Matches (11)
IPL (2)
RHF Trophy (4)
Pakistan vs New Zealand (1)
WT20 Qualifier (4)
RESULT
Qualifying Tournament Pool A (N), Hyderabad, September 20, 2011, Nokia Champions League T20
(20 ov, T:126) 126/6

Somerset won by 4 wickets (with 0 balls remaining)

Player Of The Match
34* (24)
steve-snell
Report

Somerset win thriller to eliminate Auckland

Steve Snell proved the unlikeliest of heroes for Somerset with a game-turning late cameo which ended Auckland's Champions League hopes

Somerset 126 for 6 (Snell 34*, Hildreth 34) beat Auckland 125 for 7 (Vincent 47*) by four wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Steve Snell, who was in the anonymity of Minor Counties cricket last month, proved the unlikeliest of heroes for Somerset with a game-turning late cameo which ended Auckland's Champions League hopes after a last-ball thriller in Hyderabad. Snell, only making the trip to India because Somerset's two preferred wicketkeeper-batsmen Craig Kieswetter and Jos Buttler were tied up with the England Twenty20 team, concocted a 24-ball 34 that proved the difference in a low-scoring encounter.
Somerset, battling jetlag after landing in India only a day before this match, began the game well, restricting Auckland to a moderate 125. They seemed to be on course after an enterprising start to the chase, moving to 32 in four overs before fast bowler Michael Bates intervened.
Bates, whose triple-wicket maiden set up Auckland's victory in the final of the HRV Cup, started with a momentum-stalling over in which he only allowed two runs. He returned in the 10th, a double-wicket maiden, removing the set batsman Peter Trego, and Nick Compton as Somerset slid to 54 for 4, after having been 52 for 1 in eight overs.
Spinner Ronnie Hira choked the runs and the boundaries proved elusive for Somerset - there was only one four in the ten overs after the Powerplay - prompting the asking-rate to climb towards double-digits. Despite Snell edging a four past the keeper in the 17th, and forming a substantial partnership with a watchful James Hildreth, Somerset seemed in trouble at 94 for 5, needing another 32 from three overs.
A flagging Somerset were then energised by Snell. A straight lofted four, a miscued swipe to midwicket and a scoop over short fine leg helped bring 12 runs off the 18th over bowled by Chris Martin. In the next over another experienced bowler, Kyle Mills, was taken for three boundaries, including two streaky ones, to make it a relatively straightforward five runs off the final over.
Bates wasn't going to give up yet. He started with a perfect yorker, and then limited Somerset to four singles off the next four deliveries, including a run-out to set Somerset captain Alfonso Thomas the task of making a single off the final delivery. Thomas was up to the challenge, carving the ball over the infield and towards sweeper cover to confirm Auckland's exit.
While Bates has been the stand-out performer with the ball in both Auckland's matches, Lou Vincent has been the batting star, again top-scoring on a sluggish pitch though he was starved of strike and support.
Auckland's batsmen shuffled across the stumps, backed away to make room and attempted plenty of reverse-sweeps but they couldn't shake Somerset from their lines and lengths. Even Vincent couldn't connect some of his more fancy shots - in the 19th over, when he missed yet another reverse paddle, he showed his frustration by pretending to kick down the stumps three times.
Auckland were on the back foot early on as they lost several of their better-known batsman cheaply. Martin Guptill did better than the diamond duck he managed on Monday, but holed out to long-on for 9 despite being dropped on his second ball and barely surviving a run-out on the next. Their Australian import Rob Quiney also flopped, trapped lbw by Thomas for 4.
Vincent and captain Gareth Hopkins had to revive Auckland from 14 for 3, but were hemmed in by the raft of Somerset slow bowlers used, a strategy that worked well for Trinidad & Tobago earlier in the day. The extent of Auckland's struggles showed in their boundary count - in the final nine overs there was only one four and one six.
Auckland's early exit underlined New Zealand teams' poor performance in the Champions League since its inception, though they will feel hard done by to be ejected after two tight matches.

Siddarth Ravindran is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

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Nokia Champions League T20

Group A
TEAMMWLPTNRR
NSW43160.627
MI4215-0.280
T&T42240.176
COBRA41230.229
CSK4132-0.712
Group B
TEAMMWLPTNRR
SOM4215-0.557
RCB42240.325
KKR42240.306
WAR42240.246
SOA4123-0.533
Qualifying Tournament Pool A
TEAMMWLPTNRR
SOM22040.300
KKR2112-0.225
AUCK2020-0.075
Qualifying Tournament Pool B
TEAMMWLPTNRR
T&T22041.659
RU2112-0.275
LEICS2020-1.375