Sussex seal hard-fought win despite Jack Libby's Hove comforts
Opener makes 167 but Worcestershire fall short in valiant fourth-innings chase
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12-May-2025 • 9 mins ago

Jake Libby made 167 but finished on the losing side • Getty Images
Sussex 284 (Carson 102, Haines 53, Taylor 5-56) and 256 (Alsop 72, Coles 68) beat Worcestershire 180 (Hudson-Prentice 5-40) and 313 (Libby 167, Karvelas 3-52, Robinson 3-66) by 47 runs
Sussex's persevering seam attack finally broke Worcestershire's determined resistance - led by Jake Libby's 167 - to claim their second win since promotion back to Division One in the Rothesay County Championship.
No opponent loves batting at Hove more than Libby, who has now made the three highest scores of his career at the 1st Central County Ground. And while he was there to anchor their chase, Worcestershire looked capable of overhauling a target of 361.
But having seen off another testing spell by Ollie Robinson with the new ball, Libby was caught off Robinson's replacement Fynn Hudson-Prentice. His was the eighth wicket to fall with 75 still needed and Robinson got belated rewards for an excellent performance when took the last two wickets after tea to seal victory by 47 runs.
There was little assistance in the pitch, even on the fourth day, for Sussex's spinners, so it was left to their seam bowlers - led by the indefatigable Robinson - to take the seven wickets needed at the start of the final day which began with Worcestershire requiring 244.
It was no surprise that Libby offered supreme resistance. He made his career-best 215 in this fixture in 2022 followed by 198 a year later. Here, having resumed on 64, he batted superbly especially against Robinson who beat the bat on numerous occasions, regularly challenged the stumps and could easily have finished with five or six wickets.
During a nine-over spell at the start of the day Robinson thought he'd removed Libby on 86 to a catch behind the wicket but umpire James Middlebrook remained unmoved and shortly before lunch Libby moved to the 18th first-class hundred of his career, from 180 balls.
Hudson-Prentice had picked up nightwatchman Ben Allison in the second over of the day but Sussex only took one more wicket in the morning session when Ethan Brookes played on to Ari Karvelas.
Skipper Brett D'Oliveira helped Libby put on 81 in 22 overs either side of lunch with few alarms but with the new ball due Tom Clark made an important breakthrough when he bowled D'Oliveira through the gate for 29.
Matthew Waite then gave Libby solid support. They survived another outstanding spell by the luckless Robinson down the slope with Waite batting for an hour before Karvelas tempted him into driving at an outswinger and James Coles took a sharp, low catch at third slip.
Libby still looked as if he could still guide Worcestershire home but when Hudson-Prentice replaced Robinson he broke through straight away, tempting Libby into a rare loose drive which Clark, diving to his right, clung onto at second slip. Libby had batted for six-and-a-half hours, faced 252 balls and hit 22 fours and departed to a fully deserved standing ovation from an appreciative Sussex audience.
Fateh Singh was put down behind the stumps by John Simpson off Jack Carson on 7 but it didn't prove costly. Robinson returned for a third spell after tea and finally got some belated reward when Singh took on a short ball and Tom Haines raced in from the midwicket boundary to take a well-judged catch.
Robinson wrapped up victory in emphatic style in his next over when he sent Ben Gibbon's off stump cartwheeling to finish with 3 for 66 from 29.2 overs.