
- June 21, 2025
The Vitality Blast game in Bristol was a thriller that went down to the last ball, with Gloucestershire completing a two-wicket win over Hampshire, in a match that ebbed and flowed. Hampshire, who started shakily, looked like they were setting themselves up for a defendable total at the halfway stage – but they only managed 124 runs. It looked like Gloucestershire would chase that target for a win; however, it became a relatively tense ride for them – it came down to the last over, with Gloucestershire running out 130/8. It was an excellent ending that didn’t favour Hampshire when it came to the pressure of the moment, and resulted in a fighting performance from Gloucestershire and victory.
Top-Order Batting Collapse Crippled Hampshire’s Chase
The first major reason Hampshire lost to Middlesex was the collapse at the top of the order. Right from the start, it was wickets and wickets — Pretorius, Vince, and Albert all went in order. Of the top five in the batting order, none posted meaningful partnerships, with only Weatherley’s 18 and Brevis’ 13 in quick time giving any fight. You’re aiming for 125, and you need your big guns to fire. Instead, the scoreboard showed uncertainty, and momentum stalled. Too many dots, too many quick wickets, and not enough guns meant Hampshire’s scoreboard was modest enough to allow the visitors to hope.
D’Arcy Short’s Explosive Knock Turned the Tide
Secondly, D’Arcy Short was the game-changer for Gloucestershire. He came in to bat during a tricky chase, but his explosive 49 runs off 41 balls dramatically shifted the momentum of the game. Short’s ability to rotate the strike and to find the boundary allowed Gloucestershire to have a stable platform to build on, and importantly, gave the area of the game plan of chasing down the runs a balance and steady foundation when early wickets looked likely to derail their run chase.
Miles Hammond, Oliver Price, and D’Arcy Short all chipped in with runs to put pressure on Hampshire’s bowlers. The partnerships that Gloucestershire needed were there at crucial stages of the innings, which transitioned from a humdrum run chase to a nail-biter. Without Short’s flair and timing, Gloucestershire could very easily have folded under the weight of the chase.
Hampshire’s Death Bowling and Fielding Lapses Cost Them
Lastly, a less considered element was Hampshire’s inability to seal the deal in the death overs. Although bowlers such as Chris Wood and Benny Howell took wickets, extras and some lapses in the field contributed to opportunities. Ultimately, five extras and a couple of loose deliveries at the end resulted in Gloucestershire being closer to their target than Hampshire would have liked.
Plus, the runs accumulated later on from Payne and Shaw were not bombastic, but they were steady, and they were calm under pressure, ensuring they made every ball/ run count. Hampshire’s fielding simply was not sharp enough in the death overs to box this match off when they had to, and missing that razor-edge cost them in the end.
Hampshire’s day unravelled as they failed to match Short’s innings as they chased down an achievable total and, in the end, were unable to succeed in the moments that mattered most as they challenged them to reach that total. What was a run chase that seemed possible morphed into a last-ball finish, while Gloucestershire’s overall tenacity was Hampshire’s overall inability to finish.
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