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Kent scored 308-8 in response to Gloucestershire's 325 in the Rothesay County Championship. Key performances included Muyeye with 90 runs and Taylor taking 6 wickets for Gloucestershire.
Rothesay County Championship, Division Two, Seat Unique Stadium, Bristol (day two)
Gloucestershire 325: Charlesworth 85, Bracey 57, Price 50; Taylor 6-52
Kent 308-8: Muyeye 90, Benjamin 74*, Dawkins 65; Williams 4-40
Gloucestershire 4pts, Kent 5pts
Half-centuries from Tawanda Muyeye, Chris Benjamin and Ben Dawkins boosted Kent's battle for first innings supremacy over Gloucestershire on the second day of their Division Two match at Bristol.
Muyeye top-scored with 90 off 141 balls, while Benjamin contributed 74 not out and Dawkins a career-best 65 as the visitors ran up 308-8 in reply to Gloucestershire's 325. Seamer Will Williams was the pick of the home bowling attack with 4-40 from 21 overs and claimed a stunning run out.
At one point Kent were 245-8, trailing by 80 runs, but Benjamin and Keith Dudgeon (30 not out) put together an unbroken ninth-wicket stand of 63 in the closing overs to frustrate the hosts.
Kent set out at 1-0 when play began in hazy sunshine. With no addition to the score in 2.5 overs, Zak Crawley aimed to play a delivery from Gabe Bell off the back foot and only succeeded in getting an inside edge onto his stumps.
Nightwatch Michael Cohen was dropped on 12 by Ollie Price at first slip off Matt Taylor, but had added only six when another edge off a full delivery from Williams saw him safely pouched by Gloucestershire captain Cameron Bancroft at second slip.
Williams then produced the best ball of the morning, nipping back off the seam to bowl Sam Northeast between bat and pad and Kent were in trouble at 39-3.
But Dawkins was soon into his stride, taking two boundaries off Ben Charlesworth's first over, while the brief introduction of leg-spinner Ed Middleton saw him concede 10 off an over, with Muyeye capitalising on the opening two deliveries, both dropped short, to pull successive fours. By lunch, the pair had taken the total to 99-3, with Dawkins unbeaten on 45 and Muyeye on 31.
The afternoon session saw Dawkins go to his half-century off 99 balls, with nine fours, while Muyeye required 88 deliveries to reach fifty, having struck eight boundaries. On 59, Dawkins was given a life when Price dropped his second catch of the day, low at first slip off Matt Taylor.
Gloucestershire scored 325 runs in their innings.
The top scorers for Kent were Muyeye with 90 runs, Benjamin with 74 not out, and Dawkins with 65 runs.
Taylor took 6 wickets for 52 runs in Kent's innings.
Gloucestershire has 4 points, while Kent has 5 points in the match.

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That enabled the 19-year-old to go past his previous best first class score of 61, made against Derbyshire at Canterbury last season, as he and Muyeye brought up a century stand off 190 balls.
Dawkins departed soon afterwards, bowled by Williams playing forward defensively. The former Lancashire seamer struck for a fourth time when Price redeemed himself by accepting a third chance to send back Daniel Bell-Drummond for three and make the score 151-5.
Muyeye and Benjamin then put together a stand of 55 before, on the stroke of tea, Muyeye got a thick edge pushing forward to Charlesworth and wicketkeeper James Bracey took a straightforward catch moving to his right.
Muyeye had hit 14 fours and rarely looked in much difficulty.
Tea was taken at the fall of his wicket with Kent 206-6, still 119 runs behind and Williams having returned 4-24 from 16 overs.
As if that were not enough, Williams produced a startling piece of fielding early in the final session to claim Kent's seventh wicket. Ekansh Singh, who had just lofted Graeme van Buuren over long-on for six, slashed the left-arm spinner to deep cover, only to be run out attempting a second as Williams scored a direct hit with only one stump to aim at.
Benjamin was holding the Kent innings together and moved to a chanceless fifty off 86 balls, with six fours. He lost another partner when Joey Evison was caught behind looking to pull a short ball from Charlesworth.
The second new ball was taken after 80 overs at 245-8, but made no impression as Benjamin and Dudgeon batted with calm assurance until stumps.
Report by ECB Reporters' Network, supported by Rothesay.