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Key stars as runs flow

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Rob Key's unbeaten century saw Kent make a fluent reply to Hampshire's first innings 405 for nine declared on day two of an LV= County Championship run-spree in Canterbury.

Having chased leather for more than four sessions, Kent made a game reply to finish day two on 200 for one - a first innings deficit of 205 - with Key 105 not out.

The former England batsman lost opening partner Sam Northeast with only 37 on the board, but then teamed up with England Under-19 starlet Daniel Bell-Drummond to add an unbroken 163 for the second wicket through to the close.

Key batted faultlessly to reach his century from 142 balls, including a dozen boundaries.

Already the highest championship run-scorer at Canterbury in Kent's history, this was Key's 22nd hundred on the ground - 21 of which has been for the county. It was also the 34-year-old's 44th ton for the club.

At the other end, rookie Bell-Drummond, in only his 11th championship appearance, made a sticky start and looked troubled by the pace of James Tomlinson.

But, after surviving the left-arm paceman's new ball burst, Bell-Drummond relaxed into his work to bring up a 103-ball half-century.

The teenage prodigy from Millfield School moved to the landmark by dancing down the pitch to on-drive one from Danny Briggs to the ropes at long-on having already hit the left-arm spinner for six into the Frank Woolley stand.

By stumps, Bell-Drummond had reached a championship best 74 as he and Key took Kent to their first batting bonus point of the match.

At the start of the day, Hampshire elected to extend their first innings beyond lunch before finally declaring nine wickets down and 30 minutes into the afternoon session.

After his stoic, opening day century, former Kent batsman Michael Carberry moved effortlessly to 150 from 291 balls before chasing a wide one from Calum Haggett to be caught behind for 154 and end a fourth-wicket partnership with Sean Ervine that added 99 inside 29 overs.

Haggett took his tally to 3-100 by trapping Adam Wheater lbw before Darren Stevens dismissed Adam Rouse in similar fashion to bring a quick end to his maiden innings in first-class cricket.

After lunch, Kent skipper James Tredwell took his first wickets of the championship campaign on Kentish soil to finish with respectable figures of 3-83 from 27.2 overs.

The off-spinner had Ervine stumped for 72, Sohail Tanvir pouched at slip on 32 and Danny Briggs caught at long-on for 19 to spark the Hampshire declaration.


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