Bristol Post

Overton hails Somerset’s brilliant bowling and fielding

- By RICHARD LATHAM

It’s a long summer and it remains a burning ambition to play more internatio­nal cricket

REVENGE was sweet for Somerset as seamers Craig Overton and Matt Henry led them to a crushing eight-wicket Vitality Blast victory over reigning champions Hampshire Hawks at Taunton.

Beaten in last season’s semifinals by the same opponents, the hosts dominated from the start after winning the toss, with Overton claiming 3-8 from four overs and Henry 2-19 from three to leave the Hawks 27-5.

The Blast title holders never recovered and were bowled out for 74, their lowest ever T20 total, in 16.1 overs, with Ben Green taking 3-11 and Lewis Gregory 2-13, while Overton added four catches to his heroics with the ball.

It was a ruthless display by the Somerset seamers, backed by some razor-sharp fielding. In reply, the hosts breezed to 74-2 off just 9.3 overs, with Tom Banton smiting 40 off 24 balls.

Somerset’s man-of-the-match Overton said: “It was up there as one of our best bowling and fielding displays since I became part of the team. I wouldn’t mind carrying that pitch around with me because it certainly did a bit for the bowlers early on.

“We are hopeful that this could be our year in the Blast. We have added an internatio­nal bowler in Matt Henry and strengthen­ed our batting as well, so perhaps we can go one better than reaching Finals Day.

“The crowd here are always our twelfth man and there is nothing better than winning in front of them on a sunny evening at Taunton.

“I am still managing some tendonitis in a knee, which was affecting me at the start of the season. Because of that, I never expected to be selected by England.

“But it seems to be improving and I am getting back to where I want to be. It’s a long summer and it remains a burning ambition to play more internatio­nal cricket.”

Overton and Henry appeared to be trying to outshine each other when the Hawks innings began in front of a packed crowd, both maintainin­g excellent line and length.

Sam McDermott fell to the last ball of Overton’s opening over, caught two-handed to his left by Tom Kohler-Cadmore at slip.

It was 9-2 when Henry struck with his first delivery, bowling James Vince between bat and pad with a ball that nipped back. The New Zealand Test bowler then had Joe Weatherly caught at mid-on by Overton off a skyer to make it 12-3 in the fourth over.

By the end of the six-over powerplay, the Hawks were in disarray at

26-3. Their plight worsened when Overton had Tom Priest caught behind attempting to pull a short ball.

Overton notched his third victim in the same over as Toby Albert was also snaffled by wicketkeep­er Banton, going hard at a wide delivery.

Albert had scooped a six off Henry, but it was a rare moment of defiance from the Hawks as Overton produced 17 dot balls in bowling his allotted four overs straight through from the River End

Rightly impressed by his opening attack, Somerset skipper Tom Abell did not make a change until the eighth over, which saw Peter Siddle replace Henry.

Ross Whiteley hit fours off successive balls from Gregory and Liam Dawson pulled a a six off

Green as Hampshire briefly threatened a recovery. But, having helped take the score to 57, Dawson fell to another Overton catch, this time at fine leg off a scoop, and Scott Currie went in the same Gregory over, the 12th of the innings, bowled off a bottom edged pull shot.

Whiteley had reached his side’s top score of 18 when caught by Kohler-Cadmore, diving forward at long-off, having made decent contact with a Green full toss.

At 61-8, the Hawks were down and out. Chris Wood was pouched by the diving Overton at mid-off off Green, who completed the rout by having Nathan Ellis, who had taken 13 off Henry’s final over, caught at long-on by the same fielder.

Somerset’s big-hitting batting line-up were never likely to be troubled chasing such a paltry total and Banton soon signalled his intentions to end the match early by clearing the ropes with a ramp shot off Wood in the 3rd over.

A scoop off Ellis brought the England T20 internatio­nal another boundary, followed up next ball by a clip through the leg side for four. Will Smeed was caught at short third man for five in the same over, but by the end of their powerplay, Somerset were comfortabl­e at 37-1.

Banton launched another six over midwicket off Dawson before being stumped in the same over chasing a wide one. Kohler-Cadmore (18 not out) got off the mark by smashing the spinner over wide long-on for a maximum and by then the outcome had long been beyond doubt.

 ?? Picture: Harry Trump/Getty ?? Craig Overton celebrates his dismissal of Hampshire’s Toby Albert on Wednesday night
Picture: Harry Trump/Getty Craig Overton celebrates his dismissal of Hampshire’s Toby Albert on Wednesday night

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