This match turned into relegation scrap on the third day with small advances from both sides. Fluent batting was at a premium as a significant canopy of cloud encouraged the Middlesex bowlers.
Alex Winter at Lord's11-Sep-2014
ScorecardPaul Collingwood was central to another Durham recovery•Getty Images
This match turned into relegation scrap on the third day with small advances from both sides. Fluent batting was at a premium as a significant canopy of cloud encouraged the Middlesex bowlers. But just when Durham were struggling, Captain Fantastic was on hand once again.Durham do not have to contemplate life without Paul Collingwood for at least one more year after he signed on for another season but sometime in the not-too-distant future, there will be no Collingwood recovery.Two years ago Durham were as Elton John sung, only for Collingwood to retake the captaincy, rescue his side from relegation and, after the Chester-le-Street boardroom LP had played out , led them to another Championship title last season.Here, Durham’s chance to dominate a match where victory should ensure their Division One safety was drifting away before Collingwood made a robust half-century and the lower-order rallied to take Durham far into the lead. It was more Collingwood-like that for the second time in the match after a first-innings 59, he did not go on to make a more eye-catching total. The contribution was just enough and perfectly timed.The third day at Lord’s was murkier and cooler – more Durham really, and Collingwood settled in to ensure his side held the whip hand tight. It was 19 balls before he got off the mark with a boundary off Tim Murtagh. He combined resolute defence in the most testing conditions of this match with aggression when it was required – including three sixes over the short boundary – to wrestle the initiative back from the hosts who sensed a way back into the match after two days of cricket as tired as the Lord’s square.Had Collingwood been held on 12 by Dawid Malan diving to his right at second slip, Middlesex could have been on their way to a target after tea. Instead, they saw Captain Fantastic in the next over pull Steven Finn into the Tavern Stand and drive him through the covers before adding another six into the Mound Stand. A slog sweep into the Tavern off Ollie Rayner raised his fifty in 70 balls.Murtagh rues lack of killer instinct
Tim Murtagh insisted his side were still in the game despite facing a huge target and bemoaned his side’s knack of not being able to finish sides off.
“I think we bowled a lot better as a group today. The conditions probably aided us – it was overcast, heavy kind of quite humid conditions perfect for swing and seam bowling really.
“I thought Toby bowled the best I’ve seen him bowl. He bowled worse at Northampton and picked up 13 in the game. He was outstanding. We’re still in this game and we’re still fighting.
“But we’re lacking firepower in the bowling. We’re lacking an out and out fourth seamer, we’re missing Gareth Berg a lot this season. He hasn’t played at all so the makeup of our side has been very different.
“We haven’t had that proper fourth seamer, which I think we’re trying to rectify for next season. Dexy has done a good job but we’ve struggled a bit from our spin side, we haven’t had many wickets from them.”
It appeared the Captain and the Kid had stepped into the ring as Collingwood and Ben Stokes played carefully for a partnership of 40 after lunch but the captain’s Brown Dirt Cowboy was Gordon Muchall, who finished undefeated on 74 – just his second score over fifty of the season – and shared with Collingwood a stand of 79 at four-an-over to push the lead over 300. Muchall was also dropped, to a very sharp chance in the gully on 28, but initially guided by his skipper, kicked Durham on with the lower order, including John Hastings’ punchy 28.Durham began the day a comfortable 129 ahead with eight wickets in hand but lost both Phil Mustard and Mark Stoneman within seven overs – both caught behind off Murtagh. And when Borthwick was held very well by wicketkeeper John Simpson diving low to his left, Murtagh had a fourth wicket and Durham were five down only 200 ahead.But again Middlesex could not put the hammer down. There was much better support for Murtagh this time. Roland-Jones in particular was unlucky to only pick up Stokes lbw and No. 10 Chris Rushworth slapping to cover, having beaten the bat so many times during the day. Three times in three balls he defeated Hastings and he stood in the middle of the wicket, shoulders slumped, as if his wing mirror had been clipped and shattered.It was perhaps indicative of Middlesex’s attack throughout the season. Thought potent enough to perhaps deliver a title challenge they have leaned on Murtagh heavily again. This time he took four of the first five wickets to fall and later returned to have Hastings caught at cover to complete a fourth 10-wicket haul in first-class cricket. His second five-for of the match took him past 50 wickets in a season for the sixth time in seven years. He has been awarded a benefit for 2015.Somewhat unfortunately for Middlesex they eventually bowled Durham out with a tricky 13 overs left in the day – about the time a declaration would have come anyway – and an interruption for bad light split those into two mini sessions.In the first, Hastings swung one up the slope to have Chris Rogers lbw for 4. He made an unbeaten 241 when Middlesex chased a ridiculous 472 to beat Yorkshire here in April. The miracle worker was gone. In the second, Sam Robson played a confident punch down the ground, cut two boundaries and took four more fours off his hip to suggest this time he could lead Middlesex’s heroics on day four.