Lancashire 303 for 7 (Lavelle 72, Hurst 66, Bohannon 62, Andersson 3-55) beat Middlesex 293 (Higgins 66, Andersson 46*, Aspinwall 4-52) by 10 runs
Lavelle struck 72 from 53 balls, with 19-year-old Hurst racking up 66 from 42 as the pair put on 131 in just 81 deliveries – a Red Rose sixth-wicket record against Middlesex – to steer the visitors to 303 for seven at Lord’s.
Lancashire’s success means they will seal a quarter-final tie if they defeat Nottinghamshire in their final group fixture on Tuesday.
Although George Bell gave Lancashire a solid start, dispatching Ethan Bamber three times to the off-side boundary in an over, the seamer made the breakthrough when Keaton Jennings edged behind.
Hollman sent down a full toss that Bohannon gratefully thumped to the short boundary, but his response was impressive, the next delivery pitching and turning to hit off stump and end the right-hander’s knock of 62.
Balderson soon followed as Andersson (three for 55) calmly plucked a one-handed return catch out of the air, but Lavelle and Hurst both went for their shots and injected the innings with sudden impetus.
Hurst outscored his partner, flaying one Ishaan Kaushal over for 20 and reaching his maiden half-century from 33 balls before he eventually perished, skying Andersson to third man in the penultimate over.
Lavelle was run out by a smart throw from John Simpson soon afterwards, but the duo had already done enough to lift Lancashire above 300, which proved to be out of the home side’s reach.
Joe Cracknell looked in good touch at the start of Middlesex’s reply, striking a series of sweet cover boundaries to reach 33 before he was undone by a Tom Bailey delivery that seamed away to send his off stump flying.
Medium-pacer Aspinwall made an immediate impact, with his first ball breaching Sam Robson’s defences, but Higgins and Mark Stoneman added 52 from nine overs to keep pace with the required rate.
However, Jack Morley took two wickets in four balls to turn the tide firmly in the visitors’ favour, with Stoneman trapped in front for 44 before Simpson’s reverse sweep was neatly pouched by Lavelle, racing in from the boundary.
Higgins kept up the charge, repeatedly piercing the infield and depositing Morley and Bailey into the Tavern for maximums as he posted a third half-century of the tournament, sharing another substantial stand of 57 with Jack Davies.
When Higgins’ ramp shot was juggled and held by Balderson, Middlesex’s hopes faded and, although Andersson’s unbeaten 46 ensured the contest went to the final over, Aspinwall held his nerve to dismiss Bamber and Kaushal with successive balls.
Source: ESPN Crickinfo