Round Three of the 2026 County Championship

A look back at goings on in round three of the 2026 county championship, starting with a classic match at Southampton. Also a photo gallery.

At about 4:15PM UK time today the umpires at Northampton decided that it was too dark there to continue, and with that decision the third round of this year’s county championship was at an end, all the other games having been decided.

Hampshire and Somerset fought out an absolute thriller at Southampton. Somerset resumed overnight on 139-3, needing 148 more to win with seven wickets standing. The early loss of James Rew was counterbalanced by a fighting fifth wicket stand between Tom Abell and Will Smeed. Then in the run up to lunch both Smeed and Overton got out to ill-advised shots, and it was 197-6, 90 needed and four wickets left, with Gregory joining Abell. Progress in the afternoon was slow, as Hampshire made Abell and Gregory work hard for every run, but the score mounted imperceptibly at first, then noticeably. The ask was down to 25, and Somerset were looking definite favourites when speedster Sonny Baker, who has recently switched counties from Somerset to Hampshire, rattled Gregory’s stumps for his fourth scalp of the innings. Alfie Ogborne, promoted after his career best 38 in the first innings, failed this time, caught behind for 7 to give Baker a fifth scalp, and the score was 272-8. That brought Jack Leach, who of course has history when it comes to tight finishes (see the Headingley Heist) in to join his fellow Tauntonian Abell with 15 required, and Abell closing in on three figures. Like his spiritual forebear Horace Hazell, who made a habit of seeing partners to centuries and sides to narrow wins over the course of his career, Leach is well suited to this sort of situation. The score inched up until just four were needed. The next over went Hampshire;s way for five balls, but Abell managed a single off the sixth to reduce the ask to three and retain the strike. Kyle Abbott then accepted responsibility for bowling the next over, his 25th of the innings – a heavy workload for someone firmly at the veteran stage of his career. Abell got the very first ball of the new over away for four to take Somerset to a two wicket victory and himself to 101 not out. Abell had faced 229 balls in total, been at the crease for 314 minutes and that last boundary was only the eighth of his innings. A pitch which produces a pulsating match, and a definite result late on the final afternoon has to be rated perfect for the match it was prepared for, so props to the Hampshire ground staff. Full scorecard here.

A combination of an overly flat pitch and overly cautious umpires (I suspect given what I know of them that Mr Shanmugam was guiltier in this regard than Ms Redfern) had pretty much consigned the match at Wantage Road to a draw before today even started. Short of Northamptonshire ripping through Middlesex’s last eight wickets in the morning session it was hard to see any chance of any interest developing. In the event Middlesex lost no wickets in the morning session, and only one in the afternoon session. By the time I joined the coverage of this match, purely because it was the only game still in action, the only question was when hands would be shaken. In the event the light intervened shortly after the evening session got underway, and the game did not resume. The scores in this game were Middlesex 341 and 353-3, Northamptonshire 409, meaning that Middlesex were 284 ahead with seven second innings wickets standing – neither side within a country mile of winning. It is true that the light, and the overly cautious decisions of the umpires in this regard robbed the game of a good 80 overs, but even with those overs being bowled it would have taken a declaration in the Middlesex second innings to make things remotely interesting. Thus this pitch was not suitable for the match it was prepared for, since it would in any circumstances have required intervention (in the form of a declaration) to open up the possibility of a result.

Lancashire beat Gloucestershire by four wickets in the only game that I did not catch any of. The other match was between Warwickshire and Essex, and it was a low scoring, hard fought affair. Essex needed 206 to win in the final innings, exactly one run more than they had managed in their first innings. When they crashed to 82-7 it looked a foregone conclusion in Warwickshire’s favour, but a lower order fightback would have had Warwickshire just a teeny bit worried when the score had reached 163-8, 43 short of victory. However in the space of two overs and a single run from that point both Simon Harmer (32) and Zaman Akhtar (35) were dismissed by Beau Webster, Harmer falling to a fine slip catch by Yates and Akhtar misjudging an attempted big hit to hole out to Sam Hain. Though I only caught the final stages of this match, having been concentrating on the thriller at Southampton for most of the four days I can tell that it would have been a fine match.

My usual sign off…

A Battle Royal at Southampton

The match between Hampshire and Somerset in the 2026 county championship will have a definite result barring a dramatic downturn in the weather. However there is no telling which way it will go.

It looked for a long time like Hampshire would build a decisive advantage in the course of their second innings. At 269-4 they were 219 ahead with six wickets standing, and most would have anticipated a final advantage of at least 350 for them. However a fine spell of bowling by Lewis Gregory brought Somerset back in to it. The Plymouth born seamer had final innings figures of 5-42, including the last four wickets at a personal cost of five runs, as 310-6 became 336 all out, and Somerset were left needing 287 to win, one run less than they had managed first time round. The pitch is not showing any signs of serious mischief. Archie Vaughan started well, scoring 30 of the first 33 runs, but then got out. Joshua Thomas and Tom Lammonby have also both been dismissed, for 9 runs each. James Rew and Tom Abell are now batting together and have moved the score on from 52-3 to 79-3. Somerset will have memories of a match against Essex when they were set 325, slumped to 78-5 and ended up winning, while Hampshire will note that Somerset have a longish tail, with Smeed in next, then Overton and Gregory, both good all rounders, but both more bowler than batter, and finally Leach, Ogborne and Ball, of whom the first two can bat a bit, while the latter is a genuine number 11. Somerset Women are also in action, against Lancashire Women in the Women’s One Day Cup, in a match that is going to the wire, though by now Somerset’s hopes would seem to rest on Charlie Dean, who will have to shepherd the tail if Somerset are to score the 27 they still need with four wickets and six overs remaining.

While I have been preparing this post for publication Somerset have moved on to 95-3 against Hampshire, and Somerset Women are within sight of victory over Lancashire Women, with Jess Hazell providing Charlie Dean with good support. Lancashire Women appear to have messed up their handling of the bowlers – Mahika Gaur will not bowl a full allocation, which given that she has 1-19 approaching the end of her sixth over, and the fact that she is an England bowler looks horrendous.

My usual sign off…

Learn more

Hampshire v Somerset

A look at developments on the first two days of Hampshire v Somerset in the county championship and a large photo gallery.

There are only a few matches taking place in the county championship this week. One of them, which I am focussing on, is between Hampshire and Somerset.

I missed the entire morning session and the start of the afternoon session. Just as I was tuning in Hampshire, who had won the toss and chosen to bat, lost their fifth wicket with only 119 on the board. Two more wickets followed quickly before Jake Lehmann and the lower order staged a fightback, boosting the total to 238. Somerset lost three wickets fairly early, but then James Rew, surely soon to be an England cricketer, and Tom Abell took control of proceedings, and by the close Somerset were 154-3.

I again missed the morning session, this time due a commitment at the library. Hampshire took four wickets during the session. Somerset had gained a lead, but it looked like being a slender one when Jack Leach was run out to make it 250-9. Then Alfie Ogborne, culpable in the Leach run out, redeemed himself by scoring a new career best of 38 to boost the lead to exactly 50. Hampshire lost Toby Albert injured (though under new playing conditions for this season they can introduce a like for like substitute if they can find one) but no wicket fell until the score had reached 114, when Tom Prest was pinned LBW by Jake Ball. The score is now 119-1, a lead of 69 overall. Incidentally about the new substitutes rule there has been one would be injury replacement blocked, when Ajeet Singh Dale of Lancashire was injured yesterday, and they initially wanted to replace him with Tom Bailey, which the umpires deemed to be not sufficiently ‘like for like’, so Ollie Sutton was called in from a second XI match instead.

I have a bumper haul of photographs to share…