Shafayat leads Northants fight
Bilal Shafayat led a Northamptonshire fightback on the first day at The Oval with 91 after they had fallen to 183 for 6.
Andrew McGlashan at The Oval
02-Aug-2006
Surrey 3 for 0 (Newman 2*, Batty 1*) trail Northamptonshire 347 (Shafayat 91, Phillips 65, Rogers 59) by 344 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Wessels left because he believed he couldn't take the club any further although, in truth, they haven't come that far under his guidance and are languishing near the foot of division two. But with the slipshod batting of the first session it was possible to why Wessles would have been pulling out his remaining hair. David Capel, the man in charge until the end of the season, has the tough task can't be expected to turn things around this summer but he will have been hearted at the fight shown after the early collapse.
To lose four wickets before lunch at The Oval needs one of two things; exceptional bowling or wasteful batting. Northamptonshire provided the latter in bucket loads. Only Stephen Peters can be partly excused after being squared-up by a decent delivery from Mohammad Akram and edging to gully.
The shots of Chris Rogers, Usman Afzaal and David Sales left much to be desired. Rogers - back after the Top End series in Australia - returned in place of Sourav Ganguly and battled fluently for his half-century, being especially strong down the ground. But a limp pull against Nayan Doshi picked out square leg before Usman Afzaal chipped one back to Anil Kumble. Moments before lunch David Sales inexplicably lofted Doshi mid-off.
It would have been easy for Northamptonshire to have folded given their current state of upheaval but it is to their credit, and especially Shafayat's, that the innings remained afloat and began to flourish. Shafayat is only batting at No. 6 because of taking on the wicketkeeping duties from the injured Rikki Wessels.
He had a moment of fortune when he was missed by by Scott Newman, at short leg, on 33. But he rode his luck well and wasn't afraid to take the attacking route with some handsome straight driving off the spinners and his half-century came off 105 balls. Ben Phillips, no mean No. 8, provided powerful support in a century stand for the seventh wicket which knocked the wind out of Surrey's sails.
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Shafayat's innings was studded with glimpses of his huge talent which has yet to be fully realised in his five-year career. There are rumours that he will be heading back to Nottinghamshire, where he began, next season to replace the retiring Darren Bicknell and being settled in one place would surely help his career. His quick footwork stood out here as he played Kumble with confidence and a century was there for the taking when he skied Salisbury to cover
The three Surrey spinners shared eight of the wickets and performed well together. Kumble kept the batsmen guessing although sent down an unusually high number of loose deliveries. Doshi produced some teasing flight while Salisbury continued his impressive season, taking his tally to 42. Salisbury and Kumble - two legspinners who have enjoyed contrasting careers - finished level pegging after this outing.
But the strength of Northamptonshire's fightback is shown by the last five wickets adding 164. At one stage one batting bonus point would have been a decent effort; when Jason Brown was the last man out to give Salisbury a deserved third wicket they would have been disappointed to miss out on four points. Maybe Capel has something work with after all.
Andrew McGlashan is editorial assistant of Cricinfo