Joe Clarke's fourth century of the season, coupled with resilient batting from Lyndon James, ensured Nottinghamshire secured a draw against Lancashire in their Vitality County Championship match at Southport.
Clarke, who has now passed fifty in seven out of 14 first-class innings this season, formed an unbroken 136-run partnership with James for the fifth wicket. By the time play concluded at 4:50 PM, Nottinghamshire had reached 270 for four, with Clarke unbeaten on 115 and James not out on 43. Clarke's first-class run tally for the season now stands at 795.
Lancashire's James Anderson, who had delivered an extraordinary spell on Tuesday morning, finished the final day with figures of one for 25 from eleven overs across two spells. Despite Anderson's efforts, the eight points both teams gained from the draw helped them move slightly away from the relegation zone in Division One.
Anderson's sole wicket in the second innings came with his 17th delivery of the day, when Will Young edged a catch to Matthew Hurst. Clarke and Jack Haynes then stabilised the innings, with Haynes even hooking a six onto the Southport to Liverpool railway line, narrowly missing a train. However, Haynes was later caught behind off Chris Green, who secured his maiden first-class wicket for Lancashire.
By lunchtime, no more wickets had fallen, allowing home spectators to enjoy the rare sight of Nathan Lyon and Anderson, boasting a combined 1230 Test wickets, bowling in tandem. Statisticians believe this to be the most Test wickets ever taken by one first-class team, with the nearest challenger being another Lancashire side that included Muttiah Muralitharan, Andrew Flintoff, and Dominic Cork.
Clarke continued to bat with calm efficiency, bringing up his fifty off 107 balls, and Nottinghamshire went into lunch at 164 for four, trailing by 63 runs. The prospect of Anderson with the new ball loomed, causing some anxious glances at the sky, but rain intervened at 2:20 PM, pausing play.
Play resumed at 4:00 PM with 33 overs remaining. Clarke and James, undeterred by the delay, played with increasing freedom. Clarke reached his century off 185 balls with a square cut off Luke Wells, and Nottinghamshire moved into the lead before the match concluded in a draw.