Gloucestershire 136 (Balderson 5-34, Anderson 3-12) and 58 for 3 trail Lancashire 240 (Jennings 70, Taylor 6-43) by 46 runs
Shot out for a wholly inadequate 136 in their first innings, Gloucestershire’s batting frailties were again exposed as they reached stumps on 58 for 3, still trailing by 46. Bottom of the table without a point before this game, they face an uphill battle if they are to avoid a third straight defeat.
Resuming their first innings on 124 for 6, Gloucestershire mustered scant resistance with the bat in the morning session, losing their last four wickets for just 12 runs as they were shot out inside 51 overs. James Anderson delivered an object lesson in how to dissect a tail, accounting for Taylor, Henry Brookes and Will Williams in a burst of three wickets in five balls to take his tally to 17 for the season, while George Balderson removed debutant Tommy Boorman to finish with 5 for 34.
Having previously taken 14 first-innings wickets at an average of 75 apiece in matches against Middlesex and Durham, Gloucestershire’s fortunes with ball in hand have been similarly lacking. Certainly, the new ball pair of Williams and Gabe Bell failed to trouble Luke Wells and Jennings unduly as the openers advanced the score to 41 without any major scares.
Coming on as first change at the Ashley Down Road end, Taylor made the breakthrough when persuading Wells to direct a looping drive to Williams at mid-on and depart for 27 in the 12th over. But Bohannon and Jennings held firm to progress the score to 73 for 1 at lunch.
Rather ominously for Gloucestershire, Jennings looked well set and he drove Bell expansively through the covers to bring up the 50 partnership. Making his first appearance of the season, the tall left-hander then guided a ball from Taylor through third to register a chanceless half-century from 87 balls via his seventh boundary.
Bohannon never looked truly secure in an innings that spanned 78 deliveries, Taylor bowling him for 21 with a yorker-length delivery that reduced the visitors to 120 for 2. Lancashire were in front soon afterwards, Marcus Harris stepping down the pitch and hoisting Graeme van Buuren over long-off for a huge six.
But Gloucestershire’s slow left armer struck an important blow later in the same over, Jennings attempting to hit over the top, dragging the ball to Williams at mid-on and falling into the trap set for him. Suddenly, Gloucestershire tails were up, and Taylor was rewarded for his persistence when Ollie Price took a fine catch low down at first slip to send back Michael Jones for a duck with the score 141 for 4.
When Bell trapped fellow Australian Harris in the crease for 12, Lancashire were 145 for 5 and under pressure, having lost four wickets in nine overs. Arav Shetty was next to go, taking on Brookes and holing out to Boorman at deep square leg as the northerners reached tea on 170 for 6.
That quickly became 180 for 8, Taylor having Balderson caught in the slips by Bancroft and then pinning Paul Coughlin in front to record his ninth first-class five-wicket haul. Instead of running through the tail though, Gloucestershire were frustrated by a stubborn ninth-wicket stand of 58 between Matty Hurst and Ollie Sutton, a substitute for injured fast bowler Ajeet Singh Dale. Hurst managed the tail-end resistance supremely well in a patient innings of 39 to extend Lancashire’s lead to three figures as the bowlers tired. He was eventually bowled by Bell, while Taylor returned to remove Sutton for 19.
Lancashire finished the day well and truly on top, Balderson having Bancroft caught at the wicket, Anderson dismissing Price lbw and Coughlin persuading Ben Charlesworth to edge to second slip as Gloucestershire’s top order floundered once more. Miles Hammond and James Bracey reached the close without further mishap, but the home side will be required to muster a level of resistance beyond anything seen previously this season if they are to extricate themselves from a tricky situation.








