On a clinical second day two, Surrey dominated with the ball and then the bat to put the defending champions in charge against Hampshire at the Kia Oval.
Dan Worrall (3/37) and Jordan Clark (3/54) spearheaded an overall well-disciplined bowling unit as the hosts bowled out Hampshire for 219.
England’s current Test vice-captain, Ollie Pope struck a 67-ball half-century, while teammate Dom Sibley followed his century of the opening day with 55 not out, the pair sharing an unbroken stand of 80 before bad light brought a slightly premature close at 136/1.
For Hampshire, Tom Prest and Nick Gubbins both got beyond 40 without pressing on and they will see this as a chance missed on a pitch of few demons.
Overnight batters Gubbins and Mark Stoneman struck a crisp boundary apiece in the opening two overs of the morning, but thereafter excessive caution rendered them all-but stroke-less against some naggingly accurate bowling from the Surrey seamers.
“As a collective that’s as good as I’ve seen us bowl.”
Assistant Coach Jade Dernbach spoke to @backandacross after an excellent day for the bowling unit was back up by an unbeaten stand of 80 for the second wicket.
🤎 | #SurreyCricket pic.twitter.com/yQ9qv1sJNc
— Surrey Cricket (@surreycricket) April 12, 2025
The score crept into the 80s as runs became a trickle before drying up altogether. Matt Fisher twice whistled the ball past the flailing blade of Stoneman and pressure told as Gubbins tickled one from Dan Lawrence around the corner to Pope at leg slip.
Worrall then trapped Stoneman in front with a full delivery and when Toby Albert edged Jordan Clark to Lawrence at third slip three wickets had fallen in 47 balls for only six runs.
Such was the batter’s stranglehold, when Prest flashed one over third slip’s head for four it marked the first boundary for 26 overs.
Hampshire emerged from lunch with a different mindset marked by four boundaries in the first nine balls, more than in the whole first session.
Dawson though soon perished, a deserved wicket for Fisher, and skipper Ben Brown spurned a reprieve when dropped at slip by Sibley, edging the next ball to the safe hands of Ben Foakes.
At 118/6, Hampshire were looking at a sizeable first-innings deficit, but Prest and New Zealander Brett Hampton played positively, the latter caressing a wide, full ball from Roach to the extra cover fence. A 50-stand was in the offing when Hampton fell for 26 made at more than a run a ball, Pope grabbing a fine low catch at slip from one which went from inside edge onto the pad.
Worrall returned to have Prest caught by Patel at short leg from a ball which flew off the meat of the bat and was brilliantly pouched by Patel.
The fact Surrey’s lead was limited to 34 owed much to Abbott’s swashbuckling 37, including a six over backward square, Lawrence ending his revelry with one which turned to bowl him.
Abbott made the breakthrough when Surrey batted a second time, trapping Rory Burns lbw, but not before the openers had added 56 with few alarms.
Sibley batted with great fluency, though surviving a close call for a run out before moving to 50 from 90 balls with seven fours.
Pope soon followed suit, propelled to the landmarks with the aid of successive sixes off Sonny Baker, the latter stroke just clearing the fielder at wide third.
Report by ECB Reporters’ Network supported by Rothesay