Day 3 Durham 457 for eight declared vs Leicestershire 143 & 13 for nought
Day 2 Durham 457/8 dec lead Leicestershire 96/6 by 361
David Bedingham passed 1000 runs for the season before Ben Raine and Vishwa Fernando ran through Leicestershire’s top order to leave them in a perilous position on Day 2 of their LV = Insurance County Championship game at Seat Unique Riverside
Durham pushed the tempo early looking to secure maximum batting points and declare with Storm Agnes threatening to ruin prospects of play in the afternoon and after resuming on 409-5, Bedingham moved to 1000 first class runs for the season.
He then went to 150 in the game with a 6 and an all-run 4 as Durham looked to accelerate towards a declaration.
Jonathan Bushnell and Paul Coughlin were out slogging as Durham declared on 457/8, before Raine and Fernando took over.
Raine dismissed the top 4 in the hour before lunch, Fernando picking up his first two wickets for Durham before rain arrived at 1:45, before play was eventually called for the day at 15:40.
Durham continued their championship celebrations on day 2 with Bedingham steering them to a position of great strength with glorious shots as he raced to his milestones.
Bushnell tried to follow suit but skied Hull to Sam Evans at cover for 19 before Tom Scriven cleaned up Bedingham for an outstanding 156 as Leicestershire picked up their second bowling point.
Paul Coughlin and Ben Raine saw Durham to maximum batting points for the 8th time this season before Coughlin’s wicket brought the declaration, leaving Leicestershire just over an hour to bat before lunch.
They made a slow but steady start until Ben Raine got into his groove, removing Rishi Patel’s off stump, before bowling Sam Evans, pinning Umar Amin and Louis Kimber LBW first ball in the same over in a remarkable spell of bowling as the clouds and lights came into play.
Leicestershire returned after lunch to grey clouds and full lights illuminating the ground as the hosts zoned in on the stumps.
Fernando picked up his maiden wicket in Durham colours as Harry Swindells chopped on to the Sri Lankan international to leave Leicestershire in real trouble at 74/5. He then picked up Lewis Hill LBW three balls later for 25 as the wickets continued to tumble.
Scriven and Ben Cox started to show signs of a mini partnership, flashing shots away to the boundary as they attempted to drag Leicestershire out of a hole that seemed to only get deeper with every passing ball.
The rain that threatened to wipe out most of the afternoon started to arrive at 1:45 and the umpires took the players from the field five minutes later, not to return for the remainder of the day.
Day 1 Durham 409/5
Graham Clark and David Bedingham both scored hundreds as Division 2 winners Durham looked to end the season with a victory as they piled on the runs on day 1 of their LV=Insurance County Championship Division 2 fixture against Leicestershire.
Leicestershire looked to have made the correct decision at the toss to bowl as they dismissed Alex Lees for 6. However, Michael Jones and Scott Borthwick put on 99 for the second wicket to check their progress at Seat Unique Riverside.
The visitors then fought back in the early afternoon as they dismissed Borthwick and Jones either side of lunch, before Ollie Robinson fell in a spell of 3-34.
Bedingham and Clark stole the initiative and the momentum of the day, as they shared a 208 run partnership in the mid afternoon and early evening as Durham looked to finish the season on a high after being confirmed as winners last week.
On a week of celebration for the North East outfit as they ended their 7 year absence from Division 1, the sun hid away early on as Leicestershire won the toss and decided to bowl on an overcast morning at Chester-le-Street.
They were rewarded early on when Chris Wright pinned Lees to dismiss the leading run scorer in the County Championship for 6 in the 5th over of the game.
The ball moved around early on, Jones very fortunate to not be bowled by an absolute snorter by Wright that somehow didn’t take the edge of the bat or remove his off stump.
However, Durham were not dissuaded by this and carried on in the same way they have done all season, applying pressure back onto the bowlers with their positive approach to batting with Jones and skipper Scott Borthwick.
Borthwick took the aggressor role in the partnership and went to 50 off 45 balls with a clip through midwicket as Leicestershire tried desperately for a breakthrough to try and keep their slim promotion hopes alive.
The visitors broke the partnership on 99 when Tom Scriven had Borthwick caught behind by Ben Cox standing up to the stumps just before lunch for a punchy 63, following his unbeaten 134 against Worcester.
One brought two as Jones was bowled by Scriven first ball after the lunch break for 37, after surviving the moving ball earlier on in the day as the lights were intermittently.
Their resistance continued as Ollie Robinson clipped Scriven to mid wicket in a burst of 3-34 as they looked to make the most of their decision to bowl first.
However, the afternoon momentum then turned back to the hosts as David Bedingham and Graham Clark shared a 50 run partnership as the change bowlers failed to exert the same control and pressure.
Clark moved to 50 off 52 balls as his comeback season in red ball continued in fine fettle, and Bedingham got his half century off 67 deliveries as the pair shifted momentum back towards the champions.
The pair moved past the 100 partnership with ease, bringing Durham their 50th batting bonus point and thus a new club record for most batting points achieved in a single season.
Leicestershire looked devoid of bowling options outside of Wright and Scriven as the pitch favoured batting, as Bedingham and Clark eased through the gears in the afternoon session following the loss of Robinson.
Clark then moved to his third century of the season with a pull through the leg side Louis Kimber’s off spin, before Wright returned with the new ball to pin him LBW for a superb 119.
Bedingham went to his fifth century of the season and 10t in a Durham shirt off 158 balls with a gentle push through the covers as Durham looked to assert total dominance of the game, before bad light brought a slightly premature end to the day.