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Ekansh Singh Shines as Durham Stutter Against Kent

Vikram Singh · · 3 min read
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Ekansh Singh Shines as Durham Stutter Against Kent

Durham were struggling on 173 for 5 against Kent, still trailing by 350, when rain forced an early end to day two of their Rothesay County Championship match at Beckenham.

Ekansh Singh hit an unbeaten 66 to help Kent to 523 all out, after Durham started the second day with three wickets for four runs in the first two overs. However, Ekansh put on a century stand with Keith Dudgeon, to swing the momentum back in Kent’s favour.

Kent’s Strong Performance

Matthew Potts took 6 for 92 and claimed his 300th first-class wicket, but Matt Milnes and Ekansh took two wickets apiece to leave the Division Two leaders still 200 shy of the follow-on at stumps. Milnes bowled England’s new opener, Emilio Gay, for a duck, leaving David Bedingham and Ben Stokes as the not out batters on 77 and 8 respectively.

Kent were 385 for 4 overnight, but Durham made a near-perfect start to the second day. Raine struck in the first over, bowling Ben Dawkins, who couldn’t add to his overnight score of 180.

Durham’s Response

Potts then had Chris Benjamin caught by Kasey Aldridge at second slip for 7 and Milnes went for 4, caught by Alex Lees at third, before the hosts responded with a stand worth 108.

Ekansh was on 44 when he miscued an uppercut off Stokes and was caught by Gay, only for the umpire to signal a no-ball. He profited by driving Callum Parkinson for a single to reach his fifty, but in the final over before lunch Durham broke the partnership when Dudgeon went for 44, top-edging Potts to Ollie Robinson, leaving Kent on 497 for 8.

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Conclusion

Durham’s reply got off to a rough start when Gay chopped Milnes onto his middle stump. Lees was lbw for 31 to Ekansh, who then got Will Rhodes caught at gully by for 19 by Dudgeon. (Rhodes was on as a sub for Ben McKinney, who’d injured his ankle in the nets.)

When Graham Clark got a bottom edge to Dudgeon for 5, Durham were 88 for 4 and the former Kent wicketkeeper Ollie Robinson came in ahead of Stokes, who’d been feeling unwell on day one.

Bedingham pulled Ekansh for six and then punched Dudgeon for four through the covers to reach fifty, steering Durham to 121 for 4 at tea, but the light deteriorated during the interval, to the extent Kent were told they’d have to bowl spinners. Tawanda Muyeye found Bedingham’s edge, but the ball hit Benjamin on the shoulder and ballooned to safety.

When the light improved, Robinson chased a wide one from Milnes was caught by Dudgeon at gully for 27, but rain began to fall at 5.40pm and play was abandoned with 15.3 overs remaining.

Vikram Singh

Vikram Singh is a senior cricket reporter for The Tribune, widely respected for his exhaustive coverage of India’s domestic cricket landscape and his sharp analysis of fast bowler development. A graduate of Panjab University, Chandigarh, he grew up watching the Punjab Ranji Trophy side and began his career documenting the cricketing rhythms of the northern circuit—from Mohali to Dharamsala. Vikram’s work is defined by an ability to weave hard data on player workloads and fitness into narratives that capture the human cost of the modern game. He has covered numerous Ranji Trophy seasons, multiple IPL campaigns, and international fixtures across all three formats. A recipient of the India Press Club Award and his newspaper’s top sports honour, Vikram is driven by a belief that the health of the national team depends on a thriving, well‑reported domestic ecosystem.