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Cricket round-up: Bizarre end to Sussex's win

Sunday 13 July 1997 23:02 BST
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Sussex beat Gloucestershire by one wicket in the Sunday League but only thanks to one of those curiosities that keeps amateur umpires and keen students of the laws busy.

Mark Robinson, Sussex's No 11, was stumped by Jack Russell off Mark Alleyne only for the umpire, Allan Jones, to give the host's victory by signalling for a wide. That bizarre end gave Sussex only their second win on a Sunday this season.

Sussex, set a modest victory target of 142, took 22 balls to score their first run and it needed Keith Greenfield's battling 62 to approach Gloucestershire's score.

The Hampshire captain, John Stephenson, answered his critics with a career- best Sunday League bowling performance as his side cruised to an 88-run victory over Worcestershire at Southampton.

Stephenson, under fire following last week's exit from the NatWest Trophy at the hands of Glamorgan and in a personal slump of form with the bat, claimed 6 for 33.

He brought to an end a potentially match-winning innings from Graeme Hick, who hit a six and three fours on his way to 48. He and Tom Moody put on 92 for the second wicket but Worcestershire then struggled and were all out for 145 as they chased 233.

A half-century from David Hemp carried Warwickshire to the top of the League as they achieved a target of 137 in 17 overs with three balls to spare against Durham at Chester-le-Street.

The five-wicket win in a rain-interrupted match looked unlikely when Hemp went in at 37 for 2 in the eighth over, but the left-hander hit the first two balls he faced from James Boiling for two and six, and reached his first one-day fifty for his new county off only 20 balls.

The match was initially reduced to 32 overs a side after an hour's delay and another downpour terminated Durham's innings when they had made 174 for 2 from 27.4 overs. Stewart Hutton hit eight fours in his 57 and Martin Speight made 64 not out off 56 balls.

Yorkshire's hopes of claiming the title took a heavy blow when they fell to defeat by 114 runs against Derbyshire. They were never in a one-sided contest and lost with 7.2 overs to spare.

Derbyshire dominated from the moment Byas put them in, with Adrian Rollins and Chris Adams racing to 50 in only seven overs before Richard Stemp and Peter Hartley applied the brake. Hartley had Rollins taken at short mid-wicket for 36 and Gul Khan fell to a low catch by Craig White at short extra cover for six but that was the end of Yorkshire's success.

The rest of the attack was savaged by Adams and Vince Clarke, who shared an unbroken stand of 158 - a Derbyshire third-wicket record in the Sunday League. Adams' century, which followed a NatWest Trophy hundred on Wednesday, came off 104 balls while Clarke's 77 occupied only 68 deliveries.

Derbyshire's 259 for 2 was also their highest Sunday League total against Yorkshire, who never looked like seriously reaching that total. Byas and White were dismissed in the first four overs and Andrew Harris ripped through the lower order to finish with 4 for 22 as Yorkshire subsided to 145 all out.

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