Worcestershire rookies stand keeps Lancashire at bay (From Dudley News)
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Worcestershire rookies stand keeps Lancashire at bay
9:41am Friday 17th August 2012 in WCCC
THAT’S OUT: Worcestershire Cricket Club’s James Cameron falls LBW off the bowling of Lancashire’s Kyle Hogg.
WORCESTERSHIRE rookies Neil Pinner and Joe Leach defied relegation rivals Lancashire in their crucial LV= County Championship first division clash at New Road.
The two 21-year-olds, making only their second appearances in the competition, earned their bottom-the-table side a bonus point which seemed unlikely when they lost five wickets for 108.
Number six Pinner had spent nearly 15 months waiting for another opportunity after being dismissed for a duck in his only previous championship innings.
This time he seized the moment with a confident and mature performance for an unbeaten 79 from 164 balls as Worcestershire closed at 219 for six.
Reaching 50 with successive fours, he took the lead in a partnership of 111 with Leach, who was bowled by Ajmal Shahzad for 46 only two balls before the umpires took the players off for bad light.
When the game got under way after a first-day wash-out, Glen Chapple and Kyle Hogg led the fight to keep Lancashire in the top flight.
Chapple won the toss and chose to heap pressure on a Worcestershire team with only one first innings total above 300 this summer.
With Phil Hughes called up to play for Australia A against England Lions, the hosts were on the back foot in Chapple’s second over when skipper Daryl Mitchell popped up a bat-pad catch to Simon Kerrigan.
When Hogg got one to swing into James Cameron’s pads, a familiar story was in the making as Worcestershire lurched to 17 for two by the 12th over.
Reliability is not a word readily associated with the Pears’ batting but there was a welcome show of resilience as the two left handers, Matt Pardoe (37) and Moeen Ali (35), eked out a stand of 45 in 20 overs.
Pardoe, who made 55 when Worcestershire won at Old Trafford last month, adapted to an opening role and Moeen curbed his stroke-playing instincts when taking 22 balls to get off the mark.
Batting was never easy but just as the third pair seemed to be gaining the upper hand, Chapple landed a double blow with the help of two catches by Gareth Cross in the space of eight balls.
The wicketkeeper leapt to his left to take a fast-moving chance from Pardoe, who had driven the previous ball for his sixth four, and in Chapple’s next over Cross quickly adjusted his position to hold an inside edge from Vikram Solanki .
Moeen carried on the struggle for 11 more overs until he drove across a leg-stump delivery from Hogg.

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