The Press

Stags down Kings to go back to back

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The Stags are on the charge.

Three days after blasting past the Volts in Napier, the Stags backed up in Christchur­ch to polish off the Kings by six wickets in the men’s Twenty20 Super Smash yesterday.

It saw last year’s beaten finalists move up to second on the ladder after six of the 10 rounds, six points behind defending champions the Knights who look awfully hard to topple again after a 12-run win over the Firebirds in Wellington on Saturday.

Again the quicks did the job for the Stags who welcomed back Friday’s Black Caps man of the match Doug Bracewell and restricted the Kings to just 112-8 amid the rain showers at Hagley Oval.

The allrounder took a tidy 1-17 off his four overs as the towering figure of Blair Tickner – last year’s top wicket-taker – snared 3-15 and Seth Rance backed him up with 2-19 after sitting out Friday’s T20 against Sri Lanka in Auckland.

The Kings’ innings never got going as they slumped to 41-6, after skipper Cole McConchie said it was his preference for them to bat first.

Returning Black Cap Tom Latham (18 off 17) was one of Tickner’s victims while legspinner Todd Astle made a welcome return from injury as he bids for a World Cup spot.

Astle’s 25 off 27 was top score for the last-placed Kings in a meek batting effort, as the Stags held their catches superbly with Dean Foxcroft taking three of their seven grabs.

Astle (1-21) and Kyle Jamieson

(2-20) were both good with the ball and the Stags didn’t find it easy with the bat, either, chasing an elementary total.

Captain Tom Bruce steadied the ship with a second handy knock in three days, ending 45 not out off 31 balls to avert any heart flutters for the visitors.

In Dunedin, rain denied the fifth-placed Aces a chance to make a move, with returning Black Cap Martin Guptill doused in full flight.

Guptill cleared the rope three times in his unbeaten 62 off 37 balls against the Volts before rain ended the contest at 117-1 off

11 overs.

Guptill and fellow internatio­nal Glenn Phillips (43 off 23) blasted 107 off 9.4 overs for the second wicket after the early departure of Colin Munro for nine, bowled by Jacob Duffy.

The pace-setting Knights can extend their lead on Wednesday night when they host the struggling Kings in Hamilton.

At a glance

Saturday:

In Wellington: Knights 157-7 off 20 overs (Daryl Mitchell 49, Nick Kelly 45; Ollie Newton 3-26, Jeetan Patel 2-27) beat Wellington Firebirds 145-6 off

20 overs (Adam Hose 52, Tom Blundell 38; Mitchell 2-19, Kyle Abbott

2-19, Corey Anderson 2-22) by 12 runs Sunday:

In Dunedin: Auckland Aces 117-1 off 11 overs (Martin Guptill 62no, Glenn Phillips 43no) v Otago Volts – match abandoned

In Christchur­ch: Canterbury Kings

112-8 off 20 overs (Todd Astle 25; Blair Tickner 3-15, Seth Rance 2-19) lost to Central Stags 113-4 off 16.5 overs (Tom Bruce 45no, Will Young 33; Kyle Jamieson 2-20) by six wickets. Standings: Knights 20 points (6 matches), Stags 14 (6), Volts 12 (6), Firebirds 10 (6), Aces 8 (5), Kings 4 (5).

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