Nottinghamshire gain revenge over Derbyshire with narrow T20 win

Joe Clarke top-scored as Notts narrowly beat Derbyshire.Joe Clarke top-scored as Notts narrowly beat Derbyshire.
Joe Clarke top-scored as Notts narrowly beat Derbyshire.
Notts Outlaws avenged a heavy defeat at Derby with a eight-run victory at Trent Bridge to keep their Vitality Blast season just about alive.

Joe Clarke’s side climb off the bottom of the North Group table for the first time with their second win. After losing their first five matches, qualification for the quarter-finals will be a tall order but it remains mathematically possible.

Clarke, still searching for his first half-century of the season, hit 47 from 28 balls with Tom Moores (31 from 27) and Matt Montgomery (28 not out from 31) adding useful late runs to give the Falcons a target of 174, skipper Samit Patel taking two for 24 on his first visit to Trent Bridge as a Derbyshire player, supported by Pat Brown’s two for 39.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Aneurin Donald hit a 26-ball 52 and veteran Wayne Madsen 40 from 35 in the Falcons’ response but a solid performance with the ball by the home side, led by New Zealand left-arm quick Ben Lister taking two for 24 in his final appearance, ensured there would be no fairytale return for Patel.

After opting to bat first, Clarke hit 36 out of 59 for one in the powerplay. He was dropped just behind square off Patel on 24, but responded with three fours in an over off South African quick Daryn Dupavillon before slog-sweeping Ross Whiteley for his second six. Ben Martindale, in his maiden Blast innings, fell to a well-judged catch at long-off for 16.

Controversy followed before the Outlaws reached half-way on 89 for two, Clarke putting himself at serious risk of sanction after being given out caught at short third man.

As Dupavillon insisted he had his fingers fully under the ball to take Clarke’s reverse-scoop just above the ground, the Notts skipper stood his ground, shooting alternate glares at standing umpire Graham Lloyd and the fielders, before ex-colleague Patel persuaded him he should leave the field.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Alex Hales (26 off 23) and Jack Haynes (18 off 13) both made starts before being caught off Patel in the deep and it took some enterprising batting from Moores and Montgomery to give the Outlaws bowlers something to defend, Moores hammering Patel for six over long-on before being athletically caught at short fine-leg by 40-year-old Wayne Madsen.

Giving early impetus to the chase, Donald’s extraordinary hitting power lifted the Falcons to 70 for one in their batting powerplay after David Lloyd had hoicked Olly Stone to midwicket for seven, the former Glamorgan batter completing a 21-ball half-century with his fifth six as Liam Patterson-White’s first over went for 27 runs.

But the Outlaws left-arm spinner responded superbly, having Donald caught on the slog-sweep before bowling Zak Chappell in a second over that conceded only two runs. With leg-spinner Calvin Harrison miserly at the other end, the Falcons were 87 for three from 10, the outcome squarely in the balance.

Cam Fletcher was well caught at long-off but Madsen stepped up to damage Harrison’s figures with a four drilled through the on-side and a six over long-off to bring the requirement down to 46 from five overs before Ross Whitely cleared the rope off Stone but holed out off Lister.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Patel’s visions of being the match-winner vanished when he bottom-edged Stone into his stumps and when Madsen slashed Lister to be caught on the point boundary - a second wicket in two superb death overs - the Outlaws were favourites, the Falcons needing 19 from six balls, which proved too much.

Outlaws skipper and top-scorer Joe Clarke said: “We wanted that so much tonight. I said to the lads before the game that we should remember how we felt at Derby when things didn’t go our way and we played poorly.

“It means so much to the people of Nottingham, to the members and fans here tonight, and to us as players to, to win this fixture and to do it that way as well, under pressure. The way the boys stepped up makes me really happy.

“I was particularly pleased for Liam Patterson-White. He had a really tough opening over. I threw him in at the deep end by bowling him in the powerpay and Donald went after him but the way he bowled after that was superb and will do so much for his confidence as a cricketer.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“On my dismissal, I don’t want to go into whether I was out or not but there was a lot of frustration there (in the way I reacted) because I’d got to 40-odd and me and Alex (Hales) were going well. I wanted to take it deep and so I was frustrated to get out. As captain I’ve tried not to be like that but it made me show that side a little bit.”

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.