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Kent Spitfires (302-8) lost to Durham (405-4) by 103 runs at Beckenham

18:37, 22 July 2021

updated: 08:02, 23 July 2021

Dropped catches proved costly as Kent Spitfires suffered in the heat at Beckenham on Thursday.

Kent lost their Royal London One Day Cup opener by 103 runs after Durham scored more than 400 having been put into bat.

Marcus O'Riordan's appeal is not successful for Kent. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482840)
Marcus O'Riordan's appeal is not successful for Kent. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482840)

Spitfires were captained by 22-year-old Ollie Robinson, with Jack Leaning - named as captain on Tuesday - ruled out at the beginning of the One Day Cup campaign due to Covid protocols.

Graham Clark and Alex Lees both hit centuries as Durham posted their highest ever 50-over score of 405-4, eclipsing their previous record of 353-8 set against Nottinghamshire in 2014.

Clark hit 141 from 119 balls, with two sixes and 20 fours, while Lees made 100 from 98, including one six and seven fours.

David Beddingham then thrashed 67 and Cameron Bancroft finished unbeaten on 60.

Darren Stevens in full flow at Beckenham on Thursday. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482837)
Darren Stevens in full flow at Beckenham on Thursday. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482837)

Chris Rushworth took 3-29 to flatten Kent’s top order and although George Munsey made 96 and Harry Finch 64, the hosts fell well behind the run rate and eventually closed on 302-8.

On a sweltering day, four catches went down off Durham batsmen who went on to add a combined total of 225 after being reprieved.

Finch dropped Lees when he was on seven after he’d edged Harry Podmore, who himself spilled Clark when he was on 41. Beddingham was twice dropped in his thirties, first by Hamid Qadri and again by Tawanda Muyeye,

Clark got to three figures with a push to mid-wicket and finally perished when he swatted Marcus O’Riordan to Matt Quinn. Lees reached his hundred with a pull off Quinn and although he hit the very next delivery straight to Darren Stevens, Beddingham maintained the momentum, hitting his first ball for six.

Beddingham rode his luck before he eventually holed out to Stevens and was caught by Kuhn. Former Kent man Sean Dickson was then brilliantly run out for six by Robinson, with a direct hit from square leg, but the runs kept flowing. Liam Trevaskis hit the next ball for six and the final over went for 20.

Kent's Harry Finch scored a half-century against Durham. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482834)
Kent's Harry Finch scored a half-century against Durham. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482834)

Rushworth struck early in the Kent innings to remove Muyeye for 15, caught by Scott Borthwick. The same combination then removed Robinson for eight and Kuhn for six, reducing Kent to 50-3 in the seventh over.

Munsey and Finch put on 138 for the fourth wicket, but the former fell agonisingly close to his century when he swiped Paul van Meekeren to Trevaskis and Stevens made just three when he hit Jack Campbell to Lees.

With the required rate rising, Finch was bowled by Luke Doneathy and Podmore chipped Trevaskis to Borthwick for two. With the ground emptying rapidly, O’Riordan attempted to sweep Doneathy and was bowled for 22, although Qadri and James Logan showed some defiance to bat out the remaining overs and push the total over 300, finishing on 42 and 16 not out respectively.

George Munsey hit 96 from 79 balls for Kent Spitfires. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482831)
George Munsey hit 96 from 79 balls for Kent Spitfires. Picture: Keith Gillard (49482831)

Kent interim head coach Simon Cook said: “I don't think you can go far beyond the fielding performance (for what went wrong). We bowled reasonably well on a very flat wicket.

"We know it’s a good wicket for chasing and generally yields over 300 runs, but we had a couple of slip-ups in the field and dropped catches, including two in the powerplay, which at that point would have certainly checked the scoring rate, and another in the 40th over which would have slowed them down.

"We were very confident of being able to chase down anything between 330 and 350 and if we’d taken those chances there was every chance that would have been the score we would have ended up chasing. We ended up stumbling our way to 300, so that just goes to prove how good a wicket it was."

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