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Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 13-01-2025

Anderson signs one year deal


RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 24-01-2025

Lancashire have signed Australia batter Marcus Harris as an overseas player for this summer's County Championship and One-Day Cup competitions.

Harris will be available for all of Lancashire's Division Two four-day games starting against Middlesex at Lord's on 4 April.

The opener, who has played 14 Tests, joins the Red Rose after spells with Leicestershire in 2021 and last year and two seasons with Gloucestershire in between that.

"I am really excited by the opportunity to join Lancashire for the English summer and will give my all to help this great club win promotion back to Division One of the County Championship," he told the club's website, external.

Harris averages 39.64 from 172 first-class games and has an average of 48 from his time in the County Championship with nine hundreds.

He last played for Australia against England in Sydney in January 2022.

"Marcus is an experienced operator with international pedigree and has a proven track record of scoring runs at the top of the order in domestic cricket in Australia and England," said Lancashire's director of cricket performance Mark Chilton.


RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 03-04-2025

MIDDLESEX 4 DAYS 4/4/2025


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RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 05-04-2025

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Young seamers Tom Aspinwall and Ollie Sutton launched Lancashire’s bid for an immediate return to the top flight in positive fashion by bowling out Middlesex for 260 on the opening day at Lord’s.



The Red Rose began the campaign without injured ex-England veteran James Anderson and West Indies paceman Anderson Phillip, unavailable due to a visa issue.

But 21-year-old Aspinwall, with figures of four for 32, and left-armer Sutton, who took two for 57 on his first-class debut, swung the game in their side’s favour after a century stand between Sam Robson (70) and Max Holden (69) had given Middlesex a strong platform.



Having reached 215 for three in front of an impressive Lord’s crowd of 4,257, the home side stumbled – losing their last seven wickets for 45 runs – and Lancashire’s openers shaved 68 off the deficit before the close.

The visitors opted to bowl after winning the toss and gained some early swing and bounce, with Tom Bailey beating the outside edge several times before breaking through in the fifth over.

Nathan Fernandes, restored to an opener’s role at Middlesex following Mark Stoneman’s departure, contributed just a single before he was tempted to nibble at a Bailey delivery that slanted across him.

But, having seen off the new ball, Robson began to play with greater freedom and rattled off a spate of boundaries, steering Sutton to the midwicket fence to bring up his half-century from 60 balls.



Holden played his part as Middlesex cruised along at around four and a half an over, but the left-hander was given a life on 28 when he hooked Sutton to long leg, only for the ball to slip through Luke Wells’ fingers and over the rope.

Wells redeemed himself by coming on for an over of leg-breaks just before lunch to pin Robson lbw on the back foot with his fifth ball.

Holden posted his half-century in the first over after the resumption, squirting Wells to third man for three and looked a good bet to convert that 50 into three figures until he fell to a smart take by Matty Hurst.

Standing up to the stumps, the young wicketkeeper snapped up Holden off the same bowler and claimed his third dismissal when Ryan Higgins nudged George Balderson behind.

That triggered a middle-order collapse, with four more wickets falling in the space of just 21 deliveries – two apiece to Sutton and Aspinwall.



Debutant Ben Geddes became Sutton’s maiden first-class victim when he miscued a pull to midwicket and Jack Davies was lbw shuffling across his stumps before Du Plooy, having spent more than two hours over a watchful 41, was on the sharp end of a similar decision in Aspinwall’s favour.

By contrast, Toby Roland-Jones’ dismissal was palpable as Aspinwall brought the ball a long way back down the slope to take his leg stump, mopping up the innings after tea with the wickets of Zafar Gohar and Henry Brookes.

Lancashire skipper Keaton Jennings batted sensibly alongside new opening partner Michael Jones, capitalising on loose deliveries as they chipped away at the home side’s total.

However, there were close calls for both openers before stumps, with Jennings’ inside edge off Blake Cullen rebounding off his pad but somehow avoiding the wicket and Jones almost playing on to Brookes.



RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 06-04-2025

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Marcus Harris's century on Red Rose debut helped Lancashire take charge on day two at Lord's.

The Australian Test opener, batting at No. 4, survived an early scare to share a stand of 120 for the fifth wicket with Luke Wells (38). It was Harris' 30th first-class ton and he became the sixth overseas player to make a hundred on his debut for the county, a trend started by his fellow Australian, the late Andrew Symonds in 2005.

Keaton Jennings earlier weighed in 55 enabling the visitors to reach the close on 353 for 9.

The Middlesex bowlers toiled hard, with little luck, Zafar Gohar returning 3 for 77 on debut and Blake Cullen 2 for 70, the latter's first County Championship wickets since he dismissed Mohammed Rizwan at Hove in May 2022, such have been the young seamer's injury woes.

The alliance between Harris and Wells turned the tide of a day where Middlesex had initially held sway.

Their frugal bowling in the morning session especially led to a pedestrian scoring rate of two an over by the visitors on a slow, unresponsive pitch.

Lancashire's inability to break the shackles brought reward for the home side, Jennings departing to a sharp catch at slip by Robson off Ryan Higgins, shortly after raising his 50 with the aid of eight fours.

The wicket came in a spell of six overs for one run from the Zimbabwean allrounder and the pressure he exerted affected other batters too.

Josh Bohannon was in skittish mood from the off, edging one just short of Robson at slip before he'd scored. He'd got to 11 when he slashed at a slightly wider one from Higgins only for Leus du Plooy to grass the chance away to his right hand in the gully.

Even so, there was further reward for the Seaxes shortly before lunch when Toby Roland-Jones found the edge of Michael Jones' bat and wicketkeeper Jack Davies took a low catch away to his right.

On the resumption, Bohannon briefly suggested he'd left his pre-lunch struggles behind him, driving Henry Brookes straight for four, but the introduction of Gohar proved his undoing.

Bohannon played back to one from the slow left-armer which went on with the arm and crashed into off stump.

And when Matty Hurst injudiciously hooked a short one from Cullen down the throat of Nathan Fernandes at long leg the visitors were 169 for 4, still almost 100 in arrears.

Even Harris wasn't exempt from such rushes of blood to the head, having charged Gohar on 11, inside edging the ball beyond both leg stump and wicketkeeper Davies. Had he not made the thinnest of contacts the stumping would have been a formality had he not been bowled in any event.

Harris though resolved to make the most of his slice of fortune, knuckling down to take charge, driving with increasing authority before raising his 50 with his eighth boundary, a savage cut to the cover fence.


As the home bowlers tired in the glorious evening sunshine he forged on to three figures reached via an edge out of the clutches of slip to third man.

At the other end, Wells, though playing second fiddle, hit two huge sixes, one over mid-on to get off the mark and the stand reached 120 before he waved lazily at one to be caught behind with the lead at 27.

Harris was reprieved on 123 when dropped at slip by Robson, but late wickets for the persevering home attack offered Middlesex some hope ahead of day three.



RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 07-04-2025

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Max Holden's sixth first-class hundred led a Middlesex fightback on day three at Lord's to set up the prospect of an exciting finish against Division Two title favourites Lancashire.


The Cambridge-born left-hander followed up his half-century of the first innings with an unbeaten 135 to rescue his side from the havoc of 7 for 3 in the wake of Tom Bailey's superb three-wicket opening salvo.

Holden shared stands of 106 with Ryan Higgins (43) and 163 with debutante Ben Geddes (74) as the hosts reached 288 for 6 at stumps.

Bailey couldn't add to his pre-lunch heroics, but late wickets with the second new ball gave the visitors the edge once more ahead of day four.

All this unfolded after Lancashire added just six to their overnight first-innings score to be bowled out for 359, Saturday's centurion Marcus Harris last to go for 138, Zafar Gohar finishing with 4 for 79.

It was only two seasons ago Middlesex found themselves 4 for 4 in the first game of the season with the top four all dismissed without scoring and while this wasn't quite as calamitous, Bailey's new-ball spell still caused much scrambling on of pads in the home dressing-room.

Nathan Fernandes looked nervous from the get-go and Bailey soon lured him into fencing at one he should have left alone, allowing wicketkeeper Matty Hurst to gobble up the chance.

If Fernandes was culpable, then Sam Robson was undone by a super piece of bowling, Bailey squaring up the former England opener and rapping him on the pad. Any hope it would be considered too high was quickly dashed as umpire Surendiran Shanmugan sent him on his way.

Two balls later, 7 for 2 became 7 for 3 as Leus du Ploy slashed wildly at a ball around fifth stump giving Hurst his second catch in a matter of minutes. Bailey had taken 3 for 2 in 15 balls, leaving the hosts staring at the prospect of defeat inside three days.

Calm heads were required and for the second time in the match it was former England Lions batter Holden who was first to raise his hand, employing a mix of studious defence with drives caressed through the covers and savage square cuts.

Six such boundaries carried him past 50 and there would be seven more on the way to three figures, reached in style with an on-drive back past the stumps to the pavilion rope.

Fightbacks of course need co-conspirators and not for the first time, Ryan Higgins was first to come to the left-hander's assistance. A classy pull shot in front of square got the allrounder moving and he then dispatched Luke Wells deliveries to the fence twice in the same over.

Bailey returned immediately after lunch as a game of patience unfolded, the two batters resisting his second surge and a miserly spell from Will Williams to raise the 100 partnership.

It required a jaffer from George Balderson to castle Higgins with the hosts 14 in front, but Geddes, a young player hailed this week by Richard Johnson as a player with a 'high ceiling', came in to take the baton and after a shaky start he too blossomed, an off-drive through midwicket the pick of his early boundaries.


By tea the lead had swollen to 72 and the pair showed greater intent after the resumption to move the stand to 100 and beyond.

Geddes reached his half-century with five fours, before falling to the second new ball, though replays suggested he hadn't made contact with the delivery which found its way to Hurst's gloves.

Nightwatcher Blake Cullen also perished before stumps, but Holden remains to try and steer Middlesex to a defendable total on day four.



RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 08-04-2025

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Lancashire clung on to secure a draw from their gripping Rothesay County Championship Division Two encounter with Middlesex at Lord’s after falling short in their victory chase of 309 from 67 overs.

The Red Rose remained within touching distance of that target for most of the final two sessions, thanks to an opening stand of 93 between Keaton Jennings and Michael Jones and Marcus Harris following up his first-innings hundred with 52.

However, spinner Zafar Gohar took three for 64 and Henry Brookes struck twice in as many deliveries to leave the visitors eight down – but George Balderson, with an unbeaten 36, and Will Williams saw out the remaining eight overs as their side closed on 262 for eight.



Earlier, Max Holden’s knock of 184, his highest score at Lord’s and second best of his first-class career, enabled Middlesex – who had lost their first three wickets for seven – to post 407 and set up the tense finish.

Lancashire’s hopes of forcing victory were boosted by the first ball of the morning, when Tom Bailey (five for 79) captured one of Middlesex’s four remaining wickets by persuading nightwatchman Brookes to nudge to second slip.

However, Holden and Jack Davies applied themselves diligently against the Lancashire seam attack, dispatching loose deliveries to the short boundary as they extended their side’s lead further with a partnership of 69.

Davies – having survived a series of edges that fell just short of the slips – became Bailey’s fifth victim, patting him tamely into the hands of gully.

The home side began to accelerate and Holden made room outside off stump to hit Tom Aspinwall for six – but the left-hander then attempted a repeat of the stroke to Ollie Sutton and holed out to third man, ending his vigil of almost eight hours at the crease.

Gohar’s knock of 22 hauled the Middlesex lead above 300 before he was last man out, leaving the visitors two full sessions in which to chase their target at an asking rate of 4.6 per over.

Jennings and Jones – who had shared a partnership of 97 first time around – launched Lancashire’s pursuit at a steady pace, picking out gaps in the field and taking boundaries off all of the home seamers.

Three successive maidens from Blake Cullen helped to stem the flow of runs and the bowler was unlucky not to remove Jennings when he drove hard and high to mid-on, with Brookes unable to hang onto the chance.



Cullen claimed the prize in his next over, though, when the Lancashire skipper chopped on one short of his 50 – and Josh Bohannon soon followed for a duck, bowled by Gohar for the second time in the match.

Jones’ quest for a half-century on his Lancashire debut was ended as Toby Roland-Jones’ inswinging yorker into his stumps shortly before tea and Ryan Higgins’ impressive reaction slip catch to dismiss Matty Hurst left the visitors four down.

Harris continued to whittle away at the target in tandem with Wells but, having just passed 50 for the second time on his Lancashire debut, the Australian reverse-swept Gohar to short third man.

Wells took up the baton in a partnership of 66 with Balderson, hammering Brookes over midwicket for six and the pendulum appeared to have swung back in favour of the Red Rose when Cullen returned to have him caught down the leg side for 47.

Brookes’ double strike then heaped the pressure back on Lancashire but, despite packing fielders around the bat and mixing the pace of Cullen with some turning deliveries from Gohar, Middlesex could not find another way through.




RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 13-04-2025

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DAY 1

A superb century by Saif Zaib and a vital 92 from James Sales helped put Northamptonshire into the strong position of 355 for five against Lancashire after being put in to bat on the opening day of this Rothesay County Championship Division Two match at Emirates Old Trafford.

It proved to be an excellent day with the bat for the visitors as Lancashire’s attack, featuring West Indies’ pace bowler Anderson Phillip for the first time this season along with loan signing John Turner, were made to work hard on a wicket not offering the bowlers much assistance.

Luke Procter made 64 and shared a century partnership for the third wicket with Sales during the first half of the day, and the latter then forged another excellent 97-run alliance with Saib Zaib for the fifth either side of tea.

Zaib reached his fourth first-class hundred from 149 balls (1 six, 14 fours) just before the close, ending the day unbeaten on 111 after forging another good partnership of 99 with Lewis McManus (40 not out).



After two poor batting performances last week against Kent, Northamptonshire must have feared a potential repeat when they were 54 for two just an hour into the opening day, seamer George Balderson having Ricardo Vasconcelos caught behind for 16 and George Bartlett falling lbw for the same score to a searing yorker from overseas quick Phillip during a lively early spell.

Visiting skipper Procter, who produced a typically calm and unhurried innings, found an ally in Sales and the pair staged a superb fightback either side of lunch with a mixture of solid defence and a number of attractive drives. Procter, who reached 5,000 runs for Northamptonshire in all forms of cricket during his innings, was the first to go to his half century from 107 balls with Sales taking a brisker 78 balls to arrive at the same landmark in a 104-run partnership across 29 overs.



It was loan signing Turner, handed his Red Rose debut cap at the start of play by James Anderson – before the news of Anderson’s impending knighthood broke – who made the breakthrough for Lancashire midway through the afternoon. The England fast bowler had made a tentative start earlier in the day but produced a much better sustained effort during his second spell and was rewarded when Procter gloved a leg side delivery to wicketkeeper Matty Hurst for 64.



Balderson backed that up by trapping Rob Keogh lbw for a duck in the next over to leave the visitors on 159 for four.

The day was in the balance at that point, but Sales and Saib Zaib responded with a good, positive partnership that added 75 in 17 overs by tea, with Zaib becoming the third Northamptonshire batter to post a half century soon after the break from 70 balls.

Just when a third first-class career century beckoned Sales departed eight runs short to an injudicious shot, aiming to hit Tom Hartley over the top but picking out Marcus Harris at wide mid-on instead.



Zaib, who pulled Phillip over square leg for six, and McManus negotiated the rest of the day – and the arrival of the new ball to leave Northamptonshire in excellent shape going into day two.

“The pitch offered quite a bit up top and we were hopeful that it would continue throughout the day, but obviously it flattened out a bit,” was John Turner’s assessment at the close of play.

“We stuck at it well, I thought,” he added. “The bowlers kept on running in, kept on asking the right questions, and kept on challenging the batsmen.

“I think we just needed to dry up the runs at the same time, make life a bit uncomfortable for them. We went to the short ball plan a few times and that didn't get us any wickets necessarily, but it did get the questions into the batsman's mind.



“We have to just keep plugging away and being consistent on one length. It's not quick by any means, but it's quick enough to score some runs. And there are enough balls in there that keep you interested. If you hit the deck hard, something will happen eventually.”

And Turner is delighted for the opportunity his loan signing brings.

“It's great to be here, see the environment and get the opportunity to play some red ball championship cricket,” he said.

“I haven't done a lot of that recently or throughout my career really. So it's about just trying to play as much as I can to progress my career and I just want to help teams win games.

“I'm really enjoying my time at Lancashire. It's a really massive club, obviously unbelievable history and heritage, and they've been really welcoming to me. So, so far, I've really enjoyed it.”

DAY 2

Keaton Jennings remains unbeaten on 60 as Lancashire made 139 for four in reply to Northamptonshire’s 496 all out on the second day of this Rothesay County Championship match at Emirates Old Trafford.

Justin Broad took two wickets to have Lancashire in early difficulties before Jennings and Marcus Harris steadied matters with a partnership of 84 before the latter fell just before the close followed by nightwatchman Anderson Phillip in the final over with Lancashire trailing by 357 runs going into the third day.

Jennings, whose lowest effort in his three early season innings is 49, looked in great touch, pulling consecutive deliveries from Broad for four and six on his way to his half century from 117 balls.



Broad struck twice following his introduction to the attack in the 11th over, his fourth delivery finding just enough movement to trap Michael Jones lbw for 14 with the score on 22 before removing Josh Bohannon for five with a delivery that ripped out the batters off stump.

Harris played some free-flowing drives in making 43 but fell to a great diving catch at midwicket by Broad off Raphy Weatherall five overs before stumps.

At the start of the day, Saib Zaib could only add five runs to his overnight 111 before edging behind off Phillip attempting to repeat the drive that had earned him four runs the previous ball.



Broad helped McManus boost the total by 48 runs until he was run out for 19 by Tom Bailey’s direct hit from midwicket as the visitors reached the 110-over mark on 405 for seven.

McManus, who had reached his fifty earlier from 97 balls, marshalled the lower order superbly during the first half of the day and found a willing assistant in Calvin Harrison. The loan signing from Nottinghamshire gave steady support in an 81-run partnership inside 30 overs for the eighth wicket that included reverse sweeping Hartley for four to reach his half century from 87 balls.



It proved to be a frustrating passage of play for Lancashire who bowled spinners Hartley and Luke Wells in tandem for the final 33 overs of the innings in an attempt to dry up the run scoring and exert some pressure.

The innings ended abruptly with the final three wickets falling for 12 runs, starting when McManus became the second Northamptonshire batter to fall agonisingly short of a hundred in two days.

Having seen David Sales perish for 92 yesterday, McManus departed in similar fashion on 95, top-edging a front foot slog off a Wells delivery pushed wider that went high to Bohannon at mid-off. Hartley (3-91) then wrapped things up bowling both Guthrie for a duck and Harrison for 56.



“It was a tough day,” admitted Tom Hartley.

“It was not ideal losing that last wicket at the end, but I thought we battled hard.

“We just had to graft that out really. We got the wickets this morning in the end, but that's a healthy total for them.

“The pitch wasn't doing a whole lot that first day. The ball didn't really spin though apart from a bit out of the rough towards the end. We felt like we could have bowled a bit better at times, but in general, I thought we were good.

“It was just good to get overs in the bank, show what I can do, and to finish with three was pretty nice. For me, it just allows me to bowl a few more variations. It's probably something I should take into shorter spells, but I think it's just good learning for me overall.”



“It’s about getting that balance right of still tying people down but not making it too easy for them. And I think for me, especially on pitches like that, throwing in a lot of changes and pace variations is important. I think if I bowl six of the same a few times, a few overs in a row, I think people get used to it.

“Throwing in variations, even three, four an over, I think is quite key for me, just to keep people in the crease and sort of guessing a little bit more.

“I think with the weather we've been having, I think the pitches could suit a lot more spin this year. So, I'm just really excited to really do well this game, hopefully take a few wickets in the second innings on a bit more of a turning wicket and then just play consistently, hopefully, throughout the summer.”


RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 14-04-2025

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Northamptonshire are closing in on a first Rothesay County Championship victory at Old Trafford since 1999, and only their fourth win at Lancashire's headquarters, after bowling the hosts out for 228 and then having the home side 126 for two in their second innings after enforcing the follow-on.

Liam Guthrie gave Northamptonshire the dream start when he trapped Michael Jones lbw for 0 with an inswinger as Lancashire batted a second time but the visitors' victory quest was held up by a resolute 120-run partnership between Keaton Jennings, who added 49 runs to go with his first innings 96 and Josh Bohannon who remains unbeaten on 67.

Bohannon took 146 balls to reach his half century and batted with great determination while his 7 fours included a lovely, wristy flick of the wrists off Harrison to the midwicket fence, but the bowler changed ends and produced what could be a decisive moment in the match by finding the edge of Jennings' bat six overs before stumps - his fifth wicket in this match - with Lewis McManus delightedly taking his 100th first-class dismissal.

Four first-innings wickets for Harrison and three by Justin Broad led a fine bowling effort by Northamptonshire who took the remaining Lancashire wickets by the seventh over of the afternoon session, backing up the massive 496 accumulated by their batsmen, to put their side in the box seat after three days.

It was Raphy Weatherall who struck first after fifty minutes of play when Matty Hurst steered a catch straight to Ricardo Vasconcelos at gully for 16 the over after the wicketkeeper/batter had confidently twice pulled Broad to backward square leg for four.


Harrison picked up his first wicket of the day when Luke Wells, on 20, attempted to repeat the sweep shot that had brought him six runs earlier but this time top edging high to midwicket where Broad took a good running catch. That ended a promising partnership of 46 and began a clatter of the three wickets to fall for 5 runs in 19 balls with first day centurion Saib Zaib to the fore.

Jennings had looked imperious in stroking his way steadily to 96 and the fierce drive the Lancashire skipper produced against Harrison looked destined to bring up his century, but instead it nestled in the hand of Zaib at midwicket after the all-rounder flung himself to his right to pull off a stunning catch.

Given the almost perfunctory one over of spin before lunch, Zaib then trapped George Balderson lbw for 1 to complete a magical five minutes and leave the spinner with figures for this season of 5-9 from 9.5 overs. Harrison (4-34) and Broad (3-58) swiftly wrapped up the innings post lunch, Tom Hartley pulling the former to George Bartlett at midwicket for 8 and Tom Bailey finding the same fielder at long leg off Broad for the same score. Lancashire made a much better fist of things second time around, but Northamptonshire remain firm favourites to clinch a result tomorrow.


RE: Lancashire 2025 - themaclad - 15-04-2025

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Josh Bohannon's 14th first-class century came to Lancashire's rescue as this absorbing Rothesay County Championship Division Two match with Northamptonshire ended in a draw.

A career best 7 for 119 from a marathon 57 overs and career-best match figures of 11 for 153 by the on-loan Calvin Harrison looked to be propelling Northamptonshire to a first win in 26 years at Old Trafford.

But Bohannon's innings of 155, spanning more than seven hours, allied to a half-century from Marcus Harris led some stern resistance from the hosts who started the morning on 126 for 2 and fought their way through the day to reach 351 for 9 by the time the players shook hands at 5.40pm with five overs left and Lancashire 83 runs ahead.

Needing to take eight Lancashire wickets, Northamptonshire struck early when Harrison disposed of nightwatchman Anderson Phillip for 10, bowled playing down the wrong line to a delivery that turned just enough.

That proved to be the visitors' only success of the morning as Bohannon and Harris played watchfully but with increasing authority through the rest of the session in a partnership that had knocked a further 72 runs off the overnight deficit of 144 by the lunch break.

Bohannon, 60 not out overnight, accumulated steadily before joyfully on-driving Harrison for four through midwicket to reach his fourth century in 10 innings against Northamptonshire to add to the two fifties he has scored against the Wantage Road side.

Harris settled in quickly after edging his first boundary to deep third off Raphy Weatherall, although it bounced well in front of the slip cordon. The Australian left-hander reached the fence seven more times before posting his half-century from 94 balls that included one sumptuously timed back-foot square drive that was arguably the shot of the day.

Northamptonshire grabbed the new ball as soon as it became available after 23 overs with skipper Luke Procter ringing the changes, using eight bowlers in all, in the hunt for a breakthrough which finally arrived three overs into the afternoon.

Harris had just posted his third 50-plus score in four innings during a partnership of 94 when he was well caught at short leg by James Sales off Harrison with Lancashire 243 for 4 and still 25 runs in arrears.


Bohannon drove Harrison gloriously through the covers for four to take the home side into the lead halfway through the day but the bowler then removed Matty Hurst for 8 via a catch at slip by Ricardo Vasconcelos.

The wicket Northamptonshire really wanted arrived ten minutes before tea with Bohannon's unlucky dismissal, caught by wicketkeeper Lewis McManus from a rebound off the back of Sales at short leg from a Saif Zaib delivery, and Harrison was next celebrating a second first-class five-for when George Balderson popped up a bat-pad catch to Sales at short leg eight overs into the evening.

Luke Wells and Tom Bailey (8 not out) took the game into the final hour before Harrison removed Wells for 39 and Tom Hartley for 1 in quick succession but his fine, valiant effort proved to be in vain.