Spitfires bow out to Surrey

Friday 18th August 2017

Men’s First Team

Spitfires bow out to Surrey

Kent Spitfires lost a tense final group game to Surrey to crash out of the NatWest T20 Blast at The Spitfire Ground.

The Spitfires attack restricted Surrey to 154-9 with Adam Milne taking 3/26 before falling 10 runs short in reply.

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Fielding first after losing the toss, Kent made an immediate tactical switch by opening the bowling with left-arm spinner Imran Qayyum, who conceded only seven – most of which came from Aaron Finch’s first six of the night over backward square.

Having already changed his bat twice, Roy launched his first six into the pavilion in the fourth over from Mitch Claydon as 12 came off the over, but Finch’s involvement ended when he played on when attempting a back-foot force off Milne.

Milne’s next delivery trapped Moises Henriques lbw. Ben Foakes survived Milnes’ hat-trick delivery but, with two quick wickets in the bag, Kent slipped Qayyum back into the attack for the final powerplay over that ended with the visitors on 59 for two.

Roy moved to his 26th T20 50 from 31 balls with a straight six off Darren Stevens as Surrey reached 98 for two at the innings mid-point.

Claydon returned to have Foakes (13) well caught low down by Qayyum at mid-off but Roy cantered on, moving to 78 with an impudent flick over third man off a Calum Haggett but, after clubbing 10 fours and four sixes, Roy miscued to deep mid-wicket to spark Kentish celebrations.

Curran and Ollie Pope both struggled against the extreme pace of Milnes and the tenacity of Haggett and Claydon. Surrey’s fifth-wicket pair mustered only 19 before Pope (10) was bowled when aiming an audacious lap over the keeper’s head to give Haggett creditable figures of two for 32.

Rikki Clarke (3) holed out to mid-off against Neesham who, three balls later, picked up Rory Burns (4) off a skier to extra cover to finish with two for 26.

Milne switched ends for the last over to skittle Curran (20) off an under edge and finish with three for 26 as Surrey set Kent 155 to win at a rate of 7.75 an over on a tricky pitch.

In pursuit of Surrey’s 154 for nine Spitfires’ first-wicket partners Joe Denly and Daniel Bell-Drummond – fresh from their previous night’s world-record T20 opening stand of 207 against Essex – initially took a slightly more measured approach.

With Kent’s total on 39 Bell-Drummond (22) played across a clever Dernbach slower ball to go lbw, but Denly glanced for four against Dernbach and drove through extra off Clarke to help Spitfires post 50 for one during their powerplay.

Medium-pacers Moises Henriques and Stuart Meaker stemmed the flow of boundaries and, with 78 on the board, Northeast’s mistimed pull off Meaker was well held by Sam Curran at mid-wicket.

Sam Billings strode in to take advantage of further sloppy Surrey fielding by hitting 11 off Meaker’s next over, but Henriques pounced to bowl Billings (15) via an inside edge as Kent fell behind the Duckworth/Lewis/Stern rate for the first time.

Denly’s stay ended for 40 when he edged an attempted steer against Clarke through to the keeper to bring together Darren Stevens and Jimmy Neesham with 56 still needed.

The fifth-wicket partners both struggled for timing as Surrey’s attack found good lengths and, with four overs remaining, Kent still required 41.

Neesham finally found his range by clipping a leg-side six off Dernbach to reduce the target to 26 but Stevens (13) then nicked behind when cutting at Curran to give Surrey renewed hope.

Fellow left-handers Neesham and Alex Blake swished lustily and, with 23 needed, Blake clubbed a six off Dernbach who countered with four crucial dot balls that ramped up the pressure.

With 15 needed off the last over the hugely experienced Clarke caught and bowled Blake (9), had Neesham (17) caught on the deep mid-wicket ropes and snared Adam Milne (2) lbw with a slow full toss to break Kentish hearts and end the game with stunning, four-over figures of four for 16.

Kent skipper Sam Northeast bemoaned the standard of the two-paced Canterbury pitch for Spitfires’ poor home form that culminated with his side’s 10-run defeat.

“Jason Roy got them off to a flyer at the start and, although we dragged them back really well, as a batting unit, I expected us to chase that target down, but we came up a bit short.

“We played really good cricket in the two games coming into this and gave ourselves a chance but this was a disappointing end. The reality is we weren’t good enough for large parts of this tournament and we’ve fallen short as a result.”

Scorecard