Somerset 335 for 5 (Rew 86, Abell 74*, Lammonby 73) vs Sussex
Abell has now hit more than 25 in his last 14 Championship innings stretching back to last summer. There were two wickets for Tom Haines, while Sussex skipper Ollie Robinson bowled well in short spells to take one for 28 from 13 overs.
Somerset’s new overseas recruit Jordan Hermann, signed for three Championship games, was selected to open the batting with Josh Thomas, allowing Rew to drop back down to number four. The 25-year-old South African left-hander acquitted himself well against the new ball and scored his first runs for the county with two to fine leg off Robinson’s opening over of the match.
But Somerset’s attempts to solve top order batting problems suffered another setback when Thomas, on seven, fell leg before to a ball from Robinson angled into him from around the wicket. Hermann followed with the total on 46, having contributed a solid 25, another lbw victim, this time for Haines, trying to pull a short of a length delivery.
That was as good as it got for Sussex in a morning session played out under sunny skies on an easy-paced pitch, which saw several edges fall short of the slip cordon. Rew, who had been in prime form before two unsuccessful games as an opener, began scratchily, but gradually rediscovered his touch as he and Lammonby took the score to 107 for two at lunch.
A swept six by Rew off Jack Carson in the final over before the interval had brought the hundred up, but two balls later the Somerset wicketkeeper was given a life when dropped by James Coles at mid-wicket. He was unbeaten on 26 at the interval, with Lammonby having progressed fluently to 44.
Lammonby moved to his second half-century of the season at the start of the afternoon session with his eighth boundary, dispatched through backward point off Tom Clark. Rew then had another escape with his score on 37, Coles again the culprit, spilling a straightforward chance at first slip off Henry Crocombe.
Batting was looking comfortable as Rew lofted off-spinner Carson for six over long-off, shortly after reaching his fifty off 94 balls. But just when it seemed that both Somerset men were on course for centuries, they undid their good work with surprising errors.
First Lammonby gave Carson the charge and presented wicketkeeper John Simpson the simplest of stumpings to make it 170 for three. Then after Abell had helped add 44 for the fourth wicket, Rew, who had accelerated impressively in the afternoon sunshine, played an ugly shot off left-arm spinner Coles and skyed a catch to cover.
By tea, Somerset had progressed to 238 for four, with Abell unbeaten on 23. The final session began with Archie Vaughan clipping a Carson full-toss through the covers for a boundary that brought up 250 and a first Somerset batting point.
An Abell six over long-on off Carson brought up another fifty stand.
Abell then went to his sixth Championship half-century in ten innings this summer – two of them converted into hundreds – off 93 balls, never looking in the slightest bother.
Sussex took the second new ball at 285 for four and it accounted for Vaughan, caught behind driving a wide swinging ball from Clark for 29. But Craig Overton played well to help Abell add 38 before the close.






