Chris Cooke and Shubman Gill both made impressive hundreds as Glamorgan put themselves into a strong position in their must-win game against Sussex.
Gill scored 119 – his first LV= County Championship hundred – and Cooke 141 as they piled up 533 for eight declared on the second day at the 1st Central County Ground.
Sussex responded positively and were 86 for one when bad light forced the players off with 13 overs still to be bowled at Hove after there had been two short rain delays earlier in the day.
Glamorgan need to win to have any chance of overhauling Middlesex and claiming the second promotion place from Division Two.
And although Sussex bowled well in the morning session, when they took three wickets, their bowlers suffered thereafter with Cooke leading the charge as he made his tenth first-class century.
Earlier it had been Gill who went on the offensive. He quickly added the nine runs he’d needed overnight to lodge his seventh first-class hundred before greeting Jack Carson’s arrival by hitting the off-spinner for three boundaries in his first over.
But Carson had his revenge in his next over when he tossed another one up and Gill picked out long on, having faced 139 balls and hit 16 fours and two sixes.
Left-armer Sean Hunt had already broken through when he yorked Billy Root and Carson picked up a second wicket when he gave the ball air again and Andrew Salter was also caught at long on.
When Sussex took the new ball, Brad Currie soon had James Harris caught behind for 34, after Harris had added 77 with Cooke.
Timm van der Gugten helped the South African put on 41 for the eighth wicket before van der Gugten was held at long leg off Tom Clark.
Acceleration came either side of tea as Cooke and Ajaz Patel thrashed 96 in 13 overs. Patel hit an undefeated 51 from 37 balls including three sixes, two of them hit over long on in an over from Carson.
Cooke hardly played a false shot before edging Hunt to wicketkeeper Oli Carter after making his second Championship century of the season. His 141 came off 165 balls with 14 fours and two sixes.
Carter was one of two substitutes employed by Sussex after Charlie Tear and Fynn Hudson-Prentice went down with food poisoning overnight. The Glamorgan total was boosted by 50 extras.
Sussex began their reply needing 384 to avoid the follow-on and they made a positive start, Ali Orr and Tom Haines laying into some wayward new-ball bowling from Harris and Mick Hogan.
They added 69 in 11.2 overs before Hogan’s nip-backer struck Orr on the back leg and he was lbw for 45.
Haines and Tom Alsop saw their side through to the close but Glamorgan will still feel they can claim their first Championship win at Hove since 1975, even though the pitch shows little sign of deterioration.
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Glamorgan’s Chris Cooke, who made 141, said: “Shubman Gill set things up for us. He’s different class and has got a huge future ahead of him.
“I have found some consistency in the last few games and it’s nice to finish the season with a hundred and contribute in what is a really important game for us.
“It’s nice to have that big total on the board and hopefully now we only have to bat once. They got off to a bit of a flyer when they batted and it’s a quick-scoring ground.
“We know what we have to do which is to take 19 wickets and we saw towards the end there Ajaz (Patel) getting some spin which is encouraging. All we can do is try and win here and then we’ll worry about the other games.”
Sussex coach James Kirtley said: “I thought the bowlers stuck at it, especially this morning. Brad Currie has shown some good skill with the new ball. He’s got real craft.
“It’s been quite a shock for him to play as much county cricket as he has and we’ve had to manage our young bowlers generally but Brad and Sean Hunt have got better the more they have bowled.
“We’ve had some sickness in the camp and lost Charlie Tear and Fynn Hudson-Prentice. Glamorgan kindly allowed Oli Carter to keep wicket but if they bat it won’t be until we are five wickets down.”