and responsibilities. There is much to admire in Durham's success and much from which other sides could learn.


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