Georgia Elwiss gets Blaze home after Maddy Green 97 sets up chase
Somerset unable to defend 305 after fifties from Sophie Luff and Rebecca Odgers
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20-May-2025 • 4 hrs ago
Georgia Elwiss played a vital hand • Surrey CCC/Getty Images
The Blaze 305 for 6 (Green 97, Elwiss 75*, K Bryce 59) beat Somerset 304 for 7 (Luff 72, Odgers 50) by four wickets
Allrounder Georgia Elwiss defied the pain from an injured hand in a match-winning unbeaten 75 as The Blaze beat Somerset Women by four wickets with an over to spare at the Haslegrave Ground in Loughborough to record a fifth victory of their Metro Bank One-Day Cup season.
Visiting skipper Sophie Luff struck 72 from 76 balls, backed up by a half-century from opener Rebecca Odgers and a swashbuckling 25-ball 48 from Australian allrounder Amanda-Jade Wellington as Somerset set their Trent Bridge-based opponents a tough challenge by posting 304 for 7 in their 50 overs.
New Zealand batter Maddy Green hit 12 boundaries in a 90-ball 97 as The Blaze responded, sharing a 125-run second-wicket stand with Kathryn Bryce, but after her side had slipped to 238 for 6, 33-year-old Elwiss brought all her experience into play as she and skipper Kirstie Gordon shared an unbroken 67-run partnership to clinch victory.
Elwiss, who hit eight fours and faced 68 balls, batted despite suffering an injury fielding off her own bowling and spending the last 19 overs of the Somerset innings off the field receiving treatment.
Olivia Barnes, an 18-year-old left-arm spinner, took 2 for 49 on her Somerset debut.
Odgers and opening partner Emma Corney put on 88 for the first wicket as Somerset's innings got off to a flying start. They were not parted until the the 17th overs, when Odgers was unlucky to be run out after Corney changed her mind over a single.
It was the 22-year-old's second fifty in two innings in Somerset colours, making a good impression again after her 60 against Durham earlier in the month.
Legspinner Josie Groves was expensive but picked up an important wicket when Corney was stumped. Elwiss was rewarded for an excellent spell by having Fran Wilson (28) caught at mid-off from a slower ball before her injury.
Grace Ballinger castled Katie Jones for 8 but skipper Luff was the fulcrum for Somerset, the 69 added with Alex Griffiths in 11 overs for the fifth wicket giving Somerset a platform to attack.
Griffiths was bowled when she missed a slog-sweep and Luff was caught at short fine leg, having hit seven fours and a six. But then came a blitz of hitting by Wellington, seven of whose nine boundaries before she was run out off the final ball came in Ballinger's last three overs, which cost 37 runs.
The Blaze struggled for early momentum in response, Georgie Boyce running herself out looking for a single that Green understandably declined.
But once Green and Kathryn Bryce found their range in the last three overs of the powerplay, turning 19 for 1 from seven into 50 for 1 from 10, Somerset suffered until Barnes, the former Kent left-arm spinner, claimed her maiden wicket for her new county as Bryce was bowled attempting to sweep.
The partnership had added 125 in 18.4 overs, Bryce's fourth half-century of the competition having come off 47 balls with eight fours, Green's first for The Blaze also containing eight fours off 51.
Now the momentum shifted back to Somerset. A tidy spell from seamer Griffiths was rewarded when Sarah Bryce, whom she had dropped on 2 in her follow-through, was bowled behind her legs, and though Green and Elwiss, at times in obvious pain from her injury, added another 47 for the fourth wicket, Somerset achieved the breakthrough they had been looking for when Green - in touching distance of a fifth List A hundred in this calendar year - was bowled by the returning Ellie Anderson.
The loss in the next over of Ella Claridge, whose top-edged sweep gave Barnes a second wicket, left The Blaze 203 for 5 in the 36th, still 102 short of their target, Wellington striking a further blow when the legspinner removed Michaela Kirk leg before.
But despite her discomfort, Elwiss took the responsibility for seeing her side over the line, a superbly judged innings giving her a third half-century in Blaze colours as she and skipper Kirstie Gordon completed the job.