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Match Report

Ollie Robinson takes 250th first-class wicket but Middlesex clinch win over Sussex

24 Aug 2020

John Simpson and Martin Andersson emerged the heroes for Middlesex as they won a thrilling Bob Willis Trophy encounter against visitors Sussex by five wickets at Radlett.

The redoubtable wicketkeeper and young all-rounder shared an unbroken sixth-wicket stand of 63 to see the hosts to a winning target of 193 in the dying embers of a fluctuating day.

Ollie Robinson took figures of 4-50, including a spell of 3-3 in 10 balls, and had threatened to be the scourge of Middlesex once more, but Sussex were left to rue dropped slip catches which reprieved both Andersson (27*) and Simpson (32*) in the dramatic finale.

Earlier in the day, Middlesex stalwart Tim Murtagh (5-34) recorded his 37th five-wicket haul in first-class cricket as Sussex were hustled out for 102 in their second innings.

Andersson took 3-21 in the collapse, while Simpson held four catches behind the stumps.

Sussex began the day 33-4 in their second innings, a lead of 123, and not out batsmen skipper Ben Brown and Delray Rawlins rapidly increased the advantage with a flurry of early boundaries.

But Murtagh ended the revelry with one which stopped in the pitch causing Rawlins to lob the ball back to the bowler off the leading edge.

Murtagh completed his latest five-wicket haul soon afterwards when Tom Haines edged to Simpson and when Robinson was spectacularly caught by the wicketkeeper down the leg-side, Sussex were 74-7.

It might have been worse had a huge shout for LBW against Jack Carson been upheld when the spinner had made just two, an inside edge presumably saving him from being stone dead.

Brown’s nine fours ensured the visitors scraped their way past 100, but he was one of Andersson’s three victims while Miguel Cummins took 2-45.

Middlesex, needing 193 for victory, had two overs to survive before lunch and knocked 17 off that total thanks to a fluent start from Max Holden.

The left-hander and fellow opener Sam Robson continued to accumulate after the break in contrasting fashions.

Holden played nicely, striking five fours, while Robson hung in in somewhat scratchy fashion against probing bowling from Robinson and Mitch Claydon.

The partnership had realised 48 when a game within a game began with Robinson the central character.

The seamer, whose career-best 8-34 came against Middlesex last season, struck Robson near the boot with the former England man playing no shot, but the appeal was turned down and Robinson was left stunned with the decision.

A no-ball only served to get the seamer ticking all the more, but his response was magnificent.

The third ball of his next over lifted on Holden, who appeared to glove it behind. The former England U-19 captain left shaking his head, whether in disappointment at his shot or the verdict.

One ball later, in-form Nick Gubbins joined him after also nicking through to Brown and although Stevie Eskinazi kept out the hat-trick ball, Robinson produced a brute of a delivery in the next over which Robson could only fend to Tom Clark at third slip.

Robbie White joined Eskinazi and the two rebuilt either side of a tea interval brought forward by a rain delay, adding 73 before part-time medium pacer Haines made what looked a vital incision, trapping White LBW for 35 with 63 still needed.

Before that wicket, Robinson had looked weary, but revitalised, he trapped Eskinazi (26) to raise Sussex’s hopes once more. It was the 44th wicket claimed by Robinson against the Seaxes in their last five meetings, and the 250th of his first-class career.

It could have proved decisive if Phil Salt had held on to a slip catch offered by Andersson when he’d made just nine, while Finch grassed another nick from Simpson with 25 needed, but Middlesex made it home. 

Sussex skipper, Ben Brown said: "I feel really deflated. We had lots of opportunity to win this game and got ourselves into good positions with bat and ball but weren't good enough to capitalise on them. I think that's the story of the match.

"We batted well in the first innings in tricky conditions. I thought we played really well in that innings to get near enough 300 and then bowled well to begin with but I thought we were really poor after lunch by our own admission - probably for a good hour and a half. 

"We didn't get it right with the ball at all during that spell and couldn't press home a first innings advantage, which I thought we could have done. 

"In the second innings with the bat, it's just not good enough to be bowled out for a hundred on that pitch. Yes there were tricky conditions, yes it was doing a little bit, but we have to be better, both technically and mentally. 

"In those situations, we have to try and graft out a score. 150 or 200 in that second innings would have been enough to out the game beyond them and we weren't able to do that."

Watch all of the highlights from day three here:

 

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