Barnard and Malik follow Latham's lead as Surrey made to toil
Warwickshire pile up 665 for 5 declared - their highest score against Surrey - in placid conditions
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10-May-2025 • 3 hrs ago
Ed Barnard took his innings on to 177 not out • Getty Images
Surrey 98 for 1 Warwickshire 665 for 5 dec (Latham 184, Barnard 177*, Malik 105*) by 567 runs
Warwickshire exploited perfect batting conditions to pile up 665 for 5, their record score against Surrey, on the second day of the Rothesay County Championship Division One match at Edgbaston.
Tom Latham struck 184 off 319 balls, the highest score by a Warwickshire debutant, Ed Barnard harvested a career-best 177 not out from 254 and Zen Malik helped himself to a maiden century - 105 not out off 119 - as batters gorged themselves on a road of a pitch prepared to nullify the champions' bowling threat.
Surrey then embarked upon the long haul towards the follow-on figure of 516 and reached 98 for 1 at the halfway point of a match which will require some spectacular bowling if it is not to end in a draw. Just two wickets fell from a full quota of overs on the second day.
After Warwickshire resumed on the second morning on 364 for 4, Latham and Barnard extended their partnership to 169 in 37 overs. Latham reached 150 from 263 balls and, after 400 minutes at the crease, was chugging towards a double-century in untroubled fashion when, to unanimous surprise, he edged Tom Lawes to wicketkeeper Ben Foakes.
A debut double-ton eluded the New Zealander but his 184 is the highest by a player on his first-class debut for Warwickshire, displacing the 173 by John Whitehouse against Oxford University at The Parks in 1971.
Surrey should have immediately added another wicket in the next over when Barnard, on 78, chopped Dan Lawrence to point but twelfth man James Taylor put down the simplest of catches. Barnard fully exploited the reprieve to advance to his ninth first-class century as Malik, playing only his second first-class game, settled in alongside him. The proud sons of Shrewsbury and Stoke-on-Trent respectively ruthlessly took advantage of a toiling attack which at times operated with eight fielders on the boundary.
Malik's maiden ton arrived in the last over before tea, the pair having banished the oldest partnership record for Warwickshire against Surrey from the history books. Their 215 consigned the 199 by Dick Lilley and Charles Baker at The Oval in 1906 to history. Baker bailed out of cricket early to become a professional cartoonist. Surrey's bowlers may consider a similar career move if they encounter more pitches like this.
After the teatime declaration it was the turn of Warwickshire's bowlers to suffer. Ethan Bamber (9-2-14-0) bowled the best spell of the match so far and Barnard's happy day continued when he trapped Rory Burns lbw. But Ryan Patel got off the mark by pulling Beau Webster for six and, alongside former Warwickshire favourite Dominic Sibley, saw it through to the close to lay a solid foundation for tomorrow's grind towards that lofty follow on figure.