Simon Harmer showed glimpses of his 2019 form to snatch four wickets and set up a pulsating final day of Essex’s Bob Willis Trophy clash with Kent.
Former South African spin bowler Harmer, who took 71 wickets last season, had been targeted in the first innings and had gone 26 wicketless overs before pinching two late scalps.
But the Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2020 took four for 35 to help Essex roll Kent out for 112, with fast bowling duo Jamie Porter and Sam Cook contributing with analysis of two for 31 and three for 19.
It means Essex, who earlier saw Ryan ten Doeschate score 78, will require 202 to win on the last day at the Cloudfm County Ground, Chelmsford.
In the first innings, Kent had collapsed to 23 for three in the first six overs, only to recover thanks to Heino Kuhn’s 140, Ollie Robinson’s 78 and useful contributions in the lower middle order.
This time around, they slumped to 36 for three, in 21 overs, before continuing the slide.
Porter, who had taken 4-107 earlier in the match, got the ball rolling when Daniel Bell-Drummond edged behind to Adam Wheater.
Kent debutant Jack Leaning was on a pair after his first innings duck, and narrowly avoided the calamity when his edge fell just short of Sir Alastair Cook at first slip.
However, the former Yorkshire batsman only managed six before Sam Cook pinned him lbw.
Robinson was dropped on 13 at short leg by Varun Chopra, only to edge Porter to Harmer after a 50-ball 14.
Harmer then dismissed Kuhn and Darren Stevens – who both tried to play rare attacking shots, but only picked out Nick Browne and Tom Westley at deep midwicket and long on respectively.
Grant Stewart quickly followed, caught behind off Porter, before Harmer had Marcus O’Riordan lbw.
Jordan Cox had provided resilience with a 29 off 116 balls but Cook produced a brilliant in-ducker to break his defences, before the quick found Hamidullah Qadri nicking behind. O’Riordan, Cox and Qadri all departing with the score on 100.
Matt Milnes was the last man to fall as he picked out Feroze Khushi on the legside boundary – Kent rolled for 112, losing their last six wickets for 26 runs.
Browne and nightwatchman Porter faced one wicketless, and runless, over from Milnes to end the day.
Earlier, Ryan ten Doeschate collected his 79th first-class half-century, while also raising money for the Lord’s Taverners.
The Holland international is one of seven batsmen who are donating money to the Lord’s Taverners for every run they score this summer – with six bowlers helping to raise money through wickets.
Playing in his 17th season with Essex, ten Doeschate used that experience to carefully make his way to his 79th first-class fifty on an uncharacteristically sluggish Cloudfm County Ground, Chelmsford pitch.
Wheater and ten Doeschate needed almost 25 overs to bring up the 50 stand for the sixth wicket, while it took the latter 105 balls to score his first boundary of the match – however, the cover drive was worth the wait.
Wicketkeeper Wheater departed when he was run out by Heino Kuhn at midwicket after ten Doeschate had turned down a single to end the 69-run partnership.
Ten Doeschate, on his 189th first-class appearance, Marcus O’Riordan for a six over midwicket before moving to his milestone from 122 balls with a dink to third man.
Harmer scored 29, in a 68 stand with ten Doeschate, before he was plumb in front to O’Riordan just before a post-lunch slump saw the Essex tail only add 18 runs for the last three wickets, with Matt Milnes grabbing all three scalps.
Ten Doeschate fell when he struck to Leaning at point, before Sam Cook pulled to midwicket and Quinn edged to second slip in successive balls – Essex falling to an 89-run first-innings deficit
Kent head coach Matt Walker:
Giving his thoughts at the end of play, Kent head coach Matt Walker said: “I haven’t got an answer to why it [the collapse] happened.
“It happened a few times to us last year. We talked at the beginning of last year about the difference between Div 1 and Div 2.
“You have to take your chances when you have a foothold in the game you have to make it count and we didn’t do that.
“We probably won the first two days and were looking in a good position after bowling Essex out with a lead of 90. And then 40 overs later we have lost the day.
“I’m not sure why we haven’t capitalised on the foothold we had in the game.
“Whether we got a bit tense and thought we had something to lose, I don’t know. But we didn’t play the way we played in the first innings. We looked tentative and Essex bowled much better than they did first innings.
“It is something we need to get much better with.
“We are still 200 runs ahead and that is still a lot of runs to get on the last day of a game. We’ll have to bowl well and hopefully pick up some wickets early and put them under pressure like they did to us.”