As Labuschagne became more adventurous, so Gloucestershire’s chances of removing him increased and his dismissal, when it came 35 minutes before lunch, was greeted by raucous cheers from Festival-goers. Attempting to work a Beau Webster delivery from off to leg, Labuschagne succeeded only in finding Cameron Bancroft, strategically placed at leg gully. Undone by smart cricket, Glamorgan’s best batsman trudged disconsolately back to the pavilion, having made 119 from 165-balls, struck 17 fours and helped stage an alliance of 153 with Northeast.Gloucestershire took the new ball soon afterwards, but new batsman Chris Cooke and Northeast stood firm, reaching lunch on 341-4, at the culmination of a session that yielded 119 runs. Cooke was unable to hold on for much longer, though, Taylor locating his outside edge and James Bracey taking a brilliant diving catch behind the stumps to reduce the visitors to 348 for 5.Undeterred, the relentless Northeast went to his hundred from 162 balls, raising his 15th four with a leg glance off Ajeet to draw enthusiastic applause from his teammates. He found a reliable partner in the form of Dan Douthwaite, who not only defended stoutly, but also put away the bad ball with sufficient regularity to keep the required rate below four an over.Gloucestershire spirits were beginning to sag when skipper Graeme van Buuren introduced Ollie Price from the College Lawn end and the off spinner made a much-needed breakthrough, persuading Douthwaite, who had scored 39 in a sixth wicket stand of 105, to drive to cover with the score on 453.Required to score a further 140 with 38.4 overs available in the final session, Glamorgan were entitled to feel they were in with a chance of pulling off a remarkable coup while Northeast remained in the middle.He raised his 150 from 225 balls and, when the total passed 507, Glamorgan had established the highest fourth innings score in first class cricket in this country, beating a 128-year-old record set by Cambridge University in a match against MCC at Lord’s in June 1896.Tim van der Gugten offered his captain valuable support, adding 31 in a partnership of 56 for the seventh wicket before edging Singh Dale behind with a further 84 runs still needed from 22.4 overs. Gloucestershire then claimed the wicket they really wanted, Taylor finding the outside edge and Bracey taking a tumbling catch, his ninth of the match, to end Northeast’s marathon sojourn. Northeast had accrued 22 fours in an innings spanning 277 balls and the ninth wicket pair of Crane and Gorvin were still 49 runs short of their target when they came together.Gorvin made seven, playing and missing frequently, before he left a straight ball and was bowled by De Lange with 32 runs still needed. Crane now assumed responsibility for masterminding the chase, dominating the strike as Gloucestershire pushed their fielders back onto the boundary during the final few overs.Last man McIlroy nicked Webster for four through fine leg in the penultimate over to leave Crane needing to score two runs more in the final over, bowled by Singh Dale. Tied down, he scampered a single off the penultimate ball to set up a dramatic finale. McIlroy perished, leaving Crane 43 not out from 85 balls.

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