Fisher and Coad give Yorkshire control at Glamorgan
- Published
Vitality County Championship Division Two, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff (day two)
Yorkshire 361 (91.1 overs): Hill 90, Wharton 63, Bess 50; Gorvin 4-67 & 116-1: Lyth 55, Bean 53*
Glamorgan 239 (68.5 overs): Ingram 82; Fisher 4-55, Coad 4-55
Yorkshire (6 pts) lead Glamorgan (3 pts) by 238 runs with nine second-innings wickets standing
Matthew Fisher and Ben Coad bowled Yorkshire into a dominant position as the promotion-chasers claimed a first-innings lead of 122 over Glamorgan.
They go into day three in Cardiff on 116-1, already a lead of 238 runs, as Adam Lyth and Finlay Bean started strongly with fifties.
Pacemen Fisher and Coad took 4-55 apiece as Glamorgan were dismissed for 239, Colin Ingram leading the resistance with a fluent 82.
The home side only avoided a possible follow-on with eight wickets down.
Glamorgan started at 12-0 under cloudy skies but Coad began an early procession, trapping Sam Northeast lbw for 16.
Fisher found late movement to have Asa Tribe and Kiran Carlson caught at slip in successive balls before Coad found the edge of Ben Kellaway鈥檚 bat to give Jonny Bairstow the first of three catches behind the stumps.
Ingram and Chris Cooke (20) added 49 against the change bowlers as the clouds lifted, but Fisher returned to have Cooke edging his second ball to the diving Bairstow, and trapped Timm van der Gugten lbw to make it 98-6 at lunch.
South African Ingram, who has made surpassed half-century in each of his 10 championship games this season, led the fight-back in a stand of 63 with Mason Crane (29), who was acrobatically caught by Bairstow hooking at Jordan Thompson.
Dom Bess bowled Ingram in his first over with Glamorgan still 40 short of the follow-on, but James Harris and Andy Gorvin dug in and scrapped their way to the modest target in the afternoon sun.
Coad finished off the resistance by having Harris (40) given leg-before, though he clearly believed he hit the ball, and bowling last man Ben Morris.
Left 27 overs to bat in fine conditions, Lyth and Bean made the most of it as they found the boundary regularly.
Lyth was the more aggressive with eight fours and a six in his half-century before falling to Harris for 55 in the penultimate over.
Yorkshire were left to ponder the timing of a potential declaration on day three, with the possibility of poor weather on the horizon for the final afternoon.
- Published6 June
Glamorgan鈥檚 Colin Ingram told 成人论坛 Sport Wales:
鈥淚t didn鈥檛 go to plan losing six wickets in that first session and it鈥檚 a tough old scrap for us back into the game, though the guys down the order showed some good resilience.
鈥淚 left a few runs out there, when it鈥檚 going well, you鈥檝e got to keep repeating but I don鈥檛 like being in the positions we were in last week and again this week. We鈥檝e got a good mountain to climb and it鈥檚 going to test our character.
鈥淭he (team) huddle out there (after play), we were talking about what it means to play for this team. We鈥檝e got to show some character as we鈥檝e done a number of times over many years.鈥
Yorkshire bowler Ben Coad said:
鈥淲e had a great day. We would have liked to knock the tail over a bit quicker, but we are very happy to have got early wickets and have a lead of 120.
鈥淚t is a decent wicket, so to bat like we did in the first innings and get that lead today, it鈥檚 been a great couple of days.鈥