Crash! Bang! Wallop! Surrey crush Sussex Sharks after Laurie Evans dominates with the bat

The Sussex bowlers had no chance as Surrey replicated their form of two days before, when they piled up 236 against Glamorgan. And once again it was Evans (93) and Sam Curran (68) who created most of the mayhem

sussur_09062302

Hove: Surrey 258-6, Sussex Sharks 134 - Surrey won by 124 runs

Surrey's batsmen rampaged their way to a formidable total as they hammered Sussex Sharks by 124 runs at Hove, giving their T20 Blast net run rate a boost on the way.

Their 258 for 6 was the highest score made by a Surrey team in the Blast - and the fourth highest by any side - beating their 250 for 6 against Kent in 2018. It left for dead their previous best against Sussex at Hove, the 221 for 8 they scored here in 2004.

The Sussex bowlers had no chance as Surrey replicated their form of two days before, when they piled up 236 against Glamorgan. And once again it was Laurie Evans (93) and Sam Curran (68) who created most of the mayhem, with a second-wicket stand of 157, the highest for any wicket against Sussex.

Surrey, one of the strongest sides in the competition, have lost just twice in eight outings – and one of those defeats, surprisingly, came against Sussex at The Oval last month.

Sussex had gone into the match fresh from their thrilling four-run victory at Lord's the previous evening, but still knowing they had to win virtually all their remaining fixtures to progress in the competition.

They got off to an encouraging start when Nathan McAndrew bowled Will Jacks with the last delivery of the opening over. But that was as good as it got for them.

sussur_09062301

Surrey celebrate a Sussex Sharks wicket [Getty Images]

The form of Evans, who scored a century in the Glamorgan game, was a painful reminder of how many top-class white-ball players Sussex have lost in recent seasons. Evans was a member of the star-studded Sussex side that reached Finals Day in 2018, as was the Surrey captain, Chris Jordan.

After 10 overs Surrey were 107 for 1 (they were 107 without loss at the same stage against Glamorgan). Evans reached his fifty off just 28 deliveries when he pulled Henry Crocombe to cow corner for six – over the hospitality tents in the south-east corner of the ground.

The 150 came up off the last ball of the 13th over, as Evans square-drove McAndrew for four. Curran was finally out at 163 when he edged Tymal Mills to short third man. He had hit six fours and four sixes, two in succession over wide mid-on.

Evans looked destined for his second hundred in three days but he was caught at wide mid-on by James Coles off the bowling of Crocombe. But for Surrey there was no loss of impetus as Jamie Overton thumped 24 runs off 11 balls and Tom Curran 29 off nine, with three sixes and two fours. Crocombe and Mills went for 51 and 50 runs respectively, while Fynn Hudson-Prentice's three overs cost 46.  All the bowlers looked shell-shocked as they dragged themselves off the pitch.

Sussex needed 13 runs an over and their task looked hopeless, especially when they lost James Coles, pulling to backward square leg, in just the second over. 

But after five overs they were 54 for 1, and ahead of where Surrey had been at that stage. But then the impressive Tom Clark was stumped for a 23-ball 43. It needed something special from Sharks captain Ravi Bopara. But he had scored just 1 when he attempted a slog sweep against Sunil Narine and skied the ball to the keeper.

The Sussex batsmen had to keep swinging in pursuit of their improbable target and, inevitably, the wickets tumbled as the required run rate soared to 20 an over. They were all out for 134 in the 15th over and after Clark, Tom Alsop and Danial Ibrahim tied for the second best score, 17.


Related Topics

Comments

No comments received yet - Be the first!

LATEST NEWS

STAY UP TO DATE Sign up to our newsletter...
SIGN UP

Thank You! Thank you for subscribing!

Units 7-8, 35-37 High St, Barrow upon Soar, Loughborough, LE128PY

website@thecricketer.com

Welcome to www.thecricketer.com - the online home of the world’s oldest cricket magazine. Breaking news, interviews, opinion and cricket goodness from every corner of our beautiful sport, from village green to national arena.