
Hampshire 155 for 5 (Lynn 108*) beat Northamptonshire 158 for 7 (Broad 61*) by six wickets (DLS)
Chris Lynn hit the first century in a Vitality Blast Finals Day to power Hampshire Hawks to a six-wicket (DLS) win over Northamptonshire Steelbacks in the second semi-final at Edgbaston.
Lynn smashed an unbeaten 108 from 51 balls with five fours and 11 sixes as the Hawks galloped to a DLS target of 155 in 18 overs with 14 balls to spare. It was a chase pulled off virtually single-handedly as no other batter passed 12.
The Steelbacks' rain-interrupted innings had been lifted to 158 for seven from 18 overs by Justin Broad's sixth T20 half-century - 61 not out from 39 balls - which dragged the innings back from the ruins of 86 for six. But Lynn's hitting masterclass turned the chase into a cruise to book the Hawks a place in this evening's final against Somerset.
Hampshire chose to bowl and immediately struck a huge blow when David Willey edged his first ball, from Chris Wood, to wicketkeeper Toby Albert. Two more big wickets soon fell, and Wood was again involved in each, this time as an elder. He was at third to take the catch when Ricardo Vasconcelos sliced Scott Currie, then took a stinging catch at short third when quarter-final hero Ravi Bopara edged a big drive at Sonny Baker.
Bjorn Fortuin, who had played for South Africa against England in Manchester less than 24 hours earlier, added a wicket with his fifth ball when he bowled Tim Robinson. The Steelbacks were in a pickle at 65 for five when Saif Zaib pulled a Benny Howell long hop to Ali Orr on the mid-wicket boundary. It was an acrobatic grab by the fielder, but Zaib may reflect that the catch should have been taken by somebody in the Hollies Stand.
Smart work from James Vince ran out Lewis McManus just before the rain break, after which Broad and Luke Procter (30, 20) delivered some sparkling improvisation toaddd 70 in 40 balls.
After DLS had trimmed the Hawks' target, Lynn was soon making heavy inroads into it. Toby Albert and James Vince's son sent up catches off the spinners, but the Aussie thundered to a 24-ball half-century, including 16 from four balls by Procter.
Ben Mayes top-edged a reverse-sweep at Zaib and fell to a brilliant catch by George Scrimsh, but Lynn lifted Ben Sanderson for successive sixes to send his side into the last five overs needing a manageable 41. Four successive sixes off Lloyd Pope took Lynn to a 49-ball century and left the Hawks needing eight from the last three overs. They made it.
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