Sussex 150 (Hill 4-22) and 227 (Alsop 86, Hill 3-44, Coad 3-46) beat Yorkshire 195 (Root 67, Hunt 4-64) and 161 (Lyth 73, Robinson 4-42) by 21 runs
First, he had Lyth caught behind for a heroic 73, from 152 balls in 228 minutes. It was a short and sharp delivery which was too good for the left-handed opener. Then, in his next over, Robinson struck twice, having Jordan Thompson brilliantly caught by Jack Carson at long leg before, four balls later, bowling Dom Leech for a duck. Yorkshire had lost three wickets with the score on 158, all to Robinson. And finally, at 161, Ben Coad, batting with an injured back, was run out by Fynn Hudson-Prentice from point.
Yorkshire were favourites to win this match from the first morning, when they put in the championship leaders on a grassy pitch and bowled them out for 150. They were favourites again yesterday, when they set out to score 183 to win.
They looked as though they would be denied by Lyth, and Yorkshire were clear favourites at tea, at 140 for six.
They had made a bad start, slipping to 21 for two. But they regrouped through Lyth and Root before being set back on their heels when they lost two wickets just before lunch. First it was the big one, Root himself, who was lbw to a straight one in the penultimate over before the break. Root appeared to be falling over, slightly, to the off-side as he attempted to play the ball on the leg side.
Then, in the last over before the interval, George Hill edged Hudson-Prentice – who had just replaced Robinson at the Cromwell Road end – to the wicketkeeper and Yorkshire were struggling at 45 for four.
Yorkshire were just edging ahead again, when, at 76, James Wharton got an inside-edge to one from Sean Hunt and the ball dislodged his leg bail. Lyth started to mastermind yet another recovery, this time in the company of Jonathan Tattersall. But Carson had Tattersall, sweeping, caught at backward square-leg and then Robinson took over.
In the morning Sussex had lost their last three wickets in 44 minutes for the addition of 33 runs. Resuming on 194 for seven, with a precarious lead of 149, they lost their first wicket when Carson, who had added just three to his overnight 22, drove uppishly and was well caught in the covers by Wharton, moving sharply to his left.