
3. Notts tie up opponents in chases
Greedily, in addition to topping Division One, Nottinghamshire also top the North Group of the Blast after seven consecutive wins.
The last two of those came by tight margins; they beat Lancashire by one run and Durham by two. Many factors contribute to a side getting over the line, particularly when defending a target, but clarity of roles, confidence and team spirit play as big a role as skills executed under pressure. Those qualities sit in reserve for a team in form.
Durham were big favourites when they needed 58 off seven overs with eight wickets in hand but the slow left-armers, George Linde and Liam Patterson-White, put the squeeze on and their six overs in the match went for just 26 runs while each took two wickets. Durham needed boundaries and could not find them.
Whether under Haseeb Hameed with the red ball or Joe Clarke with the white, Notts usually find a way to win, a very handy attribute in the stop-start English cricket season.
4. Lyth muscles another huge score
Yorkshire look likely to join Notts in progressing from the North Group after topping 200 in each of their last two matches.
Getting up in the last over against Durham was a collective effort, but setting the target of 208 for Leicestershire, which allowed Hasan Ali and Andrew Tye to do their thing with four wickets each, was very much down to one man – Adam Lyth.
His 131 not out was the kind of knock that might prompt people to say “2014 is knocking on the dressing-room door and wants its innings back”. That was his golden season and, at 38, he is unlikely to add to his seven international appearances. He needs just three more centuries to notch 50 for Yorkshire and that much-deserved milestone will mean a lot to a born and bred Tyke.
5. Vince a convincing captain
Hampshire gained quick revenge for defeat at Canterbury by inviting Kent straight back to the Rose Bowl, where they won to consolidate their lead in the South Group.
James Vince top scored in both matches. His batting and captaincy in white-ball cricket make a big difference to Hampshire’s fortunes. With Harry Brook likely to replace Ben Stokes as the captain of the Test team, England will have to consider how that affects his workload. Vince could provide experience and leadership. He is a franchise cricketer these days, and lives abroad, but a deal that allows Jacob Bethell to lead the T20 side while Vince captains the ODI team might suit all parties.
6. Sun shining on Surrey at long last
Surely that’s not misfiring Surrey winning a critical match against Essex to leapfrog them into second place in the South Group? It is, you know. Jason Roy, Laurie Evans, Josh Philippe and Ollie Pope enjoyed the short boundaries at Chelmsford as they posted 240. That proved just enough after a late blitz from Shane Snater and Zaman Akhter almost wrested victory from the jaws of defeat for the hosts.
The return match at the Oval on Sunday, in front of a big crowd likely recovering from the drama of England’s World Cup quarter-final against Norway the night before, could be a showdown of its own in the midsummer heat.
This article is from The 99.94 Cricket Blog
View original source — The Guardian ↗