Glenn Maxwell's hitting cut short as Hurricanes fight back for victory
The Stars were on track to chase their target before Maxwell and Nicholas Pooran fell in the space of four deliveries
Dawid Malan anchored the Hurricanes' innings • Getty Images and Cricket Australia
The Stars did not make a good start to the chase as Marcus Stoinis and Andre Fletcher fell in the third over, followed by Hilton Cartwright in the sixth to leave them 3 for 40. However, Maxwell had already collected a series of sweetly-struck boundaries and then took charge of the innings bringing out his full range of strokeplay including a reverse sweep for six. Pooran largely fed him the strike and watched from the other end but when he deposited Sandeep Lamichhane inside-out over cover it felt like the game could finish quickly. Then Scott Boland, who has been impressive throughout the tournament, found Pooran's outside edge and at the start of the next over Maxwell picked out deep midwicket against Johan Botha. It was his only mistake, but a big one.
It was Lamichhane's first appearance of the competition in the purple of the Hurricanes, against his former Stars team-mates. He recently completed his two weeks' quarantine in Australia and had been diagnosed with Covid-19 while at home in Nepal. So this will have been welcome return to the middle. It wasn't his most accurate spell, but he claimed two key wickets. He defeated Cartwright with a googly and had Ben Duck caught behind off a wild drive. With Lamichhane providing right-arm legspin, the Hurricanes are an attack that have most bases covered. Ellis, meanwhile, ended with 2 for 11 from his four overs which included a huge tally of 17 dot balls.
The Hurricanes struggled to move through the gears in the first half of their innings, reaching 1 for 71 after 10 overs although they were building some momentum when the Power Surge was called after 12 overs, at 1 for 94 and Malan having reached a 32-ball fifty. However, the innings almost went into reverse in the two overs. Liam Hatcher delivered a series of excellent yorkers in the 13th over which cost just three, and then Billy Stanlake started the 14th with wickets off the first two deliveries. Ben McDermott, who used up 35 balls for 31, was bowled heaving across the line and Ellis, sent in as a pinch hitter, skied his first ball to mid-on. Stanlake would go for just two in the over (one of those as a leg bye) meaning the Surge had brought five runs.
The fourth ball of the match was driven down the ground by D'Arcy Short and resulted in one of more unusual injuries you will see. Maddinson was jogging to collect the ball from beyond the boundary, but in his stride landed directly on the rope with his left foot which resulted in a badly twisted ankle. He was soon ruled out of the match and at the 10-over mark the Stars brought in pace bowler Lance Morris under the X-factor rule. Morris' second over, the 16th of the innings, was a lively affair which started with dismissing Malan off a no-ball and then being taken for a four and six by the left hander as the Hurricanes tried to make up lost ground. It looked as though they would finish strongly as Malan and Ingram struck three sixes off consecutive balls, but the final 17 deliveries of the innings did not produce a boundary. Yet it still proved enough.
Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at ESPNcricinfo