Matches (19)
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ACC Premier Cup (2)
County DIV1 (5)
County DIV2 (4)
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WI 4-Day (4)
RESULT
South Group (D/N), Bristol, June 01, 2022, Vitality Blast
114
(14.3/20 ov, T:115) 116/4

Gloucs won by 6 wickets (with 33 balls remaining)

Player Of The Match
4/15
david-payne
Cricinfo's MVP
66.58 ptsImpact List
zak-chappell
Report

David Payne four-for sets up Gloucestershire's home-spun victory

Glenn Phillips seals win as Kent succumb to Howell and Smith's wiles too

Cameron Ponsonby
01-Jun-2022
David Payne celebrates with a smile  •  Getty Images

David Payne celebrates with a smile  •  Getty Images

Gloucestershire 116 for 4 (Phillips 50*) beat Kent 114 (Cox 48, Payne 4-15) by six wickets
Gloucestershire's Tom Smith, David Payne and Benny Howell are three of the lesser sung heroes of the T20 Blast.
Smith, 34, is the fifth-highest wicket-taker in the history of the competition and is just five wickets away from a place on the podium. Meanwhile both Payne and Howell are likely to finish the season in the top ten.
And yet, between them, they have zero international appearances. That looks most likely to change for Payne, who was called up to his third England squad this week for the white-ball tour of the Netherlands, but it nevertheless supports the counterintuitive fact that an excellent domestic record often hints as much at a player who hasn't played internationally than one who has. After all, if you're always playing here, it means you're not playing there. The top five English wicket-takers in Blast history share just 28 T20i caps between them. Mastering this level doesn't always result in becoming an apprentice at the next.
Here, Gloucestershire's three Domesticeers put on a masterclass to set their team, who were without overseas star Naseem Shah, en route to a six-wicket victory over a Kent side who are yet to get off the mark this season. Their combined figures were an impressive 12-1-57-6.
Of the three, Payne was without doubt the stand-out of the day as he took 4 for 15, including a wicket maiden to begin with and two wickets in two balls in his third over. But, whilst it was the type of performance that has meant Payne has been on England's radar for over a year, it is Smith and Howell in particular who are products and masters of their home ground in Bristol.
The wicket is slow and it spins. Comfortable for those who know it, but not for those who don't - a bit like sitting in someone else's kitchen.
And Smith and Howell are anything but accommodating hosts. Smith, with his trademark low arm that seems to only get lower with every year, slid the ball into Kent's right-handers, cramping them for room and then through a combination of natural variation and honed skill, would on occasion get the ball to grip and turn away. Both his wickets today were the result of a batter being beaten by spin, with only Sam Billings playing him with any real effectiveness as he repeatedly unfurled the reverse sweep.
Howell, on the other hand, bowled his one of everythings that either spat from the surface, seamed left, cut right or headed straight on. Howell describes himself as a fast spinner, a pick'n'mix bowler. The problem for Kent, however, was that for them it was more often than not don't-pick-and-miss.
This was an exceptionally difficult wicket to bat on. One where both captains agreed at the close of play that 140 would have been par. Payne, opening the bowling, started with a wicket-maiden that set the tone for both sides as Gloucestershrie went on the charge whilst Kent never got going. Such was the nature of the wicket that Payne conceded that he had all but abandoned the traditional pace-on delivery in favour of a diet of cutters.
No one believed that 114 was ever going to be enough, but for a brief period during Gloucestershire's chase it looked as if Kent could even bowl themselves to an unlikely victory as the hosts slipped to 46 for 4 after eight overs. Nerves for the home side were undoubtedly spreading.
Such is the nature of low-scoring games where bowlers dominate, the result itself is often decided by an individual innings where a batter manages to resist the momentum of the match. For Kent, only Jordan Cox and Billings managed to pass 20, but it was New Zealand's Glenn Phillips for the home side who made the difference as he struck an unbeaten 50 off 31, winning the game with two consecutive sixes off the spin of George Linde. In a game that had been set up by Gloucestesrhire's domestic talents, it was ultimately their overseas international who got them over the line.
The result gives Gloucestershire two wins from their first four matches, whilst Kent, winners of last year's competition, have now lost their first four games and face an uphill battle to reach the quarter-finals.

Cameron Ponsonby is a freelance cricket writer in London. @cameronponsonby

Win Probability
KENT 
KENTGLOUC
100%50%100%KENT InningsGLOUC Innings
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Vitality Blast

North Group
TEAMMWLPTNRR
BEARS1495181.210
LANCS1484180.432
DERBS1495180.054
YORKS1476150.726
NOTTS1476150.058
LEICS1486140.058
NHNTS146614-0.040
DURH143107-0.642
WORCS142115-1.807
South Group
TEAMMWLPTNRR
SURR14103210.630
SOM14104200.630
ESSEX1494190.881
HANTS1495180.198
GLOUC1466140.022
GLAM145712-0.154
SUSS144108-0.391
MIDDX144108-0.981
KENT143116-0.670