Three Cracking T20s

A look back at three splendid cricket matches and a photo gallery.

Not only are both the women’s and men’s English domestic T20 tournaments now in full swing, there is also a T20I series going on between England and New Zealand women’s teams. This post, typed as I listed to Bears v Somerset in the men’s tournament looks back at three classic matches.

ENGLAND v NEW ZEALAND

This one did not start out as though it would develop into a classic – New Zealand were 5-3 in the second over and 11-4 in the fourth, batting first. Linsey Smith was the chief destroyer, claiming three victims with her crafty slow left arm swing (note she rarely if ever actually spins the ball, it is all about movement in the air for her). Then New Zealand were dug out of trouble by a fifth wicket stand of 159. Sophie Devine with 87 off 57 balls was the principal scorer. England were never quite on terms in the chase, and the issue was virtually settled by two errors in successive balls from Maia Bouchier. First she was guilty of ball watching, resulting in the run out of the vastly experienced Heather Knight, and then on the very next ball she suffered one of the softest dismissals you could ever see. That left England needing pretty much two a ball and with two brand new batters together at the crease, and New Zealand were in control from then on, winning eventually by 14 runs to level the series, with the next match to be played tomorrow.

Yesterday in the men’s T20 tournament Glamorgan entertained Gloucestershire. The match was an absolute nailbiter, going right down to the last ball, when Matt Taylor succeeded in getting a delivery from Fazalhaq Farooqi away for the four runs Gloucestershire still needed. This match was 158 plays 157, and was a far better spectacle than 260 plays 240 on a road could ever have been.

At noon today Middlesex and Surrey assembled at Lord’s in the men’s T20 tournament. Yet again a low scoring match proved to be an absolute belter of a game. Middlesex batted first and managed 143-8 from their 20 overs, and that represented a decent recovery from a low water mark of 89-6. After 10.3 overs of the Surrey innings Middlesex looked in charge, with Lawrence having just gone to make it 56-4. That brought Laurie Evans in to join Surrey skipper Sam Curran. Curran assumed control of proceedings and played a magnificent knock, while Evans did all that was required of him. With three overs to go the pair were still together and the ask was down to 27. The 18th over effectively sealed the deal, with 24 accruing from it, including three sixes by Curran, the last of which took his score to 70. It took four more balls, three of them legal, for the job to be done, a wide and two singles accruing, with Curran appropriately scoring the winning run. In the end Curran and Evans did their jobs so well as to make it look like a very comfortable win for Surrey, but those who actually followed the game know different, and that the final margin of six wickets with nine balls to spare is a deceptive one.

My usual sign off…