Paul Collingwood
Paul Collingwood

Nottinghamshire v Durham: Scores & match report


The scores and report from Durham's Royal London One-Day Cup victory over Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.

Match scores (Trent Bridge)


Durham beat Nottinghamshire by four wickets

Nottinghamshire inns: 297 (49.5/50 overs. Hales 104, Root 66, Read 61; Wood 3-62, Weighell 3-66)

Durham inns: 299-6 (49.1/50 overs. Clark 92, Steel 77, Collingwood 73no; Ball 2-51, Broad 2-54)

Match report


Paul Collingwood rolled back the years to help Durham complete a remarkable four-wicket victory against Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge.

The 40-year old hit an unbeaten 73 as the visitors completed the chase with five balls remaining, after Alex Hales' fine century helped set a target of 298.

Collingwood scored his runs from only 47 balls, hitting a six and eight fours, the last of which sealed a highly-impressive Royal London One-Day Cup win.

Durham's chase had got off to the worst possible start when they lost captain Keaton Jennings first ball before slipping to eight for two, but a stand of 160 between Graham Clark and Cameron Steel revived hopes.

Clark made 92 from 94 balls and Steel accompanied him with 77 but when they fell it was left to Collingwood to guide them over the line.

Earlier, a century from Hales had been the backbone behind the hosts' innings. The England opener scored 104 and with half-centuries from Billy Root and Chris Read, Notts reached 297 before being bowled out one delivery short of their 50-over allocation.

Mark Wood and James Weighell each picked up three wickets for the visitors but Hales was dropped on three separate occasions and made Durham pay by advancing to the 15th one-day ton of his career.

Hales scored his runs from 103 balls, with eight fours and three huge sixes, one sailing straight through the open windows of the radio commentary boxes on the third floor of the Radcliffe Road Stand.

Weighell put Hales down on 27 and 93, both off the bowling of Chris Rushworth, and also had the misfortune to see wicketkeeper Stuart Poynter grass a low edge when the batsman was on 43.

Rushworth had put the hosts on the back foot early on, by removing Michael Lumb in the first over and Riki Wessels in the fifth but Samit Patel, in his benefit match, played nicely before lifting to the point boundary for 28.

Hales, who passed 5,000 one-day runs during his innings, was eventually dismissed by Weighell, with Ryan Pringle taking a well-judged catch in the deep.

Root and Read combined with a well-paced sixth-wicket stand of 101 in 11.5 overs, before both fell to consecutive deliveries from Paul Coughlin. Read made 61 from just 38 balls, with Root falling on 66.

That heralded a collapse which saw Notts slide from 288 for five to 297 all out, with Wood taking all of his wickets in the final over to finish with three for 62. Weighell, the competition's leading wicket-taker, took his tally to 16.

Notts would have been desperately keen to dismiss in-form Jennings early on but could not have envisaged getting his wicket as early as they did.

The left-hander, with two centuries already in this year's competition, clipped his first ball straight into the hands of Patel at point. Bowler Ball then struck again as Michael Richardson edged to slip to leave the chase in tatters at eight for two.

Clark and Steel both passed their previous best scores in a stand that spanned 32 overs, although Notts missed a couple of chances to end their stay.

Steven Mullaney put down a difficult slip catch when Steel was on two and then Hales dropped a far easier effort on the deep midwicket fence when the same player had 41.

James Pattinson, playing his 50th one-day match, trapped Clark lbw and then caught Steel at the start of the next over, off Harry Gurney.

Entering the final 10 overs Durham needed 93 runs from 60 balls but were powered to their target with Coughlin and Stuart Poynter both hitting sixes, before leaving it to Collingwood to hit Gurney for the winning boundary.

The victory lifts Durham up to second place in North Group, leapfrogging both Notts and Worcestershire, and despite their two-point penalty at the start of the campaign they are now very much on course to qualify for the knockout phase.

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