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Kings win thriller; Bates sparks Sparks

Ian Anderson

Canterbury will contest the men’s Super Smash title in the grand final after eliminating the Wellington Firebirds.

Victory yesterday in Dunedin gave them a spot in tomorrow’s showdown with the Northern Brave at Hamilton’s Seddon Park, as Cam Fletcher and Leo Carter rallied their side late when a win looked unlikely.

The Kings required 31 from the last two overs at the University of Otago Oval but Logan van Beek was hammered for 22 runs in the penultimate over in which Fletcher was dropped by Wellington skipper Michael Bracewell.

Carter, who made an unbeaten 44 from 30 balls (three fours and two sixes) hit the winning runs with three balls and six wickets to spare, but wicketkeeper-batter Fletcher was the star turn, hammering 63 not out (six fours and three sixes) off 25 deliveries.

Batting first, Wellington had reached 190-3, thanks mostly to a partnership of 143 between Bracewell and Devon Conway.

Bracewell’s phenomenal season continued as he extended his place as the competition’s leading runscorer with 478 runs at an average of 79.67. The left-hander made 81 from 54 balls (four sixes and six fours) while Conway provided support with an unbeaten 74 from 52 deliveries (two sixes and five fours) as they set a domestic T20 third-wicket partnership record for Wellington.

■ Suzie Bates gave them a target and the Otago Sparks bowlers responded superbly to push them into the Super Smash grand final against the Wellington Blaze.

Otago romped to a 29-run win over the Auckland Hearts, with Bates continuing her fruitful Twenty20 season with the bat, making 75 from 62 balls.

As expected, Bates dictated the scoring for the hosts batting first at the University of Otago Oval as they reached 143-5 off their allotted 20 overs.

Opening the batting, Bates lasted until the end of the 18th over and while it wasn’t the 34-year-old at her peak, as she would have fancied more boundaries than the seven fours and one six she produced, it was still conspicuously above what any other batter managed.

Promising young quick bowler Molly Penfold was the pick of the Auckland attack, with her short ball often troubling the hosts and ending with 2-27 off her four overs.

In reply, the visitors made a tardy start and never looked like reaching their target.

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2022-01-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-28T08:00:00.0000000Z

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