Derby Telegraph

Spark from Guest but Derbys beaten

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DERBYSHIRE fell to a two-wicket defeat in the Royal London One-Day Cup yesterday as Hampshire remain the only side to boast maximum points in this year’s competitio­n.

Maiden one-day fifties from locally-raised 20-year olds Fletcha Middleton and Toby Albert steered Hampshire to victory at the Incora County Ground.

Despite 82 from Brooke Guest earlier, Hampshire were left a target of 247.

But the tall Ben Aitchison made superb use of a hybrid pitch with bounce for the new ball by claiming four wickets for the first time in his white-ball career in his opening 25 deliveries as Hampshire sunk to 36-4 by the reply’s ninth over.

The sixth wicket had added 104, however, before Middleton went for 64, leaving Albert, like John Arlott a product of Basingstok­e, to reach an unbeaten 84, his best in all cricket, and usher Hampshire home.

Derbyshire had themselves started poorly when put in earlier until recovery came from Guest, who found 101 in 20 overs for the fifth wicket with Anuj Dal until Dal was run out for 42 attempting an ambitious single.

But when Guest fell 20 minutes later, Derbyshire, finishing nine down, mustered only 44 more from the last 41 balls.

Aitchison soon had Aneurin Donald and Tom Prest both held at second slip, the latter without score after making 51 and 181 in his previous two innings over the last five days.

With a magnificen­t full inswinger he next bowled Nick Gubbins, breaking the off-stump, for 18 before having Ben Brown caught behind as the visitors made an even worse start than Derbyshire.

A modest revival ended when Felix Organ whipped a long hop to long leg, going for seven with 179 more needed at 5.37 per over when Albert joined Middleton.

With Nick Potts proving expensive for Derbyshire, however, the requiremen­t soon fell and if the spinners were initially tight they could not sustain pressure.

For players with only seven 50-over appearance­s between them hitherto, it was an impressive­ly calm, well calculated performanc­e from the youngsters who resisted seven bowlers until Middleton pulled a Mattie McKiernan long hop to mid wicket and the target became 75 from 15.

Keith Barker and Scott Currie came and went after handy support but John Turner, dropped on nought, accompanie­d Albert home.

Soon after the official government declaratio­n of a drought had been made in the morning, the home side, in apparent sympathy, had themselves lost a quartet of batters in 40 grim balls as runs dried up to a trickle.

From a promising 49-run opening stand they slumped to 58-4 in the 18th over, Barker bowling through and claiming two for 34.

Though Harry Came reached 33, his opening partner Luis Reece endured such an uproductiv­e first 10 overs that he doubled his score when finally walking out to belt Barker over mid-wicket for six.

He and Shan Masood, for nought, went in four balls of Barker’s next over, however, before Tom Wood edged to slip and Came drove to cover.

Latterly, Alex Hughes, in his first 50-over appearance for exactly a year, partially regained momentum but fell for 31 in a final over from Jack Campbell that allowed only one run off the bat.

In the late scramble, McKiernan became a second casualty of fine fielding from Currie, who ran him out for 17.

 ?? ?? Brooke Guest made 82 for Derbyshire in yesterday’s Royal London Cup match against Hampshire.
Brooke Guest made 82 for Derbyshire in yesterday’s Royal London Cup match against Hampshire.
 ?? ?? Derbyshire’s Ben Aitchison claimed four wickets for the first time in his white-ball career.
Derbyshire’s Ben Aitchison claimed four wickets for the first time in his white-ball career.

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