Worcestershire 112 for 3 (Santner 42) tied with Durham 216 for 4 (Clark 78) on DLS method
Worcestershire Rapids face a last-game decider at Derby on Sunday after their Vitality Blast qualification bid was held up by a tied game with Durham at New Road.
Chasing 216 for 4, Durham’s fifth-highest Blast total, the Rapids were 112 for 3 from 11 overs when the umpires took the players off for bad light. As the sky remained slate grey, that was it for the night, so the teams took a point apiece.
Despite their tall total, Durham were denied their first T20 win in eight attempts at New Road while the Rapids now face a winner-takes-all visit to Derbyshire Falcons.
Put in, Durham soon lost skipper Alex Lees, who lifted the fourth ball of the innings to mid on, but recovered to post a solid powerplay and then accelerate spectacularly.
Clark added 83 in 51 balls with Jones and 71 in 35 with Carse whose 19-ball 39 included four sixes before he missed a pull at Usama Mir and was bowled.
That was a rare moment of joy in an unforgiving night for the Pakistan spinner as Durham charged along, only Santner (4-0-25-1) applying any sort of brake. Clark was superbly caught by Adam Hose, racing in and diving forward at long on, but Turner’s brilliant improvisation with 33 not out off 15 balls brought 28 from the last over and left the Rapids a daunting target.
Their run chase started badly when Brett D’Oliviera’s leg stump was sent flying by Ben Raine. Jack Haynes smashed 24 from ten balls but was bowled, sweeping, by George Drissell. Santner landed some long blows to raise hopes among the home crowd but miscued an attempt to lift Nathan Sowter into New Road and was well taken by Turner at long on.
The run chase, already damaged by Raine and Drissell, was further inconvenienced by rain and drizzle, before the light closed in. After the players left the field, only the most optimistic spectators remained as the unbroken canopy of grey overhead offered not the slightest hope of brightening. The Rapids’ fluctuating Blast campaign will go right to the wire.
Source: ESPN Crickinfo