Laurie Evans and Jamie Smith keep Surrey in T20 Blast contention

Gloucestershire will get another chance to seal a quarter-final spot in their final game at Taunton on Sunday but they will need to raise themselves

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Cheltenham: Gloucestershire 177-9, Surrey 178-3 - Surrey win by seven wickets

Scorecard

Jamie Smith and Laurie Evans kept Surrey’s Vitality Blast campaign alive as they beat Gloucestershire by seven wickets on the final day of the Cheltenham Festival.

Surrey faced a must-win game at the College, their final fixture, and knocked off a chase of 178 with 10 balls to spare.

Smith set things up with 60 from 47 balls and Evans took his side to the verge of victory with 58 from 36.

Gloucestershire will get another chance to seal a quarter-final spot in their final game at Taunton on Sunday but they will need to raise themselves with defeat here coming two days after their County Championship hopes were ended.

Having been sent in, the home side only played in fits and starts. A more measured start than previous matches saw them to 68 for 1 in the eighth over but then then lost three wickets in 18 balls.

Glenn Phillips’ 48 from 26 balls picked the innings up but 177 proved well short.

Phillips hit Batty over long-on and pulled Rikki Clarke over midwicket. He slog-swept Will Jacks and then whacked him over long-on. But when set for serious damage, hit a low full toss to long-on.

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Benny Howell made 30 from 21 balls but fell in a fine spell from Gareth Batty, who took 2 for 21.

Jacks opened the chase with a flick off Dan Worrall for six over deep square and a swing over long-off as Ryan Higgins conceded 19 from the fifth over but he skewed Josh Shaw to deep cover to fall for 24 in 14 balls.

Jamie Smith drove his namesake Tom over extra-cover and swept him for four more and at the halfway stage Surrey were on course at 88 for one.

Laurie Evans cleverly paddle-swept Howell for his first boundary before slog-sweeping him for six. He then struck Worrall over long-on to effectively end the contest.

Despite defeat, the final day of the Festival was throughly enjoyed by the home supporters on a glorious day. And goodness did they need to drink it in. Their next chance to see the first XI may be the penultimate day of August, if not later.

With The Hundred bombed in to dominate high summer, locals have just four days cricket to enjoy for the next six weeks, with just one on a weekend.

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