Matchday one Sussex v Essex (22 June) Sussex (2pts) beat Essex (0pts) by nine wickets Essex Eagles collapsed to lose their first match of the 2005 Twenty20 Cup to
Sussex Sharks. Winning the toss and batting, Essex quickly made their way to 55 for 1, with
Ronnie Irani hitting 34 off 18 balls. But two quick wickets set them back,
Andy Flower was then
run out, and
Mushtaq Ahmed ended their innings with five for 11 from 21 deliveries – as Essex ended all out for 109. In a stately reply, Sussex did not hurry too much, as
Matt Prior scored 66 off 50 balls, and 14
extras helped the Sharks past the target after 14.4 overs. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Kent v Surrey (22 June) Surrey (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by seven wickets In front of a full house at
Beckenham,
Mohammad Akram of the visiting
Surrey Lions served up a rare maiden in Twenty20 cricket as
Kent Spitfires were tied down to 140 for 8 off their twenty overs, despite
Martin van Jaarsveld scoring a fifty.
James Benning then made batting easy for Surrey, scoring ten fours and two sixes in a crackling 66. Surrey eventually won comparatively easily, having four overs left when they reached 141 for 3. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Hampshire v Middlesex (22 June) Middlesex (2pts) beat Hampshire (0pts) by 18 runs Owais Shah made a good attempt at getting the highest strike-rate of the opening day of Twenty20 cricket, recording 72 runs off only 30 balls to lift
Middlesex Crusaders to an unassailable 210 for 6. For
Hampshire Hawks,
Shane Warne showed somewhat poor captaincy when Zimbabwean
all-rounder Sean Ervine was the eighth man to come on to bowl – and then took two for 13 from two overs. New Zealander
Craig McMillan, meanwhile, conceded twenty-eight runs from his only over. Despite
Nic Pothas scoring 59 off 39 balls, the Hawks were nowhere near keeping up with the required pace, and Middlesex bowler
Irfan Pathan was a main cause of that – he took three for 16 from four overs, as Hampshire finished on 192 for 7. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Glamorgan v Somerset (22 June) Glamorgan (2pts) beat Somerset (0pts) on losing fewer wickets James Hildreth scored a quick 46 off 26 deliveries at
Sophia Gardens as
Somerset Sabres set a challenging target of 183 to
Glamorgan Dragons. No Glamorgan bowler really had control over the Somerset batsmen, and yet they lost their wickets. A highlight of the innings was the effort of Somerset's No. 9
Gareth Andrew, who smashed three fours in his first three balls and then was bowled with the fourth. In reply, Glamorgan got to 126 for 2 before part-timers
Keith Parsons and Hildreth got the better of them and took wickets at a leisure – however,
Alex Wharf hung in there with
Michael Powell and carried the Dragons to 183 for 8 after the 20 overs were up. The crowd seemed content with the one point and a tie, but the speaker informed the crowd of the actual result, which of course was pleasing to the home side. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Worcestershire v Warwickshire (22 June) Worcestershire (2pts) beat Warwickshire (0pts) by one run In the local battle at
New Road,
Worcestershire Royals eked out a victory over rivals
Warwickshire Bears.
Graeme Hick and
Ben Smith both made big scores, with 67 and 47, and skipper
Gareth Batty also made 21 to send Worcestershire to 177 for 7. Warwickshire then collapsed to accurate bowling, losing their entire top order except
Jonathan Trott to end up on 68 for 5 – but
Michael Powell made 40 not out batting at seven, turning the innings almost back to Warwickshire's favour. In the end, however, they were two runs short, their No. 11
Nick Warren only managing to hit one off the two balls he faced. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Northamptonshire v Gloucestershire (22 June) Northamptonshire (2pts) beat Gloucestershire (0pts) by 81 runs The
Gloucestershire Gladiators took a massive beating by the
Northamptonshire Steelbacks in their match at
Milton Keynes. Despite Gloucestershire's
Martyn Ball taking two for 18 from four overs, positively economical, five
no-balls and the fact that 16 overs had to be found from bowlers other than Ball allowed Northamptonshire to run away to 224 for 5 – a Twenty20 Cup record
David Sales top-scored for the hosts with 78
not out, while Australian
Damien Wright paired up with him for 84 for the sixth wicket, scoring an unbeaten 38 of his own. Gloucestershire were in trouble from the start, as opening batsman
Craig Spearman was run out for a duck, and when Wright ripped out two more wickets, the Gladiators were 10 for three. Four wickets from
Ben Phillips resulted in a serious collapse, as Gloucestershire were all out for 143. [http://www.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/2005/ENG_LOCAL/TWENTY-20/SCORECARDS/22JUN2005/NORTHANTS_GLOUCS_TWENTY-20_22JUN2005.html (Cricinfo scorecard)
Leicestershire v Nottinghamshire (22 June) Leicestershire (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by five wickets A disciplined bowling and fielding effort, conceding only five
extras, was the key to
Leicestershire Foxes' win at
Grace Road.
Nottinghamshire Outlaws won the
toss and batted first, but after Nottinghamshire skipper
Stephen Fleming found four boundaries in his twelve-ball 24,
Jeremy Snape and
Dinesh Mongia tied down the Nottinghamshire batsmen. Only Leicestershire seamer
Darren Maddy, who bowled two overs for 33, gave the visitors' total score of 143 for 8 a glimmer of respect. The chase was close and exciting, however, as Leicestershire lost
HD Ackerman and Maddy in succession to go to 16 for 2. At 103 for 5, things looked grim, but a crucial partnership between
Paul Nixon and
Ottis Gibson won them the game with four balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Derbyshire v Durham (22 June) Derbyshire (2pts) beat Durham (0pts) by six wickets Durham Dynamos were the team to beat in 2005, and up to this game they had only lost two of 17 League and Championship games. Meanwhile,
Derbyshire Phantoms had only won two from 14. Nevertheless, the Phantoms recorded a comparatively easy victory, as Durham's weak batting line-up was exposed. Batting first, they only made 130 for 7,
Kevin Dean taking two for 20 and
Andre Botha two for 16, both from a full quota of four overs.
Gordon Muchall was the only batsman to pass 20 for the Dynamos. In reply,
James Bryant top-scored with a calm 53 not out off 46 balls,
Jonathan Moss slashed boundaries at will in his 46, and two fours and a two from Botha sent them to 134 for 4 with 14 balls to spare with only
Nathan Astle in some control for Durham, taking two for 14. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Yorkshire v Lancashire (22 June) Lancashire (2pts) beat Yorkshire (0pts) by five wickets Phil Jaques, an Australian, was the dominant figure for the
Yorkshire Phoenix in the Roses battle, scoring 72 from number three before being out to countryman
Brad Hodge. That lifted the hosts to 165 for 7, but that was not enough to defend.
Matthew Hoggard, the England Test bowler, showed an uncanny knack of being uneconomical, conceding 65 runs in his four overs, and despite two wickets he lost the game for the Phoenix.
Brad Hodge ended with 64 not out for the visiting
Lancashire Lightning as they won with seventeen balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday two Surrey v Middlesex (23 June) Surrey (2pts) beat Middlesex (0pts) by 23 runs Surrey Lions recorded their second win from two matches in Twenty20 Cup cricket this season, ironic given their position at the very bottom of the 45-over National League.
Ali Brown made 64 and
David Thornely 67 not out as
Middlesex Crusaders conceded too many runs at the fine batting track at
Lord's, Surrey making 200 for 3.
Owais Shah notched up his second score in the 70s in two days, taking 78 from 44 balls, and things looked good despite Shah leaving at 148 for 2. But
Tim Murtagh changed all that. In four overs, he took six for 24, and with the help of
David Thornely (three for 22) he ensured that Middlesex had seven batsmen out in single figures. They were bowled out for 177, with three balls remaining in the innings. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Essex v Kent (24 June) Essex (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by 29 runs The match at
Chelmsford was made into even more of a slog-effort by the English rain, as both sides were limited to 12 overs.
Andy Flower made 46 off 29 balls, and 17 extras made the
Essex Eagles run-rate exactly eleven an over. Defending 133, Essex got off to a good start as
Antonio Palladino took two wickets, which stopped the visitors from massive smashing, and
Kent Spitfires finished on 103 for 4 – thirty runs short of their winning target. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Hampshire v Sussex (24 June) No result; Hampshire (1pt), Sussex (1pt) Rain caused the match between
Hampshire Hawks and
Sussex Sharks to be abandoned. Despite the fact that a ball was not bowled, the match was declared a no-result since a toss was made. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Somerset v Worcestershire (23 June) Somerset (2pts) beat Worcestershire (0pts) by 15 runs Despite captain
Graeme Smith becoming victim of
Zander de Bruyn's bowling for just two runs,
Somerset Sabres still posted a big target, thanks to
Matthew Wood, who made 94 off only 35 balls before falling to
Nadeem Malik six short of a century. Wood's smashing helped the Sabres to 210 for 6, although no other batsman passed 30.
Graeme Hick tried to emulate Wood, but could only make 87 before
Ian Blackwell got the better of him, and from then on Worcestershire never really had a chance. Blackwell finished with two for 20 in his four overs, and could take his share of the honour for Somerset's surprising win. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Gloucestershire v Glamorgan (24 June) Gloucestershire (2pts) beat Glamorgan (0pts) by seven wickets Glamorgan Dragons were out of luck at
Bristol, as their top order collapsed to the bowling of
Carl Greenidge. Only a last-wicket partnership between
Robert Croft and
Dean Cosker ensured that Glamorgan batted out 20
overs, as they were 70 for 8 at one point but finished on 128 for 9. However, it was never enough. Croft took two wickets with his
off-spin, but
Craig Spearman's 39 built the platform as
Gloucestershire Steelbacks eased to victory with 17 balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Northamptonshire v Warwickshire (24 June) Northamptonshire (2pts) beat Warwickshire (0pts) by 38 runs Northamptonshire Steelbacks took their second victory from two Twenty20 Cup matches thus far, as they accumulated 143 for 5 in 14 overs, despite no batsman hitting more than 40 in a rain-shortened match at
Northampton. Scotsman
Dougie Brown took one for nine off three overs for
Warwickshire Bears, but the target was too large for the visitors, as Northamptonshire bowler
Ben Phillips removed four Warwickshire lower-order batsmen – his second four-wicket-haul in three days – as the Bears crumbled to 105 for 9. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Nottinghamshire v Lancashire (24 June) Nottinghamshire (2pts) beat Lancashire (0pts) by 92 runs Nottinghamshire Outlaws plundered runs off the
Lancashire Lightning fast bowlers at
Trent Bridge, to recover from their first-game loss to Leicestershire. Both
James Anderson and
Glen Chapple were taken for 53 in four overs each, as the Outlaws made 198 for 5. In reply, only
Steven Crook passed 20 for Lancashire,
Graeme Swann took three for 32 and
Mark Ealham two for 22, and Lancashire ended up with an inadequate 106 all out. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Derbyshire v Leicestershire (24 June) Derbyshire (2pts) beat Leicestershire (0pts) by seven wickets (D/L method) Derbyshire Phantoms beat last year's champions
Leicestershire Foxes at
The County Ground, Derby to be the only side with two victories in the North Division of the Twenty20 Cup. Bowling first turned out to be a stroke of genius, as the Leicestershire batsmen were tied down by
Ian Hunter (three for 32) and
Andre Botha (two for 19), and wickets were spread out as Leicestershire's last man,
Claude Henderson, was
caught on the last ball – all out for 137. Derbyshire's reply was shortened by rain, and they only got 14 overs to hit 103, and two wickets from
David Masters set them back to 44 for 3. However, 42 from
Luke Sutton ensured that Derbyshire made it to the target with seven balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday three Kent v Middlesex (25 June) Middlesex (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by 20 runs Ed Smith took over the mantle from
Owais Shah as
Middlesex Crusaders' most useful batsman in the Twenty20 Cup, as he recorded three sixes in a 59-ball 85 and lifted Middlesex to 189 for 8 against
Kent Spitfires at Beckenham. In reply, Kent lost wickets regularly, and
Justin Kemp – normally a quick scorer – couldn't find his footing and only made 23
not out off 19 balls, as Kent could only scamper 169 for 5 in their allotted 20 overs, 21 runs short of the target. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Surrey v Hampshire (25 June) Hampshire (2pts) beat Surrey (0pts) by three wickets James Bruce and
Richard Logan,
Hampshire Hawks' new-ball bowlers, reduced
Surrey Lions to pieces at
the Oval. Only
Rikki Clarke passed 12 runs for Surrey, and he did so in style, making 52 with six fours and a six, while Logan and Bruce shared seven wickets between them. Hampshire had reason to be happy with bowling Surrey out for 118, although they did concede 17
wides, as extras were the second highest scorer for Surrey. Hampshire then attempted to collapse of their own, crashing to 6 for 2 and 66 for 7, but 34 from off-spinner and
captain Shaun Udal saw them home without any further loss of wickets. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Essex v Sussex (26 June) Essex (2pts) beat Sussex (0pts) by 43 runs After
Johannes van der Wath had given
Sussex Sharks the edge with two early wickets against
Essex Eagles,
Andy Flower and
Ryan ten Doeschate rebuilt to send the hosts to 151 for 5 after their 20 overs. Sussex, however, imploded following the departure of
Chris Adams for 44, as
Grant Flower took three quick wickets, and
James Middlebrook and
Andre Adams mopped up the tail for just 108. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Glamorgan v Warwickshire (25 June) Warwickshire (2pts) beat Glamorgan (0pts) by 54 runs Warwickshire Bears won their first Twenty20 match of the season in style, the deep batting line-up finally paying off. Almost every batsman contributed in their massive 205 for 7,
Jamie Troughton top-scoring with 42, and no
Glamorgan Dragons bowler escaped their wrath. When the Dragons batted, only
Matthew Elliott and
Sourav Ganguly gave them any hope of winning, and Ganguly's 36 off 35 balls was verging on the point of being useless when the required rate was 10 an over. A disciplined Warwickshire fielding effort – the Bears only conceded one extra – and
Alex Loudon taking five for 33, resulted in Glamorgan falling to 151 all out in 18.2 overs. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Gloucestershire v Worcestershire (26 June) Gloucestershire (2pts) beat Worcestershire (0pts) by five wickets This was a game of two batsmen. After
Steve Kirby had ripped out two
Worcestershire Royals wickets early on, to finish with figures of two for 15 from four overs, the Royals had been 24 for 3.
Zander de Bruyn then hit eight fours and three sixes in his 76 not out, lifting the Royals to 162 for 6 and setting a potentially tricky target. However,
Phil Weston replied with 73
not out of his own, and despite only
Craig Spearman passing 20 of the other batsmen, Weston secured a win for Gloucestershire with two balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Nottinghamshire v Yorkshire (26 June) Yorkshire (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by two wickets Tim Bresnan's onslaught of fast bowling resulted in three quick wickets for
Yorkshire Phoenix, yet he was only called upon to bowl three overs – for 22 runs – and
Nottinghamshire Outlaws were let off the hook.
Chris Read top-scored with 43 off 35, propelling the hosts to 170 for 8. An excellent start by
Ian Harvey and
Michael Lumb sent Yorkshire to 60 for 1, as Harvey found boundaries seemingly at will – when he was out for 74 (with 64 of them in boundaries), however, Yorkshire imploded from 121 for 2 to 135 for 6.
Craig White and
Ismail Dawood fought back, and number 10
Richard Dawson won them the match with a two and a four, as Yorkshire needed four runs from the last three deliveries of the game. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Leicestershire v Durham (26 June) Leicestershire (2pts) beat Durham (0pts) by three runs Durham Dynamos contrived to lose this one, having first had
Leicestershire Foxes on the rack after limiting them to a total of 150 for 9. Economical bowling from
Dale Benkenstein, who took two for 17, made that possible, but he was later to be the main culprit as
Charl Willoughby and
Jeremy Snape took wickets and refused to give him runs. He eventually finished on 18 from 17 balls, making the task of
Gareth Breese and
Gordon Muchall impossible – and Durham finished an agonising three runs short. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday four Hampshire v Kent (27 June) Hampshire (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by five wickets Zimbabwean
Greg Lamb, playing for the
Hampshire Hawks as a home qualified player due to owning an English passport, took four wickets, including three former Test players, for 28 – which helped peg
Kent Spitfires back to 154 for 9. Hampshire's reply was very well timed, and even a good bowling spell from Kent's
James Tredwell – who only conceded sixteen runs off the bat in four overs – could not stop the Hawks.
Lawrence Prittipaul made 35 before being out on the penultimate ball with the scores tied, but off-spinner and stand-in captain
Shaun Udal, however, made a single on the last ball, as Hampshire reached 155 for 5 in their 20 overs –
Nic Pothas top-scoring with 58. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Surrey v Middlesex (28 June) Surrey (2pts) beat Middlesex (0pts) by 22 runs (D/L method) Rikki Clarke top-scored with 46 and top-bowled with three for 11 for the
Surrey Lions as they moved closer to a quarter-final spot in the Twenty20 Cup with a
Duckworth–Lewis method win over
Middlesex Crusaders. Batting first, Surrey made 180 for 7,
Tim Murtagh hitting 24 off the last eight balls as
Melvyn Betts of Middlesex was smashed around. In reply, only
Ed Smith could do anything serious against the Surrey bowlers, with 33 off 22 balls. When Clarke dug out him,
Scott Styris and
Ed Joyce in quick succession, however, things looked bright for Surrey, and then rain intervened after 11 overs of the Middlesex innings. They were never allowed to come back, and as they were 22 runs behind the par score with their 78 for 4, Surrey took the victory. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Hampshire v Essex (28 June) Match abandoned; Hampshire (1pt), Essex (1pt) Hampshire Hawks and
Essex Eagles shared the spoils as the match at The
Rose Bowl, Southampton never got underway. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Somerset v Glamorgan (27 June) Somerset (2pts) beat Glamorgan (0pts) by 89 runs James Hildreth smashed 71 runs off 37 balls to lift
Somerset Sabres to a convincing victory at
Taunton. Along with
Keith Parsons making 57 off 28, they made a dent in the theory that
spinners are useful in
Twenty20 cricket, as experienced
off-spinner Robert Croft was dispatched for 50 runs in four overs. The
slow left arm bowler
Dean Cosker was also taken for 45 in his four. The visitors' reply never really got going,
Ian Blackwell taking four
Glamorgan Dragons wickets for 26 runs as the Welshmen crumbled to 123 all out,
Sourav Ganguly top-scoring with 35. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Worcestershire v Northamptonshire (27 June) Northamptonshire (2pts) beat Worcestershire (0pts) by 37 runs David Sales (59 runs) and
Usman Afzaal (46) lifted
Northamptonshire Steelbacks to a very competitive total of 180 for 6 at
New Road, where
Shoaib Akhtar bowled a maiden over but was smashed for thirty-three runs in the other three overs he bowled. The hosts' innings saw
Worcestershire Royals lose
Graeme Hick early on, and despite 53 from
Stephen Moore, Northamptonshire's bowlers had a good grip on the Worcestershire players –
Johann Louw got the best figures for the Steelbacks with three for 25 – and Worcestershire finished on 143 for 8. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Gloucestershire v Warwickshire (28 June) No result; Gloucestershire (1pt), Warwickshire (1pt) 37 balls were delivered before
Gloucestershire Steelbacks and
Warwickshire Bears were forced to abandon the game at
The County Ground, Bristol due to rain. Warwickshire were 44 for 1 after 10
leg-byes and 16
not out from
Nick Knight when the game was stopped. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Lancashire v Leicestershire (27 June) Lancashire (2pts) beat Leicestershire (0pts) by eight wickets HD Ackerman was the only one who resisted a patient bowling display from
Lancashire Lightning at their home ground,
Old Trafford.
Muttiah Muralitharan, the Sri Lankan off-spinner, took four for 19 in four overs, yet Ackerman made 79 not out amid the carnage, lifting
Leicestershire Foxes to 146 for 7. However,
Stuart Law took matters into his own hands, bludgeoning twelve fours and four sixes on his way to 92 not out – the highest score of the season so far – and Lancashire won with four wickets and 23 deliveries to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Yorkshire v Derbyshire (28 June) Yorkshire (2pts) beat Derbyshire (0pts) by six wickets A high-scoring game at
Headingley saw both sides score at run-rates in excess of 9.
Derbyshire Phantoms batted first, with
Jonathan Moss notching up 83 off just 44 balls – that's nearly two runs from every ball – and England
Test bowler
Matthew Hoggard was hit for 45 runs in three overs.
Tim Bresnan, however, continued to like the short format, as he took three for 26 in four overs. In reply,
Yorkshire Phoenix reaped the benefits of a massive partnership between Australians
Ian Harvey (who made 109, the first Twenty20 century of the season) and
Phil Jaques who shared a 124-run stand for the second wicket.
Michael Lumb and Bresnan then kept the run rate up, and Yorkshire reached 198 for 4 with an over left in the game to clinch victory. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Durham v Nottinghamshire (28 June) Durham (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by six wickets Durham Dynamos got back on track with a closely fought six-wicket win at
Riverside.
Mark Ealham had some fun with Durham bowler
Neil Killeen as he thumped six sixes in a 17-ball 45, and his partnership with
Chris Read threatened to lift
Nottinghamshire Outlaws to a much bigger score than their final 179. However, four wickets from Jamaican-born
Gareth Breese helped stem the tide. In reply,
Nathan Astle and
Gordon Muchall both made 64 – the latter a
not out – and Ealham was smashed about, conceding 51 runs in four overs. It was almost as bad for
Andrew Harris, who conceded 38 off 15 legitimate deliveries as Durham won with three balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday five Essex v Hampshire (29 June) No result; Essex (1pt), Hampshire (1pt) Hampshire Hawks endured their second no-result in two days against
Essex Eagles, having batted to a competitive total of 151 for 9 in their 20 overs, with
Greg Lamb making 67. However, the Essex innings never got off, due to rain. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Middlesex v Kent (29 June) Middlesex (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by six wickets At
Uxbridge,
Middlesex Crusaders proved the worth of wicket-taking bowling.
Irfan Pathan dug out
Matthew Walker with the second ball of the game, and that set the tone of the innings. Left-arm spinner
Chris Peploe took three wickets, but conceded 35 runs, yet Kent's final total of 144 for 8 did not look too threatening.
Owais Shah kept ploughing on his hard-hitting form, taking
James Tredwell to the cleaners in his 59 not out, and Middlesex made it to 145 for 4 with 16 balls remaining in the innings, as none of the opposition bowlers took more than one wicket. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Sussex v Surrey (29 June) Surrey (2pts) beat Sussex (0pts) by 5 wickets (D/L method) A close, rain-damaged match at
The County Ground, Hove eventually ended in
Surrey Lions snaring a last-ball victory over
Sussex Sharks. Batting first, the hosts made 139 for 6 in 17 overs, spinner
Nayan Doshi taking three wickets despite being the most expensive of the bowlers, while
Matt Prior top-scored with 51. A 28-ball fifty from
Ali Brown then lifted Surrey to 74 for 1, but two run outs saw them lose their next four wickets for eight runs.
Azhar Mahmood and
Ian Salisbury, however, shared a 36-run partnership and saw them pass the revised target of 114 by two runs on the very last ball of the game. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Northamptonshire v Somerset (29 June) Somerset (2pts) beat Northamptonshire (0pts) by five wickets At Northampton,
Andy Caddick served up an unusually economical spell, taking two for 12 in three overs despite two wides. That helped tie the hosts
Northamptonshire Steelbacks down to 95 for 6 in 12 overs in the rain-shortened game, and with
Graeme Smith and
Keith Parsons at the crease and the score 55 for 1, things looked bright for
Somerset Sabres. Two wickets from
Jason Brown helped put the odds for a Northamptonshire win down, but Somerset prevailed, Parsons hitting the winning runs on the last ball as Somerset finished on 97 for 5. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Warwickshire v Glamorgan (30 June) Warwickshire (2pts) beat Glamorgan (0pts) by four runs Glamorgan Dragons continued their poor form in an eventful game at
Edgbaston.
Jamie Troughton's 51 rescued
Warwickshire Bears from a potentially tricky situation at 56 for 4, and quick hitting from
Dougie Brown along with eleven extras gave the hosts a total of 169 for 9. Glamorgan started well, with
Sourav Ganguly and
Matthew Elliott lifting them to 88 for 1 before leaving in quick succession to
Neil Carter and
Jonathan Trott respectively.
Michael Powell and
David Hemp then built another big partnership of 59 to see Glamorgan 147 for 3, but Carter and Brown then shared five wickets as Glamorgan's lower middle order fell apart. Powell tried to pair up with
Dean Cosker, but the damage was already done, and Powell was run out on the penultimate ball as they needed six runs from two balls. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Lancashire v Derbyshire (29 June) Lancashire (2pts) beat Derbyshire (0pts) by 66 runs Brad Hodge and 23
wides gave
Lancashire Lightning a competitive total against
Derbyshire Phantoms, making 164 for 8 despite
Kevin Dean's spell of one for 16 from four overs. Hodge made 44 off 34 balls, and
Dominic Cork – promoted to five – made 28, the only ones to pass 20. Hodge, who came on as fourth change bowler, fuelled the Derbyshire implosion with wickets, as they couldn't hit the ball off the square and were all out for 98 – Hodge ending with figures of four for 17. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Nottinghamshire v Leicestershire (30 June) Leicestershire (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by 21 runs Leicestershire Foxes took the win at
Trent Bridge in a low-scoring match.
Nottinghamshire Outlaws had won the toss and bowled first, and ought to have been pretty pleased with restricting the Foxes to 150 for 4, even though they conceded 15 extras. The opening partnership of
HD Ackerman and
Darren Maddy for 67 runs had promised more for Leicestershire. However,
West Indian Ottis Gibson dug out two early wickets in
Graeme Swann and
Stephen Fleming –
Darren Maddy and
David Masters then took wickets at leisure, and Nottinghamshire were 96 for 7. Despite a rescue mission from
Gareth Clough who hit 30 off 16 balls, there was no hitting power from the other players, and Nottinghamshire finished on 129 for 8. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Yorkshire v Durham (30 June) Durham (2pts) beat Yorkshire (0pts) by two wickets Durham Dynamos won a low-scoring game at
Headingley as both these sides looked to wave goodbye to a quarter-final spot.
Yorkshire Phoenix were sent in to bat, but struggled to score runs, falling to 12 for three early on. Durham captain
Dale Benkenstein bowled himself for two overs to take three wickets for 10, and that spell set Yorkshire back sufficiently to limit them to 123 for 7 – despite a total of 10
extras.
Matthew Hoggard and
Tim Bresnan then took three quick wickets between them to reduce Durham to 15 for 3, but despite eight wickets falling in the Durham innings,
Phil Mustard's 31 and an identical score from No. 8
Gary Scott was enough to lift them to 124 for 8 with an over remaining. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday six Middlesex v Essex (1 July) Middlesex (2pts) beat Essex (0pts) by 31 runs Middlesex Crusaders defeated
Essex Eagles despite missing Irish batsman
Ed Joyce, who had gone off to play in the
2005 ICC Trophy. An opening partnership between
Owais Shah and
Ed Smith for 100 built the platform, Shah eventually making 79, and despite three wickets from Essex
off-spinner James Middlebrook,
Irfan Pathan smashed two sixes in his 21 to lift Middlesex to 185 for 6. Then Pathan took three quick wickets, those of
Alastair Cook,
Ronnie Irani and
Ravinder Bopara, as Essex crashed to 45 for 5.
James Foster made 62 not out to rescue Essex' honour somewhat, but the final score – 154 for 7 – was well short. Pathan got another wicket near the end to finish with four for 27. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Surrey v Kent (1 July) Surrey (2pts) beat Kent (0pts) by 23 runs (D/L method) Kent Spitfires suffered another loss, this time at
the Oval against
Surrey Lions. In a rain-hit game shortened by five overs, Surrey scored freely, hitting at nearly 11 runs an over –
Ali Brown with 29 and
Scott Newman with 52 not out off 27 balls doing the brunt of the damage. Kent made an attempt at chasing 168, with
Michael Carberry taking 23 runs off nine balls in his innings from number three, but Surrey spinner
Nayan Doshi took four wickets for 27 to set them back to 123 for 6. With economical bowling from
Azhar Mahmood as well, Kent only managed 144 for 8. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Sussex v Hampshire (1 July) Sussex (2pts) beat Hampshire (0pts) by 10 runs A twelve-over game at
Hove was won by
Sussex Sharks, though the rain threatened to destroy it all.
IanWard and
Matt Prior opened the batting for Sussex, who had been sent in to bat by
Hampshire Hawks' captain
Shaun Udal, and they made good use of it, sending Sussex to 53 for 0. Two quick wickets from
Sean Ervine slowed the Sharks' progression, as they slumped to 88 for 5, but
Michael Yardy hit 10 in four balls in an unbeaten 11-run sixth-wicket stand with
Carl Hopkinson. Chasing, Hampshire never quite kept up with the required run rate, as
Mushtaq Ahmed took three for 19 in his three overs to be the main cause of the Hawks' demise, and Hampshire finished on 89 for 6. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Glamorgan v Northamptonshire (1 July) Match abandoned without a ball bowled; Glamorgan (1pt), Northamptonshire (1pt) The weather at
Sophia Gardens in
Cardiff prevented a match from getting underway between
Glamorgan Dragons and
Northamptonshire Steelbacks. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Gloucestershire v Somerset (1 July) No result; Gloucestershire (1pt), Somerset (1pt) Only thirteen overs of play was possible at
The County Ground, Bristol. By that time, two
Somerset Sabres batsmen had departed for golden ducks –
Graeme Smith and
James Hildreth – and Somerset were 61 for 7.
Gloucestershire Gladiators would have fancied their chances, but rain intervened to spoil the party. (Cricinfo scorecard
Warwickshire v Worcestershire (1 July) Worcestershire (2pts) beat Warwickshire (0pts) by one run Worcestershire Royals took their second successive one-run victory over
Warwickshire Bears, to the agony of home fans at
Edgbaston. After
Heath Streak took two early wickets,
Neil Carter entered the scene as the sixth bowler to be used. He took five wickets inside four overs, for 19 runs, as Worcestershire were all out for 141 with seven balls to spare. In reply, two
run outs and wickets from
Gareth Batty and
Zander de Bruyn left Warwickshire trailing by 60 with one wicket in hand, with
Heath Streak and
James Anyon at the crease. Streak rotated the strike well, facing most of the balls and hitting most of the runs, and brought the score to 140 for 9 with a ball to spare. Then – setting off for the last run that would tie the scores (and win the match for Warwickshire on fewer wickets lost) – Streak was run out for 59, off 32 balls, and Warwickshire's quarter-final hopes were dented, but not wiped out. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Durham v Leicestershire (1 July) Leicestershire (2pts) beat Durham (0pts) by 32 runs Last year's champions
Leicestershire Foxes were back on track for the quarter-finals thanks to 73 from
John Sadler at the
Riverside Ground. Sadler's 72-run second-wicket partnership with skipper
HD Ackerman lifted the visitors to 154 for 7.
Durham Dynamos yet again showed their inability to hit at anything significantly above 6 an over,
Nicky Peng's top-score of 37 being off 41 balls. Despite captain
Dale Benkenstein hitting 33 not out off 16 deliveries, it did not help, as Leicestershire smothered them to 122 for 7. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Lancashire v Yorkshire (1 July) Lancashire (2pts) beat Yorkshire (0pts) by 110 runs Lancashire Lightning recorded the most emphatic victory by runs in the 2005 Twenty20 season, as they had fun with the
Yorkshire Phoenix bowlers. After being put in to bat,
Mal Loye and
Stuart Law put on 106 for the first wicket, and when Loye departed for 47
Brad Hodge followed up with a 17-ball 33, a partnership of 77 with Law. Despite
Ian Harvey digging into them with two wickets, the early run-rate ensured that Lancashire set a target of 208, Law recording the second Twenty20 century this season – in 56 balls.
Ian Harvey, the man responsible for the first of those centuries, was out early for 1, and wickets fell to everyone as Yorkshire were out for 97 –
Dominic Cork taking three for 10,
Muttiah Muralitharan three for 17, and
James Anderson two for 26.
Matthew Hoggard and
Tim Bresnan recorded the highest partnership for Yorkshire, with 22 for the tenth wicket. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Nottinghamshire v Derbyshire (1 July) Derbyshire (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by four wickets Derbyshire Phantoms needed to win to have a chance of qualifying for the quarter-finals – and did it, in a thriller finish.
Nottinghamshire Outlaws batted first, and
Will Smith and
Chris Read made 51 and 44 not out respectively. The pair where the only two Nottinghamshire batsmen to pass 20, their contributions lifted the hosts to 147 for 8.
Michael Di Venuto and
Luke Sutton took Derbyshire to 92 for 1 before economical bowling chipped away at Derbyshire's batting. However, captain Sutton kept a cool head, anchoring the chase with 61 not out in 54 balls as Derbyshire won with two balls to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday seven Somerset v Northamptonshire (2 July) Northamptonshire (2pts) beat Somerset (0pts) by five wickets Despite
Graeme Smith making a 53-ball century, and pairing up with
Matthew Wood for 129 for the first wicket,
Somerset Sabres still lost the match at
Taunton. Smith's 105 helped Somerset set a target of 190, but none of the bowlers conceded less than seven an over to
Northamptonshire Steelbacks' batting.
Simon Francis was the worst, ending with 57 conceded runs in four overs, while
Riki Wessels hit 49 not out with four sixes off 22 balls, and the Sabres had to see that Northamptonshire won with an over to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Worcestershire v Gloucestershire (2 July) Gloucestershire (2pts) beat Worcestershire (0pts) by nine wickets The visitors
Gloucestershire Gladiators recorded an easy victory at
New Road as
Worcestershire scored only 100 all out in their innings,
Stephen Moore top-scoring with only 23.
Martyn Ball took three for 24, but all the bowlers got wickets, and
Mark Alleyne conceded only six runs in four overs. Although they lost
Craig Spearman with the score on 22, the Gladiators knocked off their target easily, with nine wickets and five overs to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Lancashire v Durham (3 July) Lancashire (2pts) beat Durham (0pts) by 37 runs Mal Loye and
Brad Hodge helped
Lancashire Lightning to recover after
Stuart Law was stumped in the second over off
Durham Dynamos medium-pacer
Neil Killeen. Loye and Hodge paired up for 169 for the second wicket, as Loye became the second Lancastrian to score a Twenty20 century this season before he was eventually
caught off
Nathan Astle's bowling for 100. Lancashire closed on 208 for 4, and only Killeen conceded less than 30 runs of Durham's six bowlers. Astle got the best bowling figures, with two for 37, but his batting helped little – 55 for 37 was never enough to keep up with the asking rate of 10.5. When Durham realised that, they tried to lash out, and a result, wickets tumbled to
Glen Chapple and
Dominic Cork and Durham finished their 20 overs with the score on 171 for 7. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Yorkshire v Nottinghamshire (3 July) Nottinghamshire (2pts) beat Yorkshire (0pts) by six wickets Nottinghamshire won the toss at
Headingley and put
Yorkshire into bat. The hosts suffered an immediate setback when
Ian Harvey was out from the first ball to
Andrew Harris, but
Craig White and
Phil Jaques settled the ship, with Jaques going on to score 55 off 33 balls.
Richard Pyrah finished the innings with 31 off 17 as Yorkshire set their guests a target of 181 to win. The start of Nottinghamshire's innings was the opposite to Yorkshire's: openers
Will Smith (55) and
Graeme Swann (62) put on 101 before they were parted, as Swann slashed nine fours, three sixes, and also had time to run eight times across the pitch in a 25-ball frenzy. Yorkshire took the next four wickets for 50 runs, with
leg spinner Mark Lawson grabbing two, and with a high total to chase the game was in the balance. However,
Chris Read's 28 off 18 balls saw Nottinghamshire home with just two balls to go. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Derbyshire v Lancashire (4 July) Lancashire (2pts) beat Derbyshire (0pts) by 50 runs (D/L method) Big scores from
Stuart Law (67) and
Brad Hodge (90 not out) helped
Lancashire Lightning to a massive 205 for 2 at
The County Ground, Derby, medium-pacer
Ian Hunter taking both wickets. Law and Hodge shared a 154-run stand for the second wicket. Two early wickets from former England
ODI player
James Anderson pegged
Derbyshire Phantoms back, and
Brad Hodge took four for 27 – his second Twenty20 four-wicket-haul of the season – to reduce Derbyshire to 106 for 7, before rain intervened with 5.3 overs left in the game. The rain never relented, and it was calculated that Derbyshire's par score was 156, thus Lancashire took a convincing 50-run victory. The victory meant that Lancashire qualified for the quarter-finals with one game to spare. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Durham v Yorkshire (4 July) Yorkshire (2pts) beat Durham (0pts) by 40 runs Yorkshire Phoenix got their first win in three Twenty20 games, but the quarter-finals still looked out of sight, as they needed to win their last game and Derbyshire lose their last. Batting first,
Ian Harvey,
Craig White and
Paul Jaques all made scores between 40 and 60, to lift Yorkshire to 126 for 1 at one point. Off-spinner
Gary Scott and medium-pacer
Dale Benkenstein took three wickets between them, but Yorkshire still managed 171 for 7.
Durham Dynamos looked in the game when Benkenstein and
Gordon Muchall were at the crease, pairing up for 79 for the fourth wicket, but a burst of wickets – thanks to
Richard Dawson and
Anthony McGrath's bowling – sent Durham to the ropes at 111 for 8. Twelve minutes later, it was all over for 131, with 17 deliveries remaining. Yorkshire's 30-year-old
seam bowler Adam Warren took two for 32 on Twenty20 debut. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Sussex v Middlesex (4 July) No result; Sussex (1pt), Middlesex (1pt) Seven overs of play was possible at
The County Ground, Hove, before rain intervened.
Owais Shah made 30 not out off 20 balls to see
Middlesex Crusaders to a healthy 56 for 1, but
Sussex Sharks never got the chance to chase as the game was abandoned. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Warwickshire v Somerset (4 July) Warwickshire (2pts) beat Somerset (0pts) by 47 runs Warwickshire Bears jumped on the quarter-final train just as it seemed to be leaving the station, grabbing the ticket out of the hands of
Somerset Sabres.
Neil Carter and
Ian Bell opened the batting and scored quickly, sending the score to 40 for 1, but part-timer
William Durston got three wickets in quick succession to have three for four at one point.
Trevor Penney then smashed three successive sixes off Durston to end with 35 not out off 13 balls. Thus, Warwickshire closed on 172 for 8, and patient bowling from Carter and
Alex Loudon sent them crumbling to 89 for 6.
Arul Suppiah and Durston paired up for 27 for the seventh wicket, but when Suppiah was bowled by
Jonathan Trott it looked hopeless for Somerset.
Jamie Anyon wrapped them up with a hat-trick to end Somerset's innings on 125. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Essex v Surrey (5 July) Essex (2pts) beat Surrey (0pts) by one run Rain ravaged
The County Ground, Chelmsford and delayed the match between
Essex Eagles and
Surrey Lions to after ten o'clock. When it finally began, it had been shortened to five overs a side, and Essex made good use of it as they scored 71 for 3 –
Ronnie Irani making 32, while
Azhar Mahmood took two for three for Surrey. In reply,
Antonio Palladino took two wickets for Essex, but it looked up for grabs when Surrey needed eight off five after
James Middlebrook bowled a wide that went for four – however, he only conceded six runs from the remaining balls of the game, and Surrey finished on 70 for 2. Yet, they would have to be exceedingly unlucky in their last game to be eliminated, while Essex jumped into the top three and looked to qualify along with them. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Kent v Sussex (5 July) No result; Kent (1pt), Sussex (1pt) In eleven overs of play,
Kent Spitfires moved to 91 for 1,
Andrew Hall making 43 not out as
Sussex Sharks' new man,
Pakistani Naved-ul-Hasan made his debut with nought for 10 in two overs. Then, rain made play impossible. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Glamorgan v Gloucestershire (5 July) Glamorgan (2pts) beat Gloucestershire (0pts) by ten wickets Glamorgan Dragons broke their streak of four successive losses with a comfortable victory at
Sophia Gardins. The two brothers
David Harrison and
Adam Harrison took two wickets each for Glamorgan, as
Gloucestershire Gladiators crumbled to 57 for 7.
Jon Lewis and
Mark Alleyne shared a 68-run stand, but a quick burst of wickets from
Robert Croft and
Andrew Davies had them all out for 128 at
Sophia Gardens. Croft and
Matthew Elliott both made fifties as
Glamorgan Dragons knocked off the runs with ten wickets and 7.3 overs to spare, helped by five no-balls and four wides from the Gloucestershire bowlers. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Leicestershire v Derbyshire (5 July) Match abandoned; Leicestershire (1pt), Derbyshire (1pt) No play was possible at
Grace Road due to rain, but
Leicestershire Foxes moved one step closer to the second place that guaranteed a quarter-final – the no-result meant that they were still two points ahead of
Derbyshire Phantoms in third place, and dominating on net run-rate. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Northamptonshire v Worcestershire (5 July) Match abandoned; Northamptonshire (1pt), Worcestershire (1pt) No play was possible at
The County Ground, Northampton due to rain, and the hosts
Northamptonshire Steelbacks qualified for the quarter-finals thanks to the no-result. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Matchday eight Kent v Essex (6 July) Kent (2pts) beat Essex (0pts) by five runs Dane
Amjad Khan, who had missed the first part of the
2005 ICC Trophy and most of the Twenty20 Cup due to injury, returned to cricket with a very decent bowling spell of three for 24 to set
Essex Eagles back to 26 for 3. Khan's
Kent Spitfires had batted first, however, and 59
not out from left-hander
Michael Carberry lifted them to a total of 154 for 4, while
Andre Adams shone on the bowling front for Essex with two for 12 off three overs. However, the Spitfires kept firing dangerous balls at the Eagles, and eventually shot them down to 149 for 7 –
Mark Pettini making 60 in vain before he was
run out, while
Andrew Hall took two for 30 for Kent. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Middlesex v Hampshire (6 July) Hampshire (2pts) beat Middlesex (0pts) by six wickets In a high-scoring match at
Richmond,
Middlesex Crusaders made 174 for 7 having opted to bat first.
Owais Shah made yet another fifty – his fifth in eight innings – while
Scott Styris and
Paul Weekes made quick scores to up the run-rate.
Shaun Udal,
Sean Ervine and
Craig McMillan all got two wickets.
Hampshire Hawks started slowly, at about seven an over, but McMillan took a liking to
Chris Peploe in particular as he smashed five sixes in his half-hour 65 not out, and thanks to McMillan's big hitting Hampshire won with sixteen balls and six wickets to spare. However, it was in vain – with only three wins, they finished fourth in the South Division tables, while Middlesex qualified despite having a poorer net run rate than Hampshire. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Surrey v Sussex (6 July) Sussex (2pts) beat Surrey (0pts) by three wickets Surrey Lions were consistently pegged back by the
Sussex Sharks' bowling at
The Oval, having been put in to bat by Sussex captain
Chris Adams.
Azhar Mahmood stood firm and knocked off 40 unbeaten runs, but
Naved-ul-Hasan,
James Kirtley and
Mushtaq Ahmed all got two wickets for less than six runs an over as Surrey eventually had to settle for 144 for 8. In reply,
IanWard made a quickfire 50, off 28 balls, before being bowled by Surrey
off-spinner Nayan Doshi to send Sussex to 82 for 3. Adams and
Murray Goodwin both made 28, while Azhar Mahmood took two for 21 from four overs. Eventually, a six from Naved-ul-Hasan won Sussex the game with three balls to spare to put them third in the table, but as they were the poorest third-placed side in the competition with only three wins, they were still knocked out. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Somerset v Gloucestershire (6 July) Somerset (2pts) beat Gloucestershire (0pts) by 95 runs Somerset Sabres made it through to the quarter-finals after recording a massive score of 228 for 5 in twenty overs – the highest team total in
Twenty20 Cup history, eclipsing a record set a couple of weeks earlier. The most economical bowler was
Steve Kirby, and he conceded 35 runs in four overs, while the other four where all taken for more than 40 runs.
Graeme Smith top-scored with 53,
Ian Blackwell made 45, and
James Hildreth recorded 32 off 10 balls – 28 from six shots to the boundary and four from the other four deliveries. Somerset's innings featured eight sixes and twenty
extras.
Gloucestershire Gladiators, who were second in the Midland/Wales/West group before this game at
Taunton, had to go for expansive strokes, and were all out in sixteen overs,
Gareth Andrew taking four for 22 while
Craig Spearman top scored with 35 off 17 balls.
Keith Parsons also contributed bowling-wise, taking three for 12. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Warwickshire v Northamptonshire (6 July) Warwickshire (2pts) beat Northamptonshire (0pts) by 41 runs Warwickshire Bears were lifted to a total of 205 for 2 by hitting eight sixes at
Edgbaston,
Ian Bell carrying his side with 66 not out off just 38 balls.
Nick Knight also made 61 as
Northamptonshire Steelbacks failed to make any impact with the ball. The Northamptonshire reply was stifled by some reasonably economical bowling, with no regular bowler conceding more than eight an over, and good fielding which yielded one run out and stopped the boundaries. Warwickshire seamer
Jamie Anyon took three for 34, for his second successive match with a three-wicket haul, while
Usman Afzaal became top scorer with a run-a-ball 43.
Ben Phillips hit 41
not out from number four to complement his bowling figures of two for 43. In the end, Northamptonshire made 164 for 6, but still went through – along with Warwickshire, who finished second in their group thanks to their win over Somerset two days earlier. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Worcestershire v Glamorgan (6 July) Worcestershire (2pts) beat Glamorgan (0pts) by 37 runs Both
Worcestershire Royals and
Glamorgan Dragons were knocked out before the last round of the Twenty20 Cup group stage, so the match at
New Road was fairly academic. It did not stop Worcestershire from amassing one of the highest scores in Twenty20 Cup history with 223 for 9 –
Ben Smith only taking 45 balls to smack 105 off the Glamorgan bowlers, with twelve fours and six sixes, as he lifted his career Twenty20 average from 15 to 20.62. The partnership of 149 with
Graeme Hick was enough to win the match for Worcestershire, as Glamorgan never quite got the hang of
Shoaib Akhtar – who bowled two overs for 14 with a no-ball and a wide. Glamorgan ended up only losing five wickets, but 224 was always too much to ask, and they finished with a total 186 for 5. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Derbyshire v Nottinghamshire (6 July) Derbyshire (2pts) beat Nottinghamshire (0pts) by nine wickets Nottinghamshire Outlaws were limited to 139 for 5 by economical
Derbyshire Phantoms bowling – which allowed them to take singles and not much more at
Derby. Only ten boundaries were hit during Nottinghamshire's innings, all in fours, and
Chris Read – usually a man with a high strike-rate – was limited to 29 off 31 balls. The Derbyshire reply was spearheaded by
Michael Di Venuto who made an unbeaten 77 and added 92 with
Jonathan Moss for the second wicket. Derbyshire passed their target with nine wickets and 20 balls in hand, and the victory gave them a quarter-final berth. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Durham v Lancashire (6 July) Match abandoned; Durham (1pt), Lancashire (1pt) As
Lancashire Lightning were already through and
Durham Dynamos already knocked out of the Twenty20 Cup, the rain at the
Riverside Ground mattered little. Both sides shared a point in the game. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Leicestershire v Yorkshire (6 July) Leicestershire (2pts) beat Yorkshire (0pts) by seven wickets With a lot of luck with other results,
Yorkshire Phoenix could have qualified for the quarter-finals with a win in this game against
Leicestershire Foxes. However, as
Ian Harvey's support batsmen failed to score at more than three an over until
Anthony McGrath came in at five with the scoreboard on 84 for 3, their innings was eventually worth just 177 for 5 – Harvey making 77 of those and McGrath 33. In reply, opening batsman
Darren Maddy anchored the innings with 72
not out, and
Jeremy Snape saw off the required runs as he hit 39 off 23 balls and the Foxes won with nine balls and seven wickets to spare. Leicestershire, who needed a tie or better to be completely assured of the quarter-final spot, thus went through. (Cricinfo scorecard)
Tables Midlands/Wales/West Division North Division South Division Tie-breaker rules: • Points (2 for a win, 1 for a no-result, 0 for a loss) • Games won • Head-to-head result(s) between teams • Net run rate ==Quarter-finals==