Rain frustrates Nottinghamshire as fans return to Trent Bridge
Dillon Pennington, returning to the Pears line-up after being rested from the trip to Durham last week, took two for 12 from his 11.5 overs, Alzarri Joseph picking up the other wicket to fall after Worcestershire won the toss and chose to make the home side bat first on the pitch used when Nottinghamshire beat Essex here two weeks ago.
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Hide AdJoe Clarke was out for a second-ball duck against his former team-mates, while Haseeb Hameed, who made hundreds in both innings when these sides met at New Road last month, fell for 24.
There were more than 1,000 people in the historic venue when play started on time but only a few hardy souls stuck it out until play was called off soon after 6.15pm after a thoroughly inhospitable day.
Nottinghamshire wicketkeeper Tom Moores, who with Ben Slater was presented with his county cap before play, said: “It was tough to get started and keep coming off so for a batter to get into any rhythm was a real challenge, although we can’t help the weather.
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Hide Ad“The pitch is doing a bit but we still back ourselves to put a big score on the board.
“And it is great to have spectators back in. To hear that ripple of applause around the ground when someone gets a boundary, to just see faces in the ground after so long is good. There is another level of excitement when you’ve got fans in the ground.”
Each wicket that fell was promptly followed by a stoppage. Pennington dismissed Ben Slater, who matched Hameed’s 114 not out in the second innings as Nottinghamshire emerged with a draw at New Road, when he switched to round the wicket to the left-hander, who had pulled him for six in his previous over.
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Hide AdSlater nicked to wicketkeeper Ben Cox and was immediately joined by the rest of the players in hurrying back to the pavilion as the first spell of rain arrived.
The remaining action was contained in three brief passages, of 11 minutes, nine minutes and five minutes, yet the shorter two of those each brought a wicket.
Hameed had picked up four boundaries after a positive start but Joseph surprised him with a ball that climbed off a length and glanced the shoulder of the bat, Cox taking the catch.
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Hide AdThe players were off again after one more delivery, returning next for long enough for Pennington to produce the best ball of his spell, squaring up Clarke and finding enough late movement to take the edge, Cox pouching his third catch as the 22-year-old seamer doubled his wickets tally for the season.
Play was due to resume for a fourth time at 6.15 after a two-and-a-half hour stoppage only for umpires Alex Wharf and Billy Taylor to discover a damp patch on the pitch, which they deemed unsafe.