Coventry Telegraph

Sam-thing special as Bears put Vikings to the sword!

- By BRIAN HALFORD

THE enduring excellence of Sam Hain sparkled yet again as Birmingham Bears began their Vitality Blast campaign with a comfortabl­e 34-run victory over Yorkshire Vikings at Edgbaston.

In the second half of the inaugural ‘Blast Off ’ double-header (Lancashire beat Derbyshire in the first), the Bears were lifted to an imposing 200 for six by a stand of 97 in 47 balls from Hain (83 not out, 46 balls) and Chris Benjamin (46, 28).

The Bears’ bowling attack then made light of the loss of Hassan Ali, who turned an ankle in the warm-up. Chris Woakes struck twice in his first 11 balls as the Vikings dipped to 34 for five. There was no way back from there and they ended on 166 all out, Dawid Malan top-scoring with 43 from 29 and Henry Brookes taking four for 32.

The hefty margin of victory continued the recent history of less-thantight Blast encounters between these teams, their previous two meetings having delivered a ten-wicket win for each.

“As a batting unit we always risk being bowled out for 70 or 80 because we want to get 200 every time, but we knew that was a decent score on a good wicket,’’ said Hain. “Benji and I enjoy batting together, we build off each other’s energy and it worked well for us.

“With our batting line-up we have a lot of people who want to do well and are capable of it and we will need that in a long campaign.

“Yorkshire bowled really well up front but sometimes as a batter in T20 you have more time than you think. If you stay in long enough, you will eventually get a ball you can hit so sometimes you have to play the long game and that’s what we did.

“Then with the ball, Woakesy and Brookesy were brilliant. It was a great effort from Brookesy after Hassan went down in the warm-up – he came in and took an incredible catch and a got a four-for. Milo took wickets too and it was a great effort from the bowlers because it is tough when you are bowling to a short boundary on one side.”

The Vikings’ decision to bowl first appeared sound after the home side ended the powerplay on a modest

41 for three. Paul Stirling, returning to Birmingham on a short-term deal until Glenn Maxwell’s IPL commitment­s are over, played on to Matt Revis whose excellent first two overs cost just eight runs.

When Dom Bess’s third ball bowled Dan Mousley through an attempted slog-sweep, the Bears were 51 for four – a wobbly platform which Hain and Benjamin first shored up then built upon spectacula­rly with some ferocious

We always risk being bowled out for 70 or 80 because we want to get 200 every time, but we knew that was a decent score.

Sam Hain

strokeplay. Revis returned to end the partnershi­p second ball back when Benjamin ladled to deep square leg, but Hain remained to smite seven fours and four sixes. His last two fours, pulled to the raucous Hollies Stand side off Ben Mike, came from the last two balls of the innings to take the total to 200. Woakes then got busy as the Vikings lost wickets to the fifth ball of each of the first four overs. The World Cup winner had Adam Lyth caught behind and forced Shan Masood to play on. Brookes ended Jonny Bairstow’s input at seven from six balls, courtesy of a nick to the wicketkeep­er,

and bowled Will Fraine to leave the innings in disarray at 20 for four.

That became 34 for five when Revis connected sweetly with a cover drive off Mousley but was brilliantl­y caught at extra by Danny Briggs. Another fine catch, from Brookes diving forward at deep square off Craig Miles, removed Mike and when Jordan Thompson sent up a skier later in the over, Malan was left with 133 to find from ten overs and only the lower order for company.

After he fell lbw slog-sweeping at Jake Lintott, the quest for 102 from the last six overs proved beyond the Vikings’ reach, despite some carefree swishing in a lost cause from Bess (42 not out, 28) and Jafer Chohan (37, 20).

 ?? ?? Sam Hain and Henry Brookes produced fireworks for Bears
Sam Hain and Henry Brookes produced fireworks for Bears

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