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Kent Spitfires (325-8) beat Leicestershire Foxes (244 all out) by 81 runs to reach Royal London One-Day Cup semi-final

Tight bowling after an impressive batting display saw Kent beat Leicestershire on Friday and qualify for the Royal London One-Day Cup semi-final.

Half-centuries from Joey Evison, Ben Compton and captain Joe Denly, alongside a typically boisterous cameo from Darren Stevens on his return to his old club, saw the Spitfires to a score which looked around par on a good wicket.

Kent's Grant Stewart ended with figures of 4-42 for his team in a winning cause at Leicestershire. Picture: Barry Goodwin
Kent's Grant Stewart ended with figures of 4-42 for his team in a winning cause at Leicestershire. Picture: Barry Goodwin

In reply, Scott Steel made a solid half-century at the top of the Leicestershire order but, though Wiaan Mulder made a superb 81 off just 71 balls, once the South African was dismissed, the pressure was too much for the Foxes' tail.

Once regular opponents, it had been 12 years since the counties met in List A cricket.

Denly made 39 in Kent's victory that day, and the Kent captain found himself shaking hands with Mulder at the toss, taking over leadership duties from Lewis Hill, ruled out after being struck on the hand while batting in the nets the previous day. Sam Evans came in for Hill at Grace Road, otherwise both sides were unchanged from their final group games.

Mulder's decision to bowl was based on the hope the pitch might still have a little moisture in it but, although Chris Wright and Beuran Hendricks bowled accurately, neither found much movement.

Evison and Compton started steadily before Evison hit Wright for three boundaries in an over, and then, when Louis Kimber was introduced into the attack at the end of the first power-play, he clubbed the occasional off-spinner for three straight sixes.

Captain Joe Denly top-scored in Kent's total with 65. Picture: Barry Goodwin
Captain Joe Denly top-scored in Kent's total with 65. Picture: Barry Goodwin

Leicestershire had taken the gamble of not playing a fifth bowler and it looked as though it was going to backfire, but Mulder turned to another part-time off-spinner in Steel, and the former Durham man obliged when Evison, having gone to his 50 off 50 deliveries, went down on one knee to sweep, missed, and was given out leg before for 62.

Ollie Robinson, dropped by Arron Lilley at slip off Steel on four, looked set to make Leicestershire pay. He raced to 27, only to sky an attempt to hit Wright through the off-side, Kimber taking the catch at extra cover.

Compton, however, continued to accumulate, and with Denly hitting the ball cleanly from the off, Kent reached 172-2 in the 31st over before Compton was bowled by Mulder.

Denly became the third Kent batsman to reach 50 but he lost Alex Blake, who missed a slog, and Denly himself went soon afterwards for 65, clothing a drive from Barnes into the hands of Steel at extra cover.

The arrival of 46-year-old Stevens was greeted with warm applause from both sets of supporters, and though he quickly lost Grant Stewart, hooking Wright to Hendricks at long leg, the Leicester-born Kent stalwart gave yet another demonstration of his remarkable hitting ability as he raced to 41 off just 24 balls.

Harry Podmore also took three wickets. Picture: Barry Goodwin
Harry Podmore also took three wickets. Picture: Barry Goodwin

The return of Hendricks and Wright slowed the scoring rate however, and once Stevens had been caught at deep midwicket off Hendricks, it took a useful cameo from Harry Finch, who hit 18 off the final over, bowled by Mulder, to take the Spitfires to 325-8.

Leicestershire's reply began solidly enough, Nick Welch looking in good touch in hitting four boundaries, and it may have been over-confidence on the part of the Zimbabwe-born batsman which saw him crack Podmore's short wide first delivery straight into the hands of Finch at backward point.

Rishi Patel followed in the same over, with Podmore nipping a delivery back through his defences and on to the top of middle stump to leave Leicestershire on 48-2 at the end of the first power-play.

Kimber, who has batted destructively for Leicestershire in this competition, duly drove his first delivery over mid-off to the boundary, but he too was bowled by a Podmore delivery which came back between bat and pads.

Steel dug in but Stevens bowled cannily and overs 18 to 25 yielded only 17 runs to the home team's cause. Trying to accelerate, Steel ramped a six and a four off consecutive deliveries from Nathan Gilchrist, but then tried to loft the next delivery over cover and holed out to mid-off.

Lilley came and went quickly but, while Mulder was there, Leicestershire had a chance. The all-rounder passed 50 for the fourth time in the competition, along with a century, but Evison came back and produced a delivery which stayed low and bowled him.

From 214-5, Leicestershire subsided as Stewart picked up four wickets to complete a comfortable victory by 81 runs.

The Kent Spitfires will travel to Hampshire for their semi-final on Tuesday.

Stevens said: “We thought the pitch would get a bit lower and slower and we were a bit fortunate to get Mulder, the ball that got him hit the base of the stumps when he was playing as well as anybody had, but that's the way it goes.

“It's been all about finding a bit of momentum in this competition and, in the last three games, that's what we've done - everybody chipping in, making a contribution, and we're on the up, which is what you want going into a semi-final.

“Hampshire got the wool on us earlier this season at Beckenham but there were one or two moments in that game when it might have gone our way.

“The pressure is different in a semi-final compared to the group stages and we'll see what happens when we go down there.”

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