Leicestershire win but miss out on quarter-finals after disciplinary ruling

Leicestershire have offered supporters who had bought tickets but did not attend after hearing that the match was effectively a dead rubber the chance to apply for a refund

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Leicester: Leicestershire 211-7, Yorkshire 151-9 - Leicestershire win by 60 runs

Scorecard

Leicestershire Foxes finished off their Vitality Blast season with a fifth straight win but it was a bittersweet victory after it was revealed just hours before the match that they had suffered a two-point deduction as a result of two disciplinary offences committed during their dramatic one-run victory over Northamptonshire Steelbacks on Friday evening, making it impossible for them to qualify for the quarter-finals.

The Foxes finished with 211 for 7 from their 20 overs after skipper Colin Ackermann made an unbeaten 72 off 46 balls, backed up by Nick Welch's rapid 46 in the powerplay and Louis Kimber's 30 off 11 balls at the death, David Willey taking 3 for 29 for the Vikings.

In what would have been a play-off for the final quarter-final place from the North Group with Leicestershire just a point behind Yorkshire ahead of the game, but the deduction rendered the result academic, with the Vikings progressing in fourth place despite mustering only 151 for 9 in reply.

Rehan Ahmed finished with an impressive 3 for 17 to total 19 wickets in his debut season, Adam Lyth's 52 from 25 balls for the Vikings an effort in vain.

The Foxes' fate was decided by the ECB's Cricket Discipline Commission on Saturday evening but the announcement was delayed until the Commission's report was published at 11am on Sunday. Leicestershire have offered supporters who had bought tickets but did not attend after hearing that the match was effectively a dead rubber the chance to apply for a refund.

Put in on the same pitch that was in use when they stacked up 215 against the Steelbacks, their highest total of the season, the Foxes looked to be on course for something similar when they raced to 56 for two in the powerplay.

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Naveen-ul-Haq took his 50th wicket in his last two Blast seasons (David Rogers/Getty Images)

It was almost all down to Welch, who pulled and drove five sixes, two off George Hill, one off David Willey and another couple off Pakistan leg spinner Shadab Khan before he was caught at deep midwicket in the fifth over, having hit his 46 off 23 balls after Lewis Hill had chipped to mid-off in the opening over to fall without scoring.

Lilley, dropped on seven, joined Ackermann as the runs continued to pile up, the Foxes completing half their overs on 97 for 2, only just shy of where they had been at the same point on Friday.

Having launched Shadab Khan over long on for long off for six, Lilley edged to short third man for 35 off 23 balls in the 11th and when Willey dismissed Wiaan Mulder, caught at mid-off, and Ben Mike, catching a miscue in his follow-through, with consecutive balls in the 14th, the innings looked at risk of falling away at 131 for 5.

Rishi Patel was caught on the cover boundary but after Kimber hit back-to-back sixes off Jordan Thomson before falling to a catch at extra cover in the final over from Willey, Yorkshire’s bowlers leaked 65 off the last four overs.

After that, Yorkshire needed a productive powerplay and got it as Lyth wallopped 52 off 25 balls before top-edging a Naveen ul-Haq bouncer to be caught at fine leg, a 50th Blast wicket in two seasons for the Afghanistan pace bowler. The Vikings opener hit seven fours and two sixes, one each off Naveen and Mulder, who bowled three wides as he conceded 22 in an over.

But 70 for 1 turned into 86 for 3 in the ninth and 103 for 4 in the 11th as the Foxes bowlers fought back, Finn Allen driving Callum Parkinson in the air to mid-off, Rehan Ahmed tossing one up to Tom Kohler-Cadmore, who promptly picked out long off, before Dawid Malan bottom-edged Ackermann into his stumps.

Willey missed a slog-sweep and was leg before Brook skied a catch to the wide long-on boundary off Mulder, who had Jordan Thompson caught behind first ball.

At 124 for 7, Yorkshire's chance had gone but with the result academic, it mattered little that Shadab Khan and Matthew Revis holed out to Rehan Ahmed as they slid to a 60-run defeat.


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