Hampshire v Somerset, Warwickshire v Essex, and more: county cricket – live

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Dark skies, covers on.The forecast predicts showers moving away so we might get more play this evening.Gloucs are almost into the Lancs tail now as Matt Taylor picks up a fourth – George Balderson for a thoughtful 19-ball- duck.Paul Coughlin, who had such a great match last week at OT, joins Hurst (8 not out).Lancs 174-7, lead Gloucs by 38.

Nick Gubbins gets a second life soon after tea, let through his fingers by Lewis Gregory at first slip,Hampshire have made up the deficit without losing a wicket, though they have lost Toby Albert to a twinged leg,DIVISION ONESouthampton: Hampshire 238 and 38-0 v Somerset 288Edgbaston: Warwickshire 190 v Essex 79-2DIVISION TWOBristol: Gloucestershire 136 v Lancashire 170-6Northampton: Northants 149-4 v Middlesex 341Another wicket at Bristol, Arav Shetty flicking the long-legged Henry Brookes high in the air where it falls gently to Boorman at deep backward square,Lancs 170-6, a lead of 34,Matt Taylor 3-19.

Albert shuffles off the pitch, leaning on his bat, retired on 17,Tom Prest replaces him, wheeling his bat round and round,Hampshire 22-0,Paul Walter and Charlie Allison have got Essex going again after Ethan Bamber and Keith Barker removed Dean Elgar and Luc Benkenstein cheaply,Essex 79-2, 111 behind Warwickshire.

Oh dear,Toby Albert looks in a bit of trouble at Southampton,He’s taken off his left pad, is sitting on the grass and giving it a massage,Everyone mills about, Hampshire 22-0 in their second innings,At Wantage Road, Saif Zaib has been out cheaply, yet to pass 20 this season.

Gut Nathan McSweeney’s unbeaten 52 has helped Northants to 129 for four,Wow, Lancashire are making a dog’s dinner of their innings against the mighty Gloucestershire,They’ve just lost four for 25, including Marcus Harris for 11,Lancs 151-5, Jennings out for 70,Lancs 151-5, lead by 15.

And that’s that! Alfie Ogborne c and b Eddie Jack for an excellent 38.Somerset’s lead a quite handy fifty.This must now be very irritating for Hampshire.Abbott throws a bouncer into the pitch but Ogborne ducks easily away.He’s now 38 not out and the Somerset lead 50.

Josh Bohannon will be kicking himself not to cash in against Gloucestershire, squared up by a smashing ball from Matt Taylor, and loses his bails.Keaton Jenning 62 not out, eyes on the three-figures prize.Lancs 129-2.only seven runs behind.Apologies to those of you without a Telegraph link, but the excellent Will Macpherson, once of this parish etc, has drawn up a list of the best Championship players of the 21st century.

To sum up: fifth, Marcus Trescothick; fourth, Ryan Sidebottom; third, Mark Ramprakash; second, Darren Stevens; first, Mushtaq Ahmed.Ogborne plonks Dawson for four, then a towering straight six.This is an interesting read on a potential Africa Cup T20 competition.How Ball survived that over, I’m not entirely sure.Some entertaining backing away and wild yahooing.

If you’ve got a few minutes, Jake Ball v Sonny Baker is worth tuning into,“Hi Tanya,” hello Geoff Wignall!“Ali Martin is of course quite right (how often is he wrong? -enough of that, Ed) on the subject of substitutes,“I can’t for the life of me comprehend how a right arm seamer, however redoubtable, chosen as a twelfth man can be adjudged an unfair improvement on the right arm seamer picked ahead of him,“Is Peter Such trolling the Lancs selection process?”A silly mix up at Southampton,Ogborne starts to run, stops, weakly sends a harrying Leach back, who is then out by a easy few inches.

Somerset 250 for nine.The lead just 12 over Hampshire.I feel like I’ve been transported back in time watching Keith Barker hoop the ball past groping openers in his first spell back at Edgbaston.Difference these days being that Warwickshire don’t have a spinner like Jeetan Patel to bowl into the pancakes his big size 12s create.Sonny Baker is in over 15 now, he’s put in a good shift.

Always throws both hands in the air as he finishes his follow through – so close, they say, so close.Northants are three down for not much, in the Middlesex mould, a couple of wickets for TRJ, the walking exemplar of of indefatigable.I wonder if Saif Zaib will have another miracle summer, currently 10 not out.Northants 63-3.Somerset have a lead thanks to captain fantastic Craig Overton, but no more, as he flat-splats Liam Dawson to Gubbins, out for thirty.

Somerset 242-8.If you just heard thunder crack above your head in the Birmingham area, it’s because I asked Ali about the subs rule.“I hate it.I think cricket is an endurance sport, in part.Beareavement etc, fine of course.

”“I also think the like-for-like becomes daft if they’re judging it on experience (Bailey not allowed for Singh Dale),”All up and going again after lunch, so far without great incident,​I’ve just popped into breezy Edgbaston for a spell and the last of the Warwickshire wickets to fall, with Nathan Gilchrist eventually fiddling Sam Cook into the cordon off the edge to see the home side 190 all out,Sam Hain finishes unbeaten on 88, having just about kept the walls from falling in,Essex have had to be patient today, which, given the quality of Cook and Co, suggests a pitch doing plenty yesterday does ease a touch when the ball gets older.

Big session coming up,DIVISION ONESouthampton: Hampshire 238 v Somerset 214-7Edgbaston: Warwickshire 190 v EssexDIVISION TWOBristol: Gloucestershire 136 v Lancashire 73-1Northampton: Northants 42-3 v Middlesex 341Some sustenance for Glos fans – Matt Taylor has had the boom-box Luke Wells caught for 27 – Lancs 60-1,Zafar Gohar was last man out for Middlesex, a third wicket for Conway,Middx 341, a good fightback from 20 for three,Northants 29-0 in reply.

Hampshire have worked hard to reduce Somerset to 210-7, still trail by 28,Rew out for 86, Sonny Baker bowling rockets at Jack Leach,Sam Hain’s unbeaten 83 has taken Warwickshire to respectability – 183 for nine against Essex,A fab little factoid from Simon Hughes at Southampton: Lewis Gregory (bowled, 2) has now got out to Kyle Abbot for the ninth time in 13 matches,Somerset 207-7, trail by 31.

I’d not seen this before, Mark Alleyne talking to The Cricketer about spin bowlers“There is still no data to suggest that spinners win you Championships,You are right that they do bowl overs and can help you manage your seam attack, but if you haven’t got the right spinner, then it’s probably a false economy,”Ooof and meanwhile at Southampton, an incredible ball by Kyle Abbott, a bullet, swerves in to remove Gregory’s off stump,,Somerset 204 for seven, trail by 34,Big Craig still there though.

Somerset suddenly look at risk of not reaching parity.They’ve lost three for 18 this morning, as Lewis Gregory joins Craig Overton at the crease.193 for six, trail by 45.Three wickets for Codi Yusuf.Keaton Jennings, in his first innings for Lancs of the year, is up and running.

One four, squeezed through the slips.Lancs 37-0.And tentative Will Smeed is caught, finally going for the big hit, but snaffled on boundary by Baker.I do hope red-ball cricket works for him, he probably only needs one good innings.A good shift by Sanderson, 19 overs, and gets his reward, a fifth wicket, Tom.

Helm, caught at fine leg.Middlesex will be pleased with their efforts though – 341-9, Zohar 83 not out.A couple of quick wickets at Edgbaston, now 145 for nine.At Southampton, Will Smeed, another slow start, nought off 21 balls, lassoos down the pitch to Liam Dawson, but the keeper can’t whip the bails off.Somerset 181 for four.

With a gentle fist pump and a shy wave of the bat, Sam Hain celebrates fifty,He and Barker (22) have pulled Warwicks towards a kind of respectability – 144 for seven,Hundred-watch in vain as Rew uncharacteristically skews a half volley from Yusuf to backward point,Somerset 175-4,At Southampton, Kyle Abbott is hustling with admirable vigour.

Baker still running in from the other end, elbows horizontally churning.Rew (85) and Abell (41) have now put on a hundred for the fourth wicket.Somerset 175-3, 63 behind.And three for Jimmy Anderson, two in an over, old teammate Will Williams lbw and Henry Brookes caught.Gloucestershire all out 136, and I predict a couple of days of toil in the field.

Luckily, there are no games north of the Midlands in this round.The Met Office promise: a mix of sunshine and showers across northern areas today, with some heavy and a risk of hail.Drier and brighter further south, although a few showers developing across Wales and the Midlands into the afternoon.Pleasant in any sunshine.Kevin James on Sonny Baker: “He’s very exciting this year, he’s always up and you now.

” Which is music to a selector’s ear.I like watching Baker too, he’s like a very energetic and giant springer spaniel.Down at Bristol, Jimmy Anderson has his first wicket of the innings, Matt Taylor’s stumps clattered.Glos 124-7.I settle down in front of Youtube but instead of events from Southampton, my son has put on Lancs v Gloucestershire.

We watch a maiden from the eager Balderson before I put my foot down,Controversy over the new substitute ruling continued to rumble on after Lancs were not allowed to swap Tom Bailey in for the injured Ajeet Singh Dale in the match at Bristol,Both Bailey and Singh Dale are right arm seamers, but match referee Peter Such ruled that Bailey, who came on as 12th man fielder to replace Singh Dale, was too experienced, and instead Lancs had to call on left-arm allrounder Ollie Sutton, who was at a second XI game at Grace Road,By the time Sutton got to the ground, everyone else had left,“There’s always going to be grey areas but if Tom had bowled the next ball, I don’t think anyone would have batted an eyelid,” Lancashire head coach Steven Croft said
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Monday’s Mandelson showdown could be Starmer’s last stand | John Crace

On days like these you reckon the prime minister would have more chance of being believed if he had said the dog ate his homework. After all, it’s quite possible that Keir Starmer has not yet realised he doesn’t have a dog. His amnesia and lack of curiosity are a piece of performance art. Almost up there with Boris Johnson. Keir would probably take that as a compliment

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Starmer was left in dark about Mandelson’s vetting by two other top civil servants

Keir Starmer was left in the dark about sensitive information relating to Peter Mandelson’s security vetting by two other top civil servants, including the head of the civil service, the Guardian can reveal.The prime minister said on Friday that it was “unforgivable” and “staggering” that senior officials did not tell him that Mandelson failed a security vetting process weeks before he took up his role as ambassador to Washington.Olly Robbins was forced out of his job as permanent secretary of the Foreign Office on Thursday after it was revealed his department granted Mandelson developed vetting clearance against the advice of the relevant agency.Now the Guardian can reveal that two other top civil servants, including the cabinet secretary, Antonia Romeo, failed to immediately notify him when they discovered that UK Security Vetting (UKSV) had advised that Mandelson should be denied clearance.The Cabinet Office maintains that there was no undue delay because the civil servants were engaged in a process of “expedited checks” aimed at informing the prime minister as quickly as possible

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Peter Mandelson’s vetting and where the blame lies | Letter

The enormous controversy about the vetting process leading up to, and following, the appointment of Peter Mandelson as UK ambassador in Washington reveals a labyrinth within Whitehall and our constitution – which is a revelation even to those of us who have been in public life for over half a century (Revealed: Mandelson failed vetting but Foreign Office overruled decision, 16 April).Three quite separate elements can appear contradictory, but can all be true at the same time. So, Keir Starmer could have been entirely telling the truth at the dispatch box last September when he said that all processes had been followed.It can be true that all existing processes were followed during the vetting process, but did not lead to any report back to the prime minister or other relevant ministers, because it has not been standard practice to notify politicians following such procedures. Of course, Peter Mandelson was not a civil servant, and the “normal” procedure was therefore not relevant to him

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What happens during security vetting and why did Peter Mandelson fail his?

After Keir Starmer announced Peter Mandelson as his pick to be ambassador to the US in December 2024, officials in the Foreign Office contacted him to organise the security vetting clearance process.As with almost all of the 8,000 officials working in the Foreign Office’s Whitehall headquarters, Mandelson required a level of clearance known as developed vetting(DV). This is necessary for individuals in roles that require frequent and uncontrolled access to material marked top secret.The vetting process is not carried out by the Foreign Office. It is done by security officials who work for United Kingdom Security Vetting (UKSV)

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Olly Robbins and Mandelson’s vetting: what did he do, why – and who knew?

Fiddling with his reading glasses, the then cabinet secretary, Sir Chris Wormald – sitting alongside the most senior civil servant in the Foreign Office, Sir Olly Robbins – suddenly appeared a little tense.The bonhomie evident in earlier answers had quite disappeared.It was 3 November 2025, and Peter Mandelson had been removed from his post as ambassador to the US two months earlier, after the disclosure of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails.MPs on the cross-party foreign affairs select committee were grilling the most senior civil servants involved in Mandelson’s appointment about the vetting and due diligence.Just over an hour in, Fleur Anderson, the MP for Putney, asked what can now be seen as a crucial question about the process: “In general, what is the end product of all that vetting? Does it all get put into one report? Who receives that report?”“The report is received by the employing department and employing line manager – in this case, that would be Sir Oliver,” Wormald responded, looking to his left towards Robbins

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Five unanswered questions on Keir Starmer’s Mandelson debacle

Downing Street has tried to do a lot of explaining, as has Keir Starmer himself. But there are still plenty of things we do not know about how Peter Mandelson failed security vetting, and what the prime minister did or did not know about it.A fairly key question. Downing Street is clear: it is “staggering” that Mandelson failed vetting, and that the Foreign Office not only overruled this but told no one in No 10.However, Ciaran Martin, a former top civil servant with past involvement in vetting work – and a close friend of the ousted Olly Robbins – said this was an oversimplification