Manchester Evening News

Rose home comforts now hinges on Bears

- CRICKET

LANCS were comfortabl­y beaten by seven wickets by Birmingham Bears at Edgbaston.

Lancashire, already assured a place in the last eight, chose to bat but were bowled out for 102 with only Danny Lamb (24, 18 balls) passing 20.

Olly Hannon-Dalby inflicted most damage with 4-0-20-4 although critical pressure was imposed by spinners Jeetan Patel (4-1-15-1) and Josh Poysden (4-0-18-1).

Birmingham then eased to 105 for three with 35 balls to spare after openers Ed Pollock (36, 24) and Ian Bell (34, 36 balls) added 68 from 54 balls.

Lancs batsman Dane Vilas said: “We let ourselves down with the bat and gave wickets away in the powerplay which was crucial. After losing four in the powerplay it was really tough on the young guys lower down the order who haven’t played too much cricket and had a lot of responsibi­lity on them.”

The Bears now need a favour from Northants Steelbacks tomorrow. If the Steelbacks beat Yorkshire at Wantage Road, the Bears could still qualify with victory over Worcesters­hire Rapids in the big derby at Edgbaston on Friday.

Lightning’s quest for a home quarter-final now also hinges on that match.

A Rapids victory would mean they claim a home quarter, consigning Lancashire to travel.

The Lightning innings started smoothly enough, 22 runs arriving from the first 17 balls, but then slumped to 59 for six.

Hannon-Dalby started the collapse with two wickets in four balls, Alex Davies and Karl Brown caught at extra cover and mid on respective­ly.

Dane Vilas lifted Aaron Thomason to deep point, Arron Lilley became Grant Elliott’s 18th victim of this year’s Blast when he sliced to short third man and Josh Bohannon the 19th when he was trapped in front.

Patel and Poysden increased the pressure, the latter bowling Steven Croft with a textbook leg-break. Catches from wicketkeep­er Tim Ambrose, fresh from signing a contract extension at Edgbaston, did for James Faulkner, Lamb and Mark Watt as the Lightning lowerorder flailed in vain before HannonDalb­y removed Matt Parkinson to seal a personal T20 best.

Bell and Pollock made rapid inroads into the small target. Bell, in the T20 form of his life, has become the Bears’ highest ever scorer in the format during this year’s tournament and again batted with class and composure.

Pollock, under no pressure to go too hard in pursuit of such a meagre total, played with controlled aggression and sent the score past 50 in the eighth over with 16 from three successive balls from Lilley.

Pollock perished to a catch at long on, just as the Bears’ first ever T20 ten-wicket win loomed, and Bell chipped Parkinson to mid-off but victory soon followed to put the Bears’ fans firmly in the Steelbacks’ camp tomorrow.

Meanwhile, Jordan Clark – who missed last night’s game with a hamstring injury – is expected to join Surrey after his contract runs out at the end of the season.

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