Date-stamped : 03 May95 - 14:25 Benson & Hedges Round 3 : Scotland v Yorkshire Glasgow (Hamilton Crescent), 2 May 1995 Scots fall to Hartley - Keith Graham Yorks (130-0) bt Scotland (129) by 10 wkts UNDER grey skies which saw 1 and 1/2 hours of the morning lost to rain, Yorkshire swept aside Scotland in an entirely one-sided contest. But for a brave 54 by Jim Love, the former Yorkshire and England batsman, Scotland might have been totally humiliated. Sent in on a wicket which, although slow, provided lateral move- ment, the Scots were quickly in trouble, losing their first five wickets for only 31 runs. Darren Gough made the initial break- through in his second over when he moved one back sharply to bowl George Reifer off an inside edge. The loss of West Indian import Malcolm Marshall to Peter Hartley for a duck was a further blow to the Scots. He was out caught behind, a decision with which he did not concur, and it was only when Greig Williamson joined Love in a seventh-wicket stand that Scotland asserted any influence on the game. Williamson played on to Stemp for 19 and although Love reached his fifty by driving Paul Grayson for six over long-off and next ball, cutting him delicately for four, the Scots could only reach 129 all out, with Hartley finishing on four for 21, a performance that was to earn him the Gold Award. Marshall faired no better when opening the Scottish bowling, conceding runs off his first two overs and being taken out of the attack after five which cost him 24 runs. With the wicket now playing more easily, Martyn Moxon and Michael Vaughan never looked anything else but in total command. Moxon in particular timed the ball to perfection and repeatedly pi- erced the off-side as the Scottish bowlers over-pitched. His half-century came off just 70 balls and included 10 boun- daries. Vaughan just had time to reach his own fifty as the Scot- tish total was passed in only the 23rd over. Source :: The Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk) Contributed by The Management (help@cricinfo.com)