From pen pusher to six hitter
A record-equalling run by Steven Croft and Riki Wessels' form lead ESPNcricinfo's countdown of the things that mattered in the latest round of the NatWest T20 Blast

Riki Wessels has been in scintillating form • Getty Images
To say Riki Wessels has had an unconventional route into county cricket would be selling you short on a story of a dual-international father, Kolpak re-rulings, entrepreneur visas and an array of loopholes.
The London derbies last year were a highlight of the FLt20 season, with Lord's in particular boasting a balmy evening sell-out in which Surrey and Middlesex both had to win to keep their title hopes alive. Alas, Surrey's ruthlessness and Middlesex's dour form this term means the return fixture next month will be a bit of a damp squib, and that's without mentioning the one-sided nature of their encounter at The Oval. The waters were then muddied when Middlesex were made to call south London home, winning their first game of the season against Sussex in their rivals' backyard.
Player focus: Jonathan Trott (Warwickshire)
It may have only been 40 runs across two innings, but the sight of Jonathan Trott back in first-team action for Warwickshire was a welcome one. That he was doing so for the Birmingham Bears, regardless of what you think of the city-woodland animal amalgamation, was also good to see. His outing against Northants was a first domestic T20 appearance in three years. That was his only appearance in 2011 but the year before he had impressed with 306 runs at 30.60. In 2009, before establishing himself as England's rock, he led the competition's scoring charts with 525 runs at 65.62. If he can rediscover his touch for the format, he will, to borrow an overused football platitude, be like a new signing.
Lancashire allrounder Steven Croft equalled Paul Nixon's record of 95 consecutive Twenty20 games when he lined up at Old Trafford to play defending champions Northants. A hard-hitting batsman who dabbles in some right-arm spin, he is an exceptional fielder to boot and was included in England's provisional 30-man squad for the 2012 World Twenty20. While international honours may be beyond the 29-year-old, he has continually proved his worth for Lancashire; an ever-present in the T20 side since his debut in 2006 against Derbyshire - who will also provide the opposition if he extends the run to 100. He is set to break Nixon's record against Yorkshire on Friday. No doubt the Western Terrace will acknowledge the milestone accordingly. Perhaps they'll bake a cake?
Having signed for Sussex on Championship-only loan, after losing his place in Kent's four-day side to fellow offspinner Adam Riley, James Tredwell had the unique experience of going from friend to foe in the space of 24 hours. He turned out for Sussex against Yorkshire at Arundel in a four-day game, taking three wickets and scoring 45 in his only innings, then returned to the Kent XI to take 2 for 20 in the T20 against Sussex at Canterbury.
Grim returns in the Championship - partly due to injury, partly due to player indifference - have created a degree of unrest among Essex supporters, if Twitter is to be believed (it is, by the way). But after succumbing to a 470-run pasting against Hampshire, Essex returned to Chelmsford-under-lights and produced a gutsy effort with the bat to chase down Middlesex's 153 with two balls to spare. Speaking after their humbling at the Ageas Bowl, Ravi Bopara felt the schedule was a factor not considered by those outside the team: "T20 takes a lot out of you as well, you know." Still, it only seems to be affecting their long-haul form as they sit pretty at the top of the South Division, with six hearty wins.