Prolific Richardson has Gloucestershire in a mess

ScorecardAlan Richardson made it consecutive 10-wicket hauls to put Worcestershire in sight of victory•PA Photos

Alan Richardson completed his second 10-wicket return in a week as Worcestershire piled the pressure on Gloucestershire in their Division Two match at New Road.After his side had batted on to make 457, the veteran seamer led the push for victory with 3 for 34 as Gloucestershire continued to struggle on a ground where they have not won in the Championship for 27 years. Needing 223 to avoid an innings defeat, they were still 136 short of their target on closing the third day because of bad light at 87 for 5.At the age of 38, Richardson is in the form of his life with career-best match figures of 12 for 63 in a two-day win against Kent and so far a return of 11 for 71 in the current game following his eight for 37 in the first innings. Yet up to the trip to Canterbury last week, he was beginning to feel he “couldn’t buy a wicket” after taking only 6 for 282 in the first four matches of the season.Now his mood is upbeat after playing on two helpful pitches. When the ball is new and nipping around, as it has done in this match, he is likely to cause problems for the best batsmen. Gloucestershire had no answer on the first day and they were again in trouble when batting again in between afternoon showers.After an initial flurry of boundaries, Richardson brought one back into Chris Dent’s pads and claimed a second success in his next over when wicketkeeper Michael Johnson held a straightforward chance from Dan Housego.Gloucestershire’s captain Michael Klinger, who played for Worcestershire in the first part of last season, looked in good form with five boundaries but having reached 26 he played on as soon as Gareth Andrew switched ends to replace Richardson.Hamish Marshall stayed for more than an hour but then edged Chris Russell’s first ball down the leg-side and Richardson claimed the bigger prize when Alex Gidman was also caught behind after making 26 in 33 overs.Gloucestershire’s struggle was tough on teenage pace bowler Craig Miles after his efforts in taking 6 for 99 in only his fourth Championship appearance. When Worcestershire resumed at 302 for 3, Moeen Ali added only one run before he was out for 123, pulling Miles to square leg for the first of three wickets in nine balls.The home side could have wobbled when Neil Pinner fell to Liam Norwell for 18, but the ever-dangerous Andrew smacked 66 from 71 balls and put on 98 with Jack Shantry (31) before Miles took two of the last three wickets.

All-round Shakib helps Bangladesh draw series

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsShakib Al Hasan scored a brisk 40 and then took four wickets to set up Bangladesh’s win•AFP

The Bangladesh spinners imposed themselves on Zimbabwe as they successfully defended a moderate total to register a 34-run win. Shakib Al Hasan was the hero with bat and ball, helping the visitors to draw the Twenty20 series.Shakib combined his all-round skills in the same game for the first time on tour, starting with a dominant 28-ball 40 that got Bangladesh ticking, after they lost opener Shamsur Rahman early. Like the first game, however, they collapsed after an 82-run second-wicket stand between Shakib and Tamim Iqbal. Bangladesh ended up on 168 for 7 in 20 overs with Prosper Utseya at his economical best for Zimbabwe. That initial thrust from Shakib and Tamim, however, was the crucial difference between the two teams.Shakib dismissed Sikandar Raza in the 17th over to effectively end the home side’s chances, as the big-hitting Raza struggled to find the boundaries. Shakib ended up with 4 for 22, his best T20 figures. One of his four victims was the Zimbabwe captain, Brendan Taylor, who fell in the fifth over after looking dangerous during his brief stay at the wicket.Sohag Gazi and Abdur Razzak also bowled crucial spells for Bangladesh, bringing back their lengths and using varying speeds whenever the batsmen charged them. Both bowled a maiden each and their overs were crucial to Bangladesh’s defence of 168. Gazi went wicketless while left-arm spinner Razzak picked up 2 for 18 from his four overs. Shafiul Islam ended with two wickets too, bowling accurately for the first time since the first ODI of the tour.Zimbabwe’s batting never really took off after Vusi Sibanda was out in the seventh over. Sibanda made 32 off 19 balls, and Raza’s 30-ball 32 was the next-most significant score for the hosts.The visitors ended up on the same total as Zimbabwe did in the first game, although this looked like a slower wicket. But the middle-order wasted a fine start. From 86 for 1 in the 9th over, Bangladesh were 126 for 5 at the start of the 15th over.When Shakib and Tamim were at the crease, Bangladesh were looking at a bigger score. They got together after Shamsur fell in the first over but wasted little time, smacking 14 boundaries in the first 10 overs. Shakib made 40 off 28 and Tamim 43 off 30 balls.Both batsmen fell trying to slog and the captain, Mushfiqur Rahim, and his deputy, Mahmudullah, departed soon after. Mushfiqur, in what may be his last match as captain – the BCB plans to persuade him to stay on – was unlucky to be given leg-before to a ball heading down the leg side. Mahmudullah, however, gave a soft catch to cover, and the four-wicket collapse also meant that there were no boundaries for 26 deliveries between the 12th and 15th overs.Only a 36-run sixth-wicket stand between Nasir Hossain and Mominul Haque helped them cross the 150-run mark. For Zimbabwe, Utseya took 2 for 15 in his four overs, the fourth time in his career that he finished with an economy rate of less than four runs an over. Brian Vitori, too, was economical but the other Zimbabwe bowlers struggled with their length.

SA emerging women's squad to tour Zimbabwe late May

A day after Zimbabwe Cricket was dealt a major blow with news that India will put on hold their scheduled tour there in July, they have been offered small compensation, with South Africa planning to send an emerging women’s squad to tour the country later this month.A group of South Africa’s most promising female players will play two ODIs and two Twenty20s between May 22 and 28 in Harare. The national women’s team coach, Hilton Moreeng, will oversee proceedings in a bid to identify promising talent ahead of the World Twenty20, which will be held in Bangladesh in 2014.”This tour presents us with a unique opportunity to grow our talent base for women,” Max Jordaan, Cricket South Africa (CSA) transformation manager, said. “The opportunities provided at this level will ensure [that] a steady flow of players [are] better prepared for international competition when their time arrives.”Similarly, Zimbabwe will use the series to help prepare for next year’s tournament in Bangladesh. Although the tour will not bring in any money through television rights, it may give Zimbabwe some reassurance that they have not been forgotten by the wider cricketing world.South Africa have an informal commitment to play against Zimbabwe at least once a year, but the packed international schedule does not always allow that. Last year, they visited the country for an unofficial T20 tri-series, which also involved Bangladesh, and although the men’s teams are unlikely to meet in 2013, the women’s tour will ensure South Africa’s obligation to their neighbours does not go unfulfilled.Women’s cricket in South Africa received a large boost when ODI sponsors, Momentum also committed to funding them alongside the men’s team. As a result, CSA is also in negotiations with the English Cricket Board (ECB) and Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) to host both the English and Sri Lanka women’s teams later in the year in order to give the team “more international exposure than ever before.”

Ashley de Silva appointed acting CEO of SLC

Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has appointed Ashley de Silva to the position of acting CEO, with a view to giving him the official position in six months, SLC secretary Nishantha Ranatunga has confirmed. De Silva has been SLC’s director of cricket operations since 2008, and replaces Ajit Jayasekara, who retires at the end of the month.”Like in any organisation we will give him a probation period, which will be around six months, and at the end of that we hope he will be CEO permanently,” Ranatunga said.Sri Lanka’s first Test captain Bandula Warnapura, had emerged as the early frontrunner for the position, but was later disqualified due to his age. Warnapura turned 60 in March, falling foul of an SLC rule that has enforced employees’ retirement at 60 since 2009. He will continue in his present job as development manager for the Asian Cricket Council.In addition to de Silva’s experience as director of cricket operations, he also managed Sri Lanka’s Under-19 side on an assignment basis before 2008, and was the general manager of private communication company Suntel for five years. He played as a wicketkeeper batsman for Colombo Cricket Club from 1984 to 1996, and appeared in three Tests and four ODIs for Sri Lanka.Sri Lanka’s youth cricket coach, Carlton Bernadaus, has been appointed to the director of cricket operations role that de Silva vacated.

Sandhu's four puts NSW on top

ScorecardGurinder Sandhu’s four wickets put New South Wales in a strong position against South Australia after day one of the Sheffield Shield match at the SCG.The Redbacks are second on a tightly packed competition table, but struggled for traction on a well-grassed pitch in the face of Sandhu’s bounce and Josh Hazlewood’s economy, his 13 overs surrendering a mere 11 runs for the wickets of Callum Ferguson and Chadd Sayers.Only South Australia captain Johan Botha made a score of note, punching a half-century to keep up his strong showing in the closing games of the season.Left with 23 overs to face on a sticky, overcast day lending itself to swing bowling, the Blues lost David Dawson to the accurate Sayers, but Scott Henry and Daniel Hughes fought out the final hour to ensure their side can enter day two with plenty of confidence.

Hughes hundred ensures Australia draw series


Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsPhillip Hughes scored his second hundred of the series•Getty Images

On debut, Phillip Hughes scored a century to give Australia a 1-0 lead in this series. In the final game, he made another hundred to save Australia from series defeat and salvage a 2-2 result. Set 248 to win the game and the five-match contest, Sri Lanka struggled early, staged a plucky fightback led by Angelo Mathews, and ultimately fell short as Australia’s bowlers backed up the fine work of Hughes, whose unbeaten 138 was all the more important in a batting line-up missing Michael Clarke.Australia’s captain had been ruled out due to an ankle injury suffered at training on the day before the match and it left the Australians with a flimsy looking batting order that featured the allrounders Glenn Maxwell and Moises Henriques at Nos. 6 and 7. But Hughes ensured the heavy lifting was done by the time those men walked to the crease and having been sent in by Mahela Jayawardene, who backed his team’s chasing form, the Australians were pleased with their 5 for 247.Still, the pitch was good, and only last summer Sri Lanka had successfully chased down 281 to beat the Australians at the same venue. The visitors knew they were in with a good chance. But early wickets were costly, and ultimately fatal to their victory hopes. At the halfway point of the chase Sri Lanka were 4 for 85, with barely one-third of the runs they needed. For most of the final 15 overs, the required run-rate hovered above nine an over.

Smart stats

  • Phillip Hughes’ 138 is the fifth-highest score by an Australian batsman against Sri Lanka and the fourth-highest against Sri Lanka in home ODIs.

  • Hughes’ 138 is also the third-highest score (second-highest for an Australian batsman) in ODIs in Hobart. The highest is 172 by Adam Gilchrist against Zimbabwe in 2004.

  • The win is Australia’s first against Sri Lanka in Hobart. On both previous occasions (1999 and 2012), they lost by three wickets.

  • For the first time since the New Zealand series in 2008-09, a bilateral series in Australia ended in a tie. In between, Australia won three series by margins of 5-0, 4-0 and 6-1.

  • The 79-run stand between Angelo Mathews and Jeevan Mendis is the second-highest sixth-wicket stand for Sri Lanka against Australia. The highest is 115 between Aravinda de Silva and Roshan Mahanama in Colombo in 1996.

Mathews and Jeevan Mendis caused Australia some jitters with a 79-run stand that in its latter stages kept up with the required rate, but when both men fell in consecutive overs with 61 runs still required, it was all but over. They had picked the gaps well and were finding the boundary regularly until Mendis (26) advanced to Moises Henriques, who sent the bull full and straight and rattled the stumps.In the next over, Mathews fell for 67 from 79 balls when he tried to pull a slower-ball bouncer from Mitchell Johnson and succeeded only in lobbing a catch to midwicket. Henriques followed up by bowling Thisara Perera for 7 and he finished with 3 for 32 from his ten overs, an impressive performance from a man whose results so far in the series had been slim. Clint McKay finished the job with the final two wickets to secure the 32-run victory in the 49th over.The problems had started for Sri Lanka through a somewhat unlikely source, the spinner Xavier Doherty, who had not taken a wicket in the series until this game. But his flight and subtle turn troubled the Sri Lankans and he ended a promising opening partnership of 57 when Mahela Jayawardene, who looked in crisp form for 38 from 39 balls, tried to drive Doherty over mid-off and instead lobbed a catch to mid-on.In Doherty’s next over he added the wicket of Lahiru Thirimanne, who with 1 from 10 balls had struggled to make a fluent start. The pressure of dot balls accounted for Thirimanne, who tried to smash Doherty over midwicket and was caught in the deep. Tillakaratne Dilshan followed for a scratchy 19 from 48 balls when he tickled a catch through to Matthew Wade off Henriques, who found just enough away movement.The Sri Lankan chase was almost derailed when Dinesh Chandimal (6) played an ugly attempted flick through leg only to see Doherty’s ball spin just enough to beat the bat and hit the stumps. At 4 for 77, Sri Lanka needed something special. It didn’t come from Kushal Perera, who top-edged Johnson and was caught at midwicket for 14, leaving the score at 5 for 108.Slowly, Mathews and Mendis worked Sri Lanka back into the contest and Mathews could dream of another come-from-behind chase, just like he orchestrated in his first match in Australia three years ago. But not this time. This time, the runs posted by Hughes early in the match proved the difference. His hundred was all the more important after Australia lost both their openers within the first ten overs of the game.There were useful contributions from several batsmen, notably David Hussey with 34, but Hughes was the key man and finished unbeaten on 138 from 154 balls. While Hughes lifted his tempo in the final stages, some of his partners were unable to stick around. Hussey was run out when he slammed the ball into the ground and back to the bowler Thisara Perera and inexplicably took off for a run that wasn’t there, giving Perera plenty of time to throw down the stumps.Glenn Maxwell followed for 9 when he skied a catch to cover off Lasith Malinga, providing Maxwell with his third single-figure score from three ODIs in this series. That was Malinga’s only wicket for the innings and while some of his yorkers in the middle overs were threatening, overall he was not quite as dangerous as during the previous few games. Nor was Nuwan Kulasekara, who collected 1 for 57 and couldn’t find the same sort of swing he had displayed over the past week.In fact, Sri Lanka’s best bowler was arguably the part-timer Dilshan, who opened, sent down three maidens, and finished with 1 for 22 from seven overs. Dilshan broke the 31-run opening stand between David Warner and Matthew Wade, who was moved up from the middle order. On 10, Warner played for a straight ball but Dilshan, coming around the wicket, got the ball to straighten enough to beat the bat of Warner, who looked back to see his off stump disturbed.Wade (23) was lbw to Kulasekara in the tenth over, his ill-judged attempted late cut to a straight ball matched only by his poor decision to have Richard Kettleborough’s lbw call reviewed. That left the Australians at 2 for 37 and needing to prevent another collapse. Hughes and the stand-in captain George Bailey steadied the innings with a 60-run partnership which, although not brisk, was important. On 17, Bailey chipped a return catch to Thisara Perera but Australia had a platform.Hughes, fresh from three single-figure scores, was initially cautious but started to pick off some boundaries as his innings moved on, including a couple of handsome drives through cover and mid-off when the Sri Lankan fast bowlers overpitched. His half-century came from 82 balls and gradually he became more and more confident, even opening his stance to crunch Malinga through wide mid-on for a boundary.His hundred came with a cut for four off Perera from his 132nd delivery and he was keen to lift the scoring rate after that, slogging Kulasekara over midwicket for the only six of the innings. The Australians picked up 47 runs in the final five overs, 30 of which came from the bat of Hughes.In the end, Hughes wasn’t Player of the Series – that honour went to Kulasekara – but he was Man of the Match in Australia’s two wins. Not bad for a first effort.

Rehman returns to Somerset in 2013

Abdur Rehman, the Pakistan left-arm spinner, will again play for Somerset next season after spending the latter part of the 2012 season at Taunton.Currently, the exact dates of the deal are unclear but will include the final stages of the County Championship and the CB40. But the club are keen to try and extend Rehman’s stay to include the Friends Life t20 earlier in the season if his Pakistan commitments allow.Rehman played four Championship matches in 2012, taking 27 wickets at 14.18 which included nine wickets in an innings against Worcestershire. He also claimed nine wickets in three CB40 matches with a best of 6 for 16.But Rehman made the headlines for off-field reasons, too, and is currently serving a 12-week ban having tested positive for cannabis during his spell with Somerset.Guy Lavender, the chief executive, said: “The club in no way condones the use of illegal drugs. It was heartening to see that he admitted his mistake and has been punished accordingly. It is now time to move on and I am very confident he will do extremely well for us next season”.Rehman added: “I really enjoyed my time there last year and will look to play with the same intensity and passion, I would also like to thank the Somerset management and fans for their support in what has been a difficult period for me.”Somerset, who are still awaiting to appoint a new director of cricket, have Alviro Petersen, the South Africa batsman, joining them for the first part of the season.

Baroda take charge against Odisha

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After the bowlers had shot out Odisha for 181 on the first day, four of the batsmen hit half-centuries to consolidate on Baroda’s advantage in Vadodara. Baroda are still missing both the Pathan brothers due to injury, but they didn’t let that affect them much as they steadily built up a solid total. Opener Aditya Waghmode made his fifth fifty-plus score in six matches, and added 125 for the second wicket with Abhimanyu Chauhan. After that their stand-in captain Ambati Rayudu and their wicketkeeper Pinal Shah, returning after a month’s absence, put on 102 for the fifth wicket to swell Baroda’s lead. With Odisha in second place on the points table, and Baroda in third, an outright win for Baroda will be a huge boost with the Ranji knockouts only a few rounds away.
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Uttar Pradesh’s batsmen built up a big score on the second day against Vidarbha. Arif Alam closed in on his second successive century and Piyush Chawla celebrated his Test call-up with an 85 that included three sixes to push UP past 500 in Nagpur. They might not declare overnight as Alam was still seven short of his hundred, with Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who was picked for India’s Twenty20 squad for the first time, keeping him company. It wasn’t the quickest of scoring, but UP will hope that the big first-innings total will put pressure on Vidarbha’s batsmen, who have already spent two full days on the field. UP are on top of the table despite having played a game less than their three closest chasers, and the three points from a first-innings lead should keep them in first place.
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Haryana bounced back from a dreadful start to their season with a surprise victory over Delhi in the last round, but they looked set to be second-best again this time as Maharashtra comfortably took the first-innings lead in Pune. Sangram Atitkar, who reached 80 twice this season without going on to make a hundred, completed his century this time, and his 177-run stand with Ankit Bawne, who made his third half-century in three innings, put Maharashtra in charge. Maharashtra had lost only three wickets and were already 45 ahead.

No. 10 Abul Hasan's debut ton revives Bangladesh

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsFidel Edwards picked up five wickets•AFP

West Indies bulldozed through the first eight Bangladesh wickets on a flat, low and slow Khulna pitch. In came debutant Abul Hasan, all of 20, and proceeded to do something that had been done only once before in 2059 previous Tests dating back to 1877, by Reggie Duff over a century ago in 1902. Abul, who goes around as a fast bowler, became only the second Test debutant to make a hundred at No. 10. Abul’s incredible innings, and his record unbroken ninth-wicket stand of 172 with Mahmudullah, himself on 72, rescued Bangladesh from 193 for 8, and left honours even on day one.The cluelessness of being a debutant No. 10, if any, was restricted to the first four deliveries of Abul’s knock, and a few scattered nervy moments against the second new ball as he approached his hundred. Barring those, the innings was a fresh breeze of audacious boundaries, and sensible defending, which blew the spotlight away from the continuing inadequacies of the specialist Bangladesh batsmen.He was beaten four successive times at the start by Fidel Edwards, who had come in for the injured Ravi Rampaul to take five wickets before being upstaged by Abul. The fifth delivery was timed neatly down the ground for three runs, and Abul was a changed man thereafter.Fast bowlers were pulled and driven with panache, a medium-pacer was charged and lofted, spinners were slog-swept and cut, and all of them were defended against solidly. He even ensured a part-timer was taken for runs when he hit Marlon Samuels for three fours in an over. Soon, he was dancing out and heaving Darren Sammy for six over long-off to go past fifty.

Smart stats

  • Abul Hasan’s unbeaten 100 is the second Test century by a No.10 batsman on debut. The previous such effort was in 1902, by Australia’s Reggie Duff, who was actually a frontline batsman who was held back due to a sticky wicket at the MCG.

  • Abul’s knock makes him the fourth No.10 batsman to score a century – the last such performance came from South Africa’s Pat Symcox.

  • Bangladesh’s previous-highest at this position was Tapash Baisya’s 66 against New Zealand in 2004.

  • Abul is also the third player from Bangladesh to score a Test hundred on debut, after Aminul Islam and Mohammad Ashraful.

  • The unbeaten 172-run stand between Abul and Mahmudullah is the fourth-highest for the ninth wicket in all Tests, and 23 away from equalling the record. Bangladesh’s previous-highest for the ninth wicket was 77.

  • Since the fall of their fifth wicket at 98, Bangladesh have added 267 runs, which is their highest for the last five wickets in an innings.

It would be an understatement to say the assault left West Indies stunned. Coming towards the end of a hard toil on an unresponsive pitch, it gave them no time to regroup. Every delivery and everyone went for runs. Sammy was caught between going for the remaining two wickets and setting fields to plug the torrent of runs. Abul eventually forced him to set defensive fields.It was a largely chanceless innings; he was put down once, on 42, at forward short leg off Veerasammy Permaul, who made three attempts at the catch but could not hold on. The second new ball was taken when Abul was on 84. He responded by a couple of blind charges at Edwards’ short deliveries, and was fortunate not to get hit.Abul’s recovery against Edwards showed the kind of touch he was in. He coolly made room to a short of a length delivery and punched it past point for four. Some more tense moments against Edwards followed, but Abul broke into a roar after a tuck to leg for two off Sunil Narine, whose returns for this series now stand at 3 for 295.Mahmudullah’s contribution was not far behind. He let the man of the day go about his business, and motored along without fuss. He didn’t try to match Abul for spectacle, although he did come close in terms of strokeplay, the highlight being a charge-and-whip off Narine which raced through square leg, and a short-arm controlled pull through midwicket off Edwards.The ninth-wicket partnership was already Bangladesh’s highest, and also the fourth-highest ever in Tests. Not even the staunchest Bangladesh supporters who had filled the stands in Khulna could have hoped for a better opening day’s play at Test cricket’s latest, and 107th venue, especially after the struggles of the specialist batsmen.In each of the first two sessions, Bangladesh were jolted early. In each session, they fought back. And in each session, with depressing familiarity, they also gave away whatever ground they had regained. The result was that despite Bangladesh’s best batsman, Tamim Iqbal, batting nearly two hours, and Nasir Hossain counter-attacking with a fifty, it was West Indies who dominated.In Tamim’s defence, he had at least fallen trying to preserve his wicket close to lunch. Nasir’s brain fade came moments before tea, when he charged at Permaul and lofted him straight to mid-on. Till then, Nasir had batted with the confidence he had shown in Mirpur against the West Indies spinners.After Edwards had dismissed Shakib Al Hasan and Naeem Islam in successive overs after lunch, Nasir and Mushfiqur Rahim put on 87 for the sixth wicket in quick time. From 98 for 5 to 185 for 5 had been a swift mini-recovery, but even as the crowd’s hopes rose and tea beckoned, Nasir blew it.Proceedings had been similar in the morning. West Indies started with the tactic that had won them the Mirpur Test – a barrage of short balls – but soon realised the pitch had hardly any life for the gambit to sustain for long. Sammy focussed on the old-fashioned and unglamorous strategy of sticking to one line outside off stump, varied his angle, and reaped the rewards. He broke a growing second-wicket stand by removing Shahriar Nafees, and then took the big wicket of Tamim.Sammy’s strikes won West Indies a session that seemed to be slipping away from them. Tamim and Nafees had several close moments against the short ball, with a few fends carrying over the infield, but soon settled down to play the pull effectively.Edwards, moving the old ball at pace, was in business early in all the three sessions but no one had reckoned for Abul.

Westley leads strong Essex reply

ScorecardTom Westley led a strong reply for Essex•Getty Images

Openers Tom Westley and Jaik Mickleburgh put together an unbroken partnership of 165 to lead a superb Essex fightback against Glamorgan on the second day at Colchester. After the visitors were bowled out for 438, an innings that included a superb 159 from Stewart Walters, the Essex pair reached the close within sight of centuries.Earlier this month, Westley and Mickleburgh, aged 23 and 22 respectively, shared in a double century stand against Leicestershire at Chelmsford and they again provided evidence of their rich promise. Westley will resume on 90 while his partner will take guard again on 72.Neither looked in any trouble as they collected a series of boundaries against both the pace and spin bowlers. Westley raced to his fifty in 73 balls with the help of 11 boundaries, three in an early over from Graham Wagg providing the launchpad for the home side’s splendid response after they had set off with the task of reaching 289 to avoid the follow-on. He added a further six boundaries before the close of play.Mickleburgh needed two deliveries fewer than Westley to complete his fifty, which contained eight boundaries, and went on to add another four and a six before the close. With the pitch of a friendly nature, both had good reason to be confident of repeating the hundreds they took off Leicestershire.Earlier in the day, Walters added a further 30 runs in the morning before he turned a delivery from Harbhajan Singh into the hands of Ryan ten Doeschate at leg slip, a dismissal that brought to an end an innings that contained 24 fours and spanned 257 deliveries.Either side of his departure, Glamorgan kept the scoreboard moving at a steady pace against an attack which, although more disciplined than on the opening day, lacked a real cutting edge. Ben Wright helped himself to six boundaries before Harbhajan had him caught on the midwicket boundary three short of a half-century, his runs arriving from 61 balls.Mark Wallace weighed in with 36 before Wagg ensured that Glamorgan were to collect maximum batting points for only the second time this season with controlled belligerence. He struck 54 from 78 deliveries before he was last out, driving paceman Maurice Chambers to Westley at deep extra cover. He scored five fours and the only two sixes of the Glamorgan innings, Harbhajan and Charl Willoughby being the bowlers to suffer.Offspinner Harbhajan finished with 4 for 91 from 35 overs to post his best figures for Essex while paceman Graham Napier picked up 3 for 124 in 29 overs.