Keegan impresses on his big day
You could see the damp in the pitch even from the removed heights of the NatWest gherkin
Emma John at Lord's
07-May-2004
Middlesex 78 for 2 trail Lancashire 236 (Loye 101, Keegan 5-36) by 158 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
You could see the damp in the pitch even from the removed heights of the
NatWest gherkin. The bowlers were leaving long, deep prints that looked like
they'd been left by a particularly orderly mole. And while 236 wasn't a
great score for Lancashire, it was looking more healthy when Middlesex stumbled to 10 for 2 before they closed on 78 for 2.
Chad Keegan made the most of the conditions, taking his second five-for
of the season. It was a big day for him in all. The PA announced that he
would be awarded Seaxes player of the 2003 season at a ceremony later this
evening (let's hope that it wasn't supposed to be a surprise). And, perhaps
more importantly, Keegan unveiled his second hairdo of the Championship, a
pony-tail scraped back behind a white headband that was oddly reminiscent of
Jane Fonda in the 1980s.
His bowling was as lively as one of her workouts. Lancashire were starting
to settle at 193 for 4, and Mal Loye was tucking in to Paul Weekes's toothless
spin, when Keegan, who had been bowling a fraction short, adjusted his
length and reaped instant rewards with three wickets in an over. First Glen
Chapple played around an outswinger, then Loye, losing his concentration,
drove straight to mid-on, punching the air in anger. Dominic Cork was the final
victim, and when Nantie Hayward bowled Kyle Hogg off an inside edge next
over, Lancashire had lost four wickets in nine balls for one run.
No surprise Loye was frustrated - apart from a brief supporting role from
Chapple, he was the closest thing to backbone that Lancashire's batting
had. He was in fine touch from the moment he arrived at the crease,
flashing an ostentatious drive to point off Keegan in the 11th over, and
taking two boundaries off Hayward in the next. In all he played 14 fours in
his century, as well as a six that went into the Mound Stand. The only time
he looked off-key was when, having brought up his century with an imperious
drive over mid-on, he raised his bat in acknowledgement to the grandstand -
where not a soul sat.
Taking the field after tea, Cork made sure that Keegan would not be
the only member of the Nicky Clarke XI making an impact today. With Andrew
Strauss sleeping off his jetlag - the dedicated Middlesex captain had taken
the field despite flying in from the Caribbean early this morning - Cork had
both openers, Sven Koenig and Ben Hutton, lbw in his first and second overs. Owais Shah, dropped by Carl Hooper off Cork's fourth, looks like he could make the mistake
pay tomorrow.