Gloucestershire 367 and 149 for 8 (Taylor 52*, Jordan 4-32) trail Sussex 527 (Wells 120, Brown 113, Jordan 52, M Taylor 4-130) by 11 runsScorecard Just for a day, in this toughest season for Sussex, Hove felt like the Hove of yesteryear.The sun shone, of course it did. And the seagulls swarmed in the breeze, barking away like the gobbiest of glovemen down the village green. A batsman called Wells resumed 100 not out, before a freewheeling wicketkeeper batsman - it could easily have been Matt Prior, Tim Ambrose or even Jim Parks, but it was Ben Brown - cut and punched his way to a century in building a 160-run lead.Then the bowlers - looking a beautifully balanced attack - blew Gloucestershire away to leave Sussex within an inch of a second win of the season. Chris Jordan was in magical form, with four wickets, 52 runs and, as ever, a stunning moment in the field.Sussexs coach Mark Davis neatly - if accidentally - summed up what childs play the day had been as he joined the hoards of fans on the outfield at lunch and tea, to play a spot of cricket with his little son. His team, evidently, was taking care of itself and Davis was not the only man with a smile on his face and weight off his shoulders.There has not been much to smile about in the last 12 months in these parts. Sussex sleepwalked their way - via a hideous injury list - to relegation in the season that nobody could afford to be relegated. They lost their long-time, highly-respected coach, Mark Robinson, to England Women. One of their players - a team-mate and friend to all and housemate to some - then died.When this sombre season began, the injuries continued; they could not make it out of either white-ball group and their Championship campaign - while undefeated - has seen all manner of draws.There remains time - five more games, three to promotion candidates, and another against Gloucestershire, which you think Sussex would fancy - for a promotion charge yet. Based on this showing, anything looks possible.The batting was clinical; the admirable Matt Taylor plugged away and claimed David Wiese - caught on the pull - and Luke Wells, trapped in front, in the first hour, but that only allowed Brown and Jordan at Gloucestershire. Brown bristled, always looking to score, whether lumping down the ground, flicking fine, pulling meatily and cutting all and sundry. Jordan, fresh from a maiden ton last week, cover drove and flicked wristily to leg, ran mighty hard (between them they scampered 13 twos) but mainly just stood and admired; eventually Browns ton, his second of the season, came from his 98th ball.The pair fell in quick succession, both, curiously to Chris Dents tame off-breaks and Sussexs innings folded soon after. They had 12 overs before tea to get stuck into Gloucestershire, who were without Luke Norwell - out of the game with concussion; he could not remember leaving the field after being hit by Jordan on Sunday.Furthermore Graeme van Buuren could bat no higher than seven, having spent time off the field after a run-in with a boundary hoarding that left him not just with a bad shoulder, but missing a tooth, too. Things, believe it or not, were about to get a good deal more painful for Gloucestershire.Those 12 overs before tea were enough for Steve Magoffin and Jordan to do for the top three. Magoffin pinned Will Tavare in front, so in came Benny Howell, deputising for Van Buuren. Jordan immediately had him in trouble, completely unaware of the locality of his off-stump and surviving five close shaves when leaving. Eventually, his middle stump went flying, bowled through the gate and, on the stroke of tea, Chris Dent - having looked fairly assured - took a wild slash and Brown did the rest.The procession continued; Klinger, Sussexs scourge, nicked off driving Wiese, who many at the county - including Luke Wright - believe is giving the side a balance they have not enjoyed since Robin Martin-Jenkins retired in 2010. Danny Briggss first ball did for Hamish Marshall, caught well at short leg by Christian Davis, before Phil Mustard - having ridden his luck against Jofra Archer - swept onto Davis, and the ball looped up behind square on the legside, with Jordan running 20 metres from slip to take a fine catch. Jordan then bowled full to dismiss Van Buuren and bounced out Craig Miles.Faced by the brave Taylor brothers, the extra half-hour proved a bridge too far, with Jack smiting three handsome sixes on his way to 50, so back Sussex must come - briefly, surely - on Tuesday. Backs were still slapped as Sussex left the field; what a day they had had. Its not the end of the world, Brown reflected, the forecast is set fair, and we did everything we could tonight. To only need one more wicket? Blimey, we would have taken that this morning. Fake Indians Jerseys .S. Open champion Justin Rose birdied the first hole with a blind shot he hit to a foot of the pin, and he stayed in front Tuesday until he completed a 4-under 67 for a two-shot lead over Jason Dufner in PGA Grand Slam of Golf. Cleveland Indians Gear . -- In a span of seven Washington Redskins offensive plays, Justin Tuck sacked Robert Griffin III four times. https://www.cheapindiansonline.com/ . Its sharpness matched my mind. This was no night to go to sleep. Indians Jerseys China . Patrice Bergeron and Daniel Paille scored 20 seconds apart a few minutes after Stamkos was taken off the ice on a stretcher with a broken right leg, and the Bruins beat the Lightning 3-0 on Monday afternoon. Indians Jerseys 2019 ., and Rudi Swiegers of Kipling, Sask., took sixth spot on Saturday in pairs at the NHK Trophy ISU Grand Prix figure skating competition. From the highs of his maiden win at the Nurburgring to the lows of the infamous Multi 21 saga, Mark Webber was never far from the spotlight during his 217 race Formula One career.After his recent decision to retire from racing, ESPN looks back at his five most memorable moments from what was a stunning career.5. The Monte Carlo double - 2012 Monaco Grand Prix Only 15 drivers in history have won multiple Monaco grands prix and Webber will forever be ensconced in that elite category.The Australian steered his Red Bull to victory at the notoriously difficult street circuit in 2010 and again in 2012, on both occasions starting from pole position and comfortably controlling the pace.While the achievement will live long in Webbers memory, for Formula One fans it was his post-race celebrations which will be forever remembered. After winning in both years, Webber performed a somersault into the pool sitting atop Red Bulls floating paddock home.4. Multi 21 - 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix When thinking of Formula Ones great teammate rivalries, Webber vs. Sebastian Vettel may not spring to mind as quickly as Alain Prost vs. Ayrton Senna, but the pair certainly will be remembered for a number of notable stoushes -- none more so than the controversial Multi 21.After clear instruction from Red Bull to hold station during the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix, Vettel -- running in second at the time -- began attacking Webber before the pair duelled wheel-to-wheel around the Sepang circuit.Vettel ended up taking the victory with an incensed Webber finishing second. The hostility in the cool down room post-race was of epic proportions as Webber angrily exclaimed Multi 21, Seb. Multi 21, or car number two ahead of car number one.3. A dream debut - 2002 Australian Grand PrixIt was a dream start to Formula One racing for local hero Webber who avoided carnage and reliability issues in what was a chaotic 2002 Australian Grand Prix.The race saw two disqualificatiions and 12 retirements which propelled Webber into fifth place by the chequered flag for a remarkable points finish on debut.dddddddddddd Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher -- who won the race -- insisted on shaking Webbers hand, highlighting the magnitude of his achievement.Funnily enough, in his 11 races at Albert Park that followed, Webber only managed to better that result once; a fourth place finish in 2012.2. Not bad for a No. 2 driver - 2010 British Grand Prix The intentions become clear at Silverstone in 2010 that the then 23-year-old Vettel would be Red Bulls lead driver. After crashing and damaging his new front wing in practice, Vettel was given Webbers for qualifying and the race -- much to the disapproval of the Australian.Honestly I would never have signed a contract for next year if I believed that was the way I thought it would be going forward, Webber said.?However, despite the advantage, Webber stormed to a fifth win of his career before delivering one of the most famous lines in motorsport history. While waving to the crowd on his parade lap, Webber exclaimed over the radio, Not bad for a number 2 driver -- and just like that the rivalry was born.1. First win - 2009 German Grand Prix Who can ever forget that iconic podium jump? Webbers maiden Formula One win in Germany was as much about relief as it was pure jubilation -- having competed in 131 races prior for no victory.Starting from pole position, Webber was involved in a tangle with Rubens Barrichello as the pair jostled for the lead into the first corner which resulted in a drive-through penalty for the Red Bull driver, dropping him to eighth.However, some stunning passes and clever strategy saw him recover brilliantly to win and join Sir Jack Brabham and Alan Jones as Australias only grand prix winners at the time. ' ' '