DURHAM coach Jon Lewis hopes new boy Alex Lees can prove his value today. After dismissing Glamorgan for 154 on day one, Lees led Durham to 75 without loss.

The opener bagged a half century and Lewis said: “The conditions were good for bowling and I thought our seamers adapted well. We kept up the pressure throughout and we were rewarded.

“Then Alex Lees and Cameron Steele were positive when we batted and I was delighted for Alex in his first game since joining us from Yorkshire. Hopefully conditions will be better tomorrow and we can press on”.

Glamorgan were undone by the visitors’ pace attack, with Chris Rushworth and new signing Matt Salisbury sharing six wickets, as the batsmen struggled in overcast conditions.

Nineteen overs were lost at the start of the day due to drizzle, and after Paul Collingwood had no hesitation in bowling first after an uncontested toss, Glamorgan were soon losing wickets.

Jack Murphy was the first to go when, after scoring the opening 17 runs of the innings he was well caught low down at third slip off Rushworth, and after Connor Brown and Nick Selman- who had laboured for 26 balls and 46 minutes over his two runs- were out, Glamorgan were 26 for 3.

Salisbury, initially on loan deal before signing a contract until 2020, was the pick of the seamers, ending with 3 for 34 from 13 accurate overs.

Kiran Carlson and David Lloyd resisted for 16 overs as they shared a partnership of 51 for the fourth wicket, before Carlson, shouldering arms to Salisbury, was bowled off stump.

After Chris Cooke went for a duck, also deceived by Salisbury, much depended on Lloyd , but when Collingwood appeared with his cutters, the skipper induced Lloyd to give him a return catch.

Smith played an useful knock towards the end, but after Rushworth had dismissed him, Durham’s latest overseas signing, the Indian spinner Axar Patel, ended the innings by taking the final two wickets in 19 balls.

Durham had 28 overs to bat, and although conditions might have eased, Steel and Lees set off purposefully, and were seldom in trouble. Lees was the dominant partner, driving elegantly through the offside and racing ahead of his partner.

Lees reached his half century from 53 balls out of 59, which included 11 boundaries.