McKenzie and Pothas steer Hampshire to victory
Nic Pothas and Neil McKenzie guided Hampshire to victory in the last over in a low-scoring Friends Provident t20 match at the Rose Bowl
03-Jun-2010
Nic Pothas and Neil McKenzie guided Hampshire to victory
in the last over in a low-scoring Friends Provident t20 match at the Rose Bowl.
Chasing a modest 115 to beat Kent , Hampshire scraped home by five
wickets with two balls to spare.
Hampshire lost their fifth wicket, that of newcomer Abdul Razzaq, at 94 to set
up a tense finish. But the Hampshire sixth-wicket pair of Pothas and McKenzie made sure in an unbroken stand of 23 in the final three overs to give their side a winning start
to this season's competition.
Kent captain Robert Key must have regretted winning the toss and choosing to
bat first, because he was out in the first over without scoring, leg before to
Hampshire captain Dimitri Mascarenhas. Kent never fully recovered, slumping to 51 for 5 in the 12th over, and then
90 for 8 in the 17th.
There was only one stand of substance, 23 for the seventh wicket between Darren
Stevens and Matt Coles. Stevens was Kent's top-scorer with a defiant 36, which
included a six off Sean Ervine and a four. But Kent managed only nine boundaries
in their entire innings, struggling to cope with left-arm pace bowler Chris
Wood, who was making his debut.
Wood took 2 for 17 and also ran out Stevens with a direct hit to ease
Hampshire towards victory. But Hampshire suffered a setback when Mascarenhas, who injured an ankle playing in the Indian Premier League and missed the first two months of the season, was able only to bowl three overs before limping off with a recurrence of the
injury.
Kent made 114 for 9 but made an immediate breakthrough when Hampshire opener
Michael Lumb was caught at backward square leg from the first ball of the
innings.
Jimmy Adams, Michael Carberry and Ervine each made useful contributions as
Hampshire's innings gained momentum, with Ervine striking four fours in his top
score of 31.
But Ervine's dismissal to a catch in the deep caused Hampshire to falter, and
it needed the steady nerve of Pothas and McKenzie to inflict on Kent their first
defeat of the season.