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Recent Match Report – Lancashire vs Notts North Group 2023

Recent Match Report – Lancashire vs Notts North Group 2023

Lancashire 208 for 4 (Mitchell 85*) beat Nottinghamshire 186 for 5 (Munro 60, Wood 2-29) by 22 runs

Shaheen Shah Afridi is the glamorous signing who Nottinghamshire hope will sweep them to glory in the Vitality Blast. He still might, but his debut figures were symptomatic of a losing Nottinghamshire night as Lancashire turned in a superbly marshalled display for a third successive Old Trafford victory that they rarely looked likely to relinquish.

As for Daryl Mitchell, well, he’s that New Zealand bloke isn’t he, decent player, been around a while, even spent a bit of his childhood in Manchester, but not somebody to set your heart racing.

But this was a night that moved to the rhythm of a steady heartbeat, a night not for the superstar, but for the largely unsung professional, or at least as unsung as 95 international appearances can be. Mitchell fashioned Lancashire’s progress to 208 for 4 with an unbeaten 85 from 41 balls with six sixes and then accentuated the feeling that they were strong favourites by running out Matthew Montgomery with a fast, flat throw from long-off – the fourth wicket to fall, and leaving Notts 97 short with 50 balls remaining. They never quite got on terms after that.

Mitchell is having a good summer and also made a Championship hundred against Somerset on debut. He was reprieved three times though, the first of them on 7 when he blazed the Surrey loanee, Conor McKerr through Steven Mullaney’s hands at mid-on; the second, a return catch to Mullaney on 32. On both occasions, instead of a reset by carefully scratching his guard, he settled himself with a look-at-me straight six.

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Three sixes against Afridi – including a startling ramp over fine leg – were later to rival such nonchalance, although he was dropped again on 79 by Lyndon James, rushing in from the cover boundary – Afridi this time the bowler to suffer.

Lancashire’s opening stand was worth 56 in 5.3 overs as Phil Salt and Luke Wells made light of the absence through injury of the captain, Keaton Jennings. Salt has possessed adventure from the first time he picked up a bat; Wells, once renowned as one of the dullest Championship openers around, someone even Eastbourne, his home town, would regard as overly sedate, has reinvented himself.

It took Samit Patel to arrest Lancashire’s progress. He is 38 now, and it has to be said his trousers have a bit of an overhang (his full-on Tudor house phase is only a couple of seasons away) but his bowling intelligence should never be underestimated. He doesn’t bother much with flight, certainly not on a flat surface like this, but he thinks batters out. When Steven Croft sliced an innocuous delivery to backward point, it was hard to understand why, but when he bowled Salt, sneaking below his attempted pull, he skidded one on with a perfect line.

Liam Livingstone is Lancashire’s stand-in captain – Dane Vilas can’t get in the side – and he bore his responsibility gravely, taking 18 over his first 18 balls as Mitchell cut loose. He became Afridi’s only wicket of the night, but only after he had peppered the new hotel, which is scheduled to be completed in time for the Ashes Test, with two monumental midwicket sixes, the second of them given a nod of appreciation by a steward in a white crash hat.

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There was a time when blows like this would have sailed out of the ground; now they are destined to bash into a shatter-proof window as somebody orders room service.

If Lancashire had begun in domineering fashion, Nottinghamshire replied disastrously as Luke Wood reminded his former county of his talent. He yorked Alex Hales with an inswinger in his first over and, in his next, outdid Joe Clarke with a short ball which was miscued to midwicket.

Colin Munro, in at three, was more of a threat, packing five sixes into his 60 from 29 balls. Lancashire preferred Wells’ legspin to Matt Parkinson – Parkinson’s career appears to be at a slightly rocky juncture – and the move came off when Munro tried to hit Wells over long-on and skied a top-edge to the wicketkeeper.

Lancashire and Nottinghamshire have won more T20 matches than any other counties – this win, statisticians told, taking Lancashire 138-137 ahead. It would be no surprise to find either of them at another Finals Day, but it was Lancashire who drew most confidence from a well-fought contest.

David Hopps writes on county cricket for ESPNcricinfo @davidkhopps

  • May 27, 2023