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County cricket: Lawrence double century puts Surrey in charge against Hampshire – as it happened | County Championship
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Lawrence double century puts Surrey in charge against Hampshire

Tanya Aldred
On a spearmint green pitch at the Oval, Dan Lawrence had one of his unstoppable days – an unorthodox tub-thumping of Hampshire. With fierce eye and rampaging bat he bashed 218 off 190 balls, and became the first player to hit four Division One centuries this season, with his highest first-class score.
The Oval had been the site of Lawrence’s maiden first-class hundred, for Essex in April 2015, when he was only 17. Eleven years later, it was the venue for his first double century, reached with a peerless inside-out drive over extra cover. All around the ground spectators rose, as they had when he passed 100 and 150, and would again when he was finally dismissed with Surrey eight down, heaving for one final six off Sonny Baker.
Lawrence was also awarded his county cap, not given away lightly here, from the director of cricket, Alec Stewart, at tea, with 2,150 runs for Surrey in the bank.
This one-off Championship match, sitting alone in the schedule because of fixture congestion, was always a bit of an anomaly. But Surrey’s marketing team, with a keen eye for good publicity, invited day-four spectators at Lord’s, whose cricket had been curtailed, to cross the Thames for only a fiver on production of their ticket – and 250 did, joining a crowd of 4,700.
Surrey were sporting a new‑look side, shorn of their England players and with a string of injuries including Ben Foakes, still out of action after bowling at the fag end of the draw against Essex in April. Bottom-of-the-table Hampshire were boosted by the return of Baker from Lord’s.
The morning session had been steady, earnest even, with Hampshire winkling out Rory Burns and Will Jacks cheaply, and when Dom Sibley followed soon after lunch, the decision to bowl looked a good one. But then Lawrence and Ollie Pope (76) stepped on the accelerator, in a partnership of 255 in 37 overs.
To rub salt in the wound, Surrey were awarded five penalty runs when a cheesed-off Delano Potgieter, who had just been crunched for two fours by Lawrence, fielded off his own bowling and flung the ball back, throwing down the stumps.
Hampshire came back well with the new ball in the evening as Surrey lost six for 31, but the damage was done. Nick Gubbins and Toby Albert survived 5.2 overs before bad light stopped play, but the day belonged to Lawrence.
Play abandoned for the day at The Oval
Stumps here, where Hampshire 17-0 trail Surrey by 404 runs. The day belonged to Dan Lawrence, who bashed a barnstorming 218 on a green seamer. Thanks for all your messages, we’ll be back tomorrow. Bye!
Hampshire 17-0 Bad light stops play
Toby Albert and Nick Gubbins survive the 5.2 overs Surrey throw at them.
WICKET! Topley c Lehman b Abbott 1 (Surrey 421 all out)
Snaffled at third slip and Surrey have rather shrivelled, losing six for 31. Still, it means they get to stalk Hampshire tonight before the rain sweeps in.
I really better write up now.
WICKET! Lawrence c Organ b Baker 218 (Surrey 418-9)
Well bowled Sonny Baker! With nine men on the boundary, Lawrence resists temptation. Then Hampshire bring the fielders in, Lawrence squeezes four and then tries to go over the top to the last ball of the over and is caught by a backpeddling Organ. The crowd rise and Hampshire’s players, including Baker, chase Lawrence to pat him on the back as he walks away. An awesome innings, a privilege to watch it.
Surrey, meanwhile, have lost 5 for 28.
I’ve looked up to find the new ball scything through Surrey – two in an over for Abbott, Surrey 410-8, Lawrence still there on 214.
Enter Tom Curran for his first Championship inning of the year and time for me to write up for the paper. Will pop back later, below the line remains open.
WICKET! Sam Curran c Orr b Organ 20 (Surrey 390-5)
Curran swivels and tries to flambé Organ for six legside but doesn’t get enough welly on it and is caught by a sprinting, diving Orr.
A couple of hundred miles north, another man overlooked by England, Liam Livingstone, has added to his 81 against Glamorgan with three for 13 in four overs including a wicket maiden.
200 for Dan Lawrence!
At the site of his first first-class 100 in April 2015, when he was just a teenager, Lawrence rocks to his first 200 with an inside out drive over extra cover. The ground rises – a pure, utterly dominating innings – 29 fours, five sixes off just 172 balls.
A fantastic stat from Richard Spiller on the back of Dan Lawrence’s county cap – it is only 30 years ago that Surrey got rid of a capped and uncapped dressing room, when David Gilbert came in as cricket manager and demanded the wall was knocked down between the two rooms.
WICKET! Pope c Brown b Baker 74 (Surrey 353-4)
The tireless Baker leaps and punches the air, Pope swivels for the hook and tickles the ball through to Ben Brown. The end of a highly entertaining partnership of 255 with Lawrence, a new record for the fourth wicket for Surrey against Hampshire.
And in between all that, a third batting point for Surrey.
A career best score for Dan Lawrence
Strides outside off stump, carelessly flicks Abbot for six over square leg. Now 182 not out.
Evening session
And so it continues. Lawrence, off the front foot, clatters Abbott high over long off for six, drives four more through mid off where a sprawled Fuller nudges the ball over the rope. At 171 not out Lawrence now has his highest score of the season. A career best of 178 dangles tantalisingly.
Andy Bull on that Lord’s pitch:
Dan Lawrence is given his Surrey county cap
You don’t get one for turning up at The Oval. Dan Lawrence is presented with his county cap as he comes off the field for tea with a rollicking 150 under his arm and 2150 runs for Surrey in the bank.
Lawrence 150! Tea- Surrey 304-3
Tea: Surrey 304-3 (Lawrence 150, Pope 68) Up races the 200 partnership between Lawrence and Pope in 190 balls, then the Surrey 300 and the Lawrence 150 in just 138 balls. He raises his bat to the dressing room, then round the ground. In this mood, he feels unstoppable.
Women’s Blast update
Maia Bouchier’s 87 spearheaded Hampshire’s 155-4, Essex are 60-3 chasing, with eight and a bit overs left.
Glamorgan stumbled to 91 for eight after 20 overs, and Kent are motoring in reply, 33-0 off just six overs.
now
An afternoon sigh of delight from The Oval crowd as Pope off drives Potgieter for four more.
And now Lawrence picks Prest for consecutive fours as he races towards 150 and Surrey towards 300. Tea approaches.
Men’s Blast update after one innings
Four wickets for Hassan Ali and one for Moeen Ali restrict Leicestershire to 147 for eight against Yorkshire
Fifties for George Musney and Jack Haynes have put Notts in a decent spot against Derbyshire, 142-4 with four overs left.
Livi’s 81 took Lancs to 200-7 against Glamorgan; Gloucestershire struggled to just 148-8 v Worcestershire; Somerset are 60-2 with 12 overs left against Warwickshire; three wickets for Sean Hunt and Tymal Mills restricted Kent to 133-8 against Sussex. Essex are 48-2 after eight overs against Middlesex
Liam Livingstone’s six-hitting extravaganza at Stanley Park is over, caught for 81 off 37 balls – three fours, eight sixes. Lancs 190-6 with five balls to go.
Fifty for Ollie Pope!
A weary Abbot looks at his boots as Pope drives him , just legside of the stumps for his half century, off 66 balls. A shot that purred to the rope.
And bang – Lawrence lofts Organ straight back over his head into the pavilion for six.
100 for Dan Lawrence!
A swotted sweep brings an standing ovation for Lawrence for a stunning century – 99 balls, 18 fours, two sixes. He gets a hug and a pat from Ollie Pope and enthusiastic applause from the balcony for his fourth hundred of the summer – every time he has passed fifty, he has gone on to three figures. Cracking innings and cranking up the pace of the game in the face of a dreadful forecast for the next three day.
A Hampshire fielder forlornly chases a drive from Pope as it accelerates to the boundary. Pope (48) and Lawrence (95) racing for milestones.
Organ switches ends and is much more parsimonious this time around, leaking just four runs. the Lawrence-Pope hundred partnership comes up in just 92 balls. And now Lawrence cracks Fuller straight down the ground for four, perfectly perpendicular. He grins a happy grin as he chats to Pope.
Cricket pitch preparation is becoming more and more hindered by the rapidly changing climate, as acknowledged by the MCC here, “The unusually hot and dry weather during May, followed by wetter conditions in the lead-up to the match, presented a number of challenges in preparing the pitch.”
and Surrey’s Lee Fortis, speaking to Richard Spiller in April. “We’ve been praying for a bit of rain. The easterly wind and dry days don’t make it especially easy and you can see the way the climate is changing. The westerly winds which bring the April showers seem to be replaced more and more now by these easterlies which we should be getting in Feburary and March.”
MCC statement “we are natuarally frustrated when a surface falls short of expectations”
MCC Chief Executive and Secretary, Rob Lawson, said: “We recognise that the pitch for this Test has shown more variable bounce than we would have wanted. We hold ourselves to the highest standards and are naturally frustrated when a surface falls short of those expectations.
“MCC invests significantly each year in the preparation of the main square at Lord’s, as well as in research, technology and expertise aimed at producing pitches that provide a fair and consistent contest between bat and ball. The unusually hot and dry weather during May, followed by wetter conditions in the lead-up to the match, presented a number of challenges in preparing the pitch.
“However, we fully recognise the need to act quickly. We will remain fully focused on applying all aspects of pitch development and improvement as outlined in our recently published MCC Cricket Strategy 2026-29.”
No respite for Hampshire, as Lawrence now cuts Fuller for four.
Felix Organ is whipped out of the attack by Ben Brown after one expensive over, and James Fuller is called back into action. Surrey 187-3.
An email from a happy Charlie Dunmore, who messaged the OBO on Friday from Geneva airport worried that the weather would ruin his kids’ first experience of cricket.
“After the intervention of the weather yesterday, our 4th day Lord’s tickets paid off and my kids got to see England wrap things up with the ball this morning for their first taste of live cricket. As I already had tickets for the Oval as a backup plan, we hopped on the tube and they are now enjoying a couple of England old boys making hay with the bat. I’m counting this as a rare parenting win.”
Happy days! Lots to enjoy as Dan Lawrence ping-pongs Felix Organ’s first over for 19 runs. Down on one knee, two legside sweeps for four, six over mid on.
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Nottinghamshire v Somerset, Leicestershire v Essex, and more: county cricket day four – live | Sport
Key events
Tea time scores
Division One
Grace Road: Leicestershire 187 and 428 v Essex 401 and 99-2 Essex need 116 to win
Trent Bridge: Somerset 310 and 355-7dec BEAT Nottinghamshire 193 and 166 by 306 runs.
Hove: Sussex 521 BEAT Glamorgan 155 and 268 by an innings and 98 runs
Scarborough: Yorkshire 469 and 246-6dec v Warwickshire 263 and 237-5 Warwicks need 216 to win
Division Two
Chester-le-Street: Durham 377 BEAT Derbyshire 118 and 237 by an innings and 22 runs
Blackpool: Kent 178 and 332 BEAT Lancashire 87 and 283 by 140 runs
Northampton: Northamptonshire 465 v Gloucestershire 268 and 387 Northants need 191 to win
New Road: Worcestershire 265 and 191-7 v Middlesex 339 and 283-6dec Worcs need 167 to win
To Scarborough: where Sam Hain (63) and Ed Barnard (280 are keeping Warwickshire hopes alive, a flying George Hill not quite able to get hand on ball. Ah, they’re going in for tea now, needing 216 off 35 overs, five wickets left. Enthralling stuff for those sitting sunning themselves on the bleachers.
Rehan Ahmed, unwanted by England, lurches left to take a super catch to get rid of Tom Westley at Grace Road. Scriven the wicket taker. Essex 86-2.
Gloucestershire are really getting stuck into their task at Wantage Road – the lead is now 176. James Bracey now 137, Will Williams, whose obstinance Lancs would have liked at Blackpool, 7 in 40 minutes.
While at New Road, Cullen (15) and Taylor (6) continue to hold up Middlesex – Worcs seven down, needing another 179.
Looks lovely and sunny at Grace Road, as the clouds stitch a blanket over Manchester. Walter and Westley moving things along. Essex 73-1 need another 143.
England Test XI: Jordan Cox and Sonny Baker to make their debuts
There are four changes from England’s XI at Lord’s. Jordan Cox, fresh from a magnificent 204 against Leicestershire, and Sonny Baker will make their Test debuts. Jofra Archer returns, as does Matt Fisher, replacing his Surrey teammate Gus Atkinson who, along with Ben Stokes, wasn’t considered for selection after breaking the curfew. There is no space this time for Shoaib Bashir.
James Rew could also make his Test debut at The Oval, if Jamie Smith’s wife goes into labour.
England XI: Ben Duckett, Emilio Gay, Jacob Bethell, Joe Root (capt), Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (wk), Jordan Cox, Jofra Archer, Josh Tongue, Matthew Fisher, Sonny Baker
Somerset (thank you Anthony Gibson) were without Toms Kohler-Cadmore, Abell, Banton and Lammonby and Will Smede, and then were raided by England for James Rew and lost Lewis Gregory to a hamstring mid-game.
Somerset BEAT Notts by 306 runs – five wickets for Coverton
Overton with the final wicket as Ali swats like a man about to be stung and Alfie Ogborne takes the catch, running over to Overton for a bear hug. Happy handshakes all round. O’Neill undefeated on 54, Notts all out for 166 and defeated for the first time in 15 matches.
Trent Bridge: Somerset 310 and 355-7dec BEAT Nottinghamshire 193 and 166 by 306 runs.
Somerset 21 points, Notts 3 points.
The wheels have fallen off and rolled into the gutter at New Road. Worcestershire, 123-7 at lunch, are now 156-7. Three for Zafar Gohar, one for Seb Morgan.
An early Essex wicket at Grace Road: “In a variation to his first innings dismissal, Elgar’s caught at slip off Davey to give Leicestershire some hope.” says Mike Daniels.
“I’m worried about Ben”
Some quite worrying quotes from Brendon McCullum about Ben Stokes.
Half a big Somerset boot is across the line as Dillon Pennington becomes wicket number four for Craig Overton, driving to backward point. O’Neill stands, thoughtful at the non-striker’s end on 45. Mohammad Ali gets a snorter first ball but survives. Notts 153-9.
Regulations, regulations. Over to you Mike Daniels: “Apparently the regs are that the 15 mins is taken if there’s a chance of a result and it’s the last innings of the game, whereas the 30 mins taken here was because that’s mandatory when there are 9 wkts down in any innings.
“That’s the combined wisdom of the scorers and the match referee at lunch. Apparently you can take the 15 mins and the 30 mins subsequently if it’s the last innings of the game.”
On a Monday in June?
100 for James Bracey
A second hundred of the season for James Bracey who has stitched Gloucestershire’s second innings together. Daz Ahmed was lbw just before lunch, so Matt Taylor joins the vigil. The lead over Northants 125.
Lewis Hill out at last for 127 – Essex need 215 to win
Could be interesting…. especially as Essex are without Jordan Cox in their second innings. All hail last man out Lewis Hill, bowled t’ween bat and pad heaving for the rope, for 127, walks off chastising himself. A second wicket for Critchley. Three each for Snater and Harmer.
Lunch at Trent Bridge, where a furious Craig Overton stalks off after missing a catch at slip in the last over before lunch, bowled by Jack Leach.
Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 193 and 138-8 v Somerset 310 and 355-7dec Notts need 335 to win
While at Grace Road they will play on till 1.30 – thanks to Mike Daniels for the info.“Scorer tells me they’re playing on for half an hour or 8 overs, rather than 15 mins. Don’t know the regs myself.”
They’re playing on for 15 mins at Grace Road too, where Lewis Hill is still keeping vigil on 113, but has lost Josh Davey after 65 minutes of defence. Leics 414-9 lead by 200.
Lunchtime-ish scores
Division One
Grace Road: Leicestershire 187 and 414-9- v Essex 401
Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 193 and 129-8 v Somerset 310 and 355-7
Hove: Sussex 521 BEAT Glamorgan 155 and 268 by an innings and 98 runs
Scarborough: Yorkshire 469 and 246-6dec v Warwickshire 263 and 139-4 Warwicks need 314 to win
Division Two
Chester-le-Street: Durham 377 BEAT Derbyshire 118 and 237 by an innings and 22 runs
Blackpool: Kent 178 and 332 BEAT Lancashire 87 and 283 by 140 runs
Northampton: Northamptonshire 465 v Gloucestershire 268 and 306-8
New Road: Worcestershire 265 and127-3 v Middlesex 339 and 283-6 Worcs need 231 to win
A Thomas Rew stat that I missed yesterday – he is the third youngest Somerset centurion after Trevor Jones and Marcus Trescothick. He beats brother James by one precious day. They’re playing an extra 15 mins at Trent Bridge to try and get this game polished off.
Worcestershire had been enjoying a fruitful morning – but have just lost Roderick for 20, lbw to Eathan Bosch, a name he must always have to spell out over the telephone. (I feel his pain). Ben Allison 71 not out. Worcs 117-3 need another 241 to beat Middx.
They’re on at Wantage Road, but James Bracey (93) and Daz Ahmed are hanging on in there. Gloucs 398-7 lead Northants by 101. Ahmed, who came through SACA, is playing in his second f-c match.
Jack Haynes, Nottinghamshire’s last real hope, get a wobbler from Pretorius that shimmies past, and touches, the outside edge, Notts 104 for eight.
100 for Lewis Hill
Well played Lewis Hill! Back-to-the-wall innings of the year? Over six hours of concentration. Leicestershire 397-8 and Essex’s frustration grows.
To Scarborough, where George Hill is also polishing his all-round credentials – 65 not out yesterday, 3 for 23 with the ball today. Warwickshire are listing badly – three wickets down this morning – 97 for four, 355 more to win.
Patterson-White has a waft and is caught at second slip by Craig Overton scooping the ball off the turf with both hands – Pretorius with the wicket. Notts down and nearly out – 87-7.
Elsewhere, Simon Harmer has extracted Tom Scriven from the Grace Road pitch, but Lewis Hill’s nearly-six-hour opus continues. He’s now got Josh Davey (5 in 23 balls) for company. The lead over Essex is 148.
Rew highlights
Thanks to WashingtonIrvine BTL for the link to the Rew brother’s batting partnership yesterday and Tom’s first century. So young, so talented.
Thomas Rew! What catch, diving to his right in front of first slip with open mitt, and only wearing the gloves because brother James was called up by England yesterday. T Rew and James Coles are currently battling for allround performance of the round. A pair for Lyndon James, a second wicket for Overton this morning.
Notts 75 for six and looking lightly to slip to defeat at fortress Trent Bridge for the first time since May 2024 against Hampshire
And there’s the next big wicket for Somerset, HH, who turns Overton off his hip and into the gloves of Thomas Rew. Notts 69 for five and HH is another player, like Saif Zaib until this round, who hasn’t been able to match last year’s plenty.
Stories of women’s cricket in Scotland wanted!
Fiona Reid and Bunny Warren are trying to find hidden stories of women’s cricket in Scotland over the last 150 years. If you have any, do contact them at Fiona.Reid@bayfirth.co.uk . Find out more here
Weather watch – no play yet at Northampton
Mostly positive, with sunny spells, though there are some showers moving north and east. At Wantage Road, they’re starting to mop up.
A huge wicket! Joe Clarke is bowled by Jake Ball, who was substituted in half way through the game because of Gregory’s hamstring. Delight for Somerset, despair for Clarke who was done for pace. Notts 51-4,
Big Craig with the second over of the morning, after Joe Clarke tickles four off Jake Ball’s first ball of the day. Not many in the white tip-up seats. And that’s a maiden.
Eyes first to Trent Bridge, where Notts are trying to avoid their first defeat of the season, and their first since May 2025 when they lost to Durham at Chester le Street. Anthony Gibson thinks it is a bowling morning moving onto a batting afternoon.
Good morning Mike Daniels in the Grace Road scorebox. “Will it be a Headingly ‘81 day here or will Leicestershire subside to another tame loss?
“It’s frustrating for their supporters to see the optimism generated by last season’s promotion dissipated by the performances this year.
“Yes, there are mitigating factors with key players missing for either the whole or part of the season and a great overseas signing subsequently withdrawn by the SA Board, but the batting hasn’t generally been good enough from the established players. Days like yesterday, when grit was shown, are more frustrating as it shows what has been missing from the first innings, and too many innings so far this year.
“The workmanlike bowling attack was never going to be strong enough to win games in Div 1 so the onus was on the batting, and it hasn’t delivered.
“There’s still time to put strong performances in this season and supporters are hoping they’ll show the fight they showed yesterday in the coming games.”
Deepti Sharma popped Pakistan dreams.
Ollie Robinson ruled out of the second Test
Due to that knee soreness he felt after the first Test. He will stay with the squad and undergo rehab work ahead of the third Test. Which means England’s bowling attack will have at least three changes from Lord’s – minus Stokes, Atkinson and Robinson.
Scores on the doors
Division One
Grace Road: Leicestershire 187 and 326-7 v Essex 401
Trent Bridge: Nottinghamshire 193 and 47-3v Somerset 310 and 355-7
Hove: Sussex 521 BEAT Glamorgan 155 and 268 by an innings and 98 runs
Scarborough: Yorkshire 469 and 246-6 v Warwickshire 263 and 44-1
Division Two
Chester-le-Street: Durham 377 BEAT Derbyshire 118 and 237 by an innings and 22 runs
Blackpool: Kent 178 and 332 BEAT Lancashire 87 and 283 by 140 runs
Northampton: Northamptonshire 465 v Gloucestershire 268 and 264-7
New Road: Worcestershire 265 and 33-2 v Middlesex 339 and 283-6 Worcs need 325 to win
Sunday’s roundup: Mahmud’s six continues Kent’s revival
Hasan Mahmud poured cold water over the Blackpool sandcastles with a career-best six for 69, nine wickets in the match, bowling Kent to a 140-run victory over Lancashire. He lifted the match ball as he led Kent off, enveloped in a huge hug from head coach Adam Hollioake as he crossed the rope – not a bad debut performance.
Kent’s dismal start to the season has been transformed, with three wins in four games. Lancashire’s though, has slipped dangerously – this a third defeat in four. Marcus Harris was stranded on an immaculate 91, though for a time, as the crowd on the bleachers soaked in the afternoon sun, the unlikely seemed possible, as Keaton Jennings (61) and Liam Livingstone (47) stuck to the task.
Sussex leaped to the top of the Division One table with an innings victory over Glamorgan at Hove. Glamorgan batted with furrowed concentration second time around, with half centuries for Ben Kellaway (55) and Asa Tribe (64), but Sussex chipped away. Captain Tom Haines snaffled three wickets as did double-centurion James Coles, who put the full stop on a magical match by bowling Ryan Hadley.
Durham coach Ryan Campbell, buoyant after the innings defeat of Derbyshire, confirmed he expects Ben Stokes to play for his team next week. He also praised Matthew Potts, whose eight for 66 cannoned Durham to victory. “When you find out you’re not going to be selected [by England], you can go one of two ways,” said Campbell. “You can be down in the dumps, or you can be Matthew Potts and take eight wickets. It just shows the qualities of the man.”
Potts’ four wickets in 19 balls ended Derbyshire’s resistance, though Harry Came carried his bat for 105. Earlier Lewis Moody, on his fundraising cycle ride from Newcastle RUFC to Twickenham, had called in to Chester le Street.
Eighteen-year-old Tom Rew hit his maiden first-class century for Somerset, a delightfully racy knock, as they dominated Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.
England pulled Jordan Cox, fresh from his 204, out of Essex’s match against Leicestershire early as cover for Jamie Smith, whose partner is due to give birth to their second child. On the pitch, a dogged Leicestershire second innings, following on, hauled the game into a fourth day.
Preamble
Hello! Monday morning and there’s three empty places at the breakfast table – Chester-le-Street, Blackpool and Hove have all left early.
But there’s still lots to chew over – can Somerset’s bowlers run through the rest of Notts? Will Leicester’s dogged Sunday be in vain?Will Yorkshire pickle out Warwicks, Middlesex, Worcester and Northants stride up the table? All this and more, from 11am. Do join us.
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