AN AMAZING maiden century from local hero James Rew and three wickets for Aussie speed merchant Riley Meredith powered the Cidermen to victory in the T20 local derby in front of a packed crowd in Taunton.
The 22-year-old helped himself to 116 from just 56 deliveries in a remarkable innings that included 14 fours and five sixes. In truth, it was an knock that changed the course of the game because as he made his way to the middle it looked very much as though the local bragging rights would be heading up the M5 to Bristol.
However, Rew was backed up brilliantly by the bowling attack as Somerset claimed victory by 18 runs.
Having earlier returned figures of three for 24, D’Arcy Short top-scored with a 34-ball 59 to give the chase lift-off, only for Gloucestershire to falter during the middle overs. Kamran Dharival hit a quickfire 38 from 20 deliveries, but Riley Meredith claimed three for 30 to restrict the visitors to 176 for seven.
Gloucestershire won the toss and fielded, Liam Scott and Marchant de Lange removing openers Tom Banton and Will Smeed in quick succession. Tom Kohler-Cadmore then hoisted a delivery from Scott to de Lange at long-on with the score 47 for three at the end of the powerplay.
Things went from bad to worse for the home side, Thomas Rew succumbing to a leg-side strangle as de Lange made further inroads and Lewis Goldsworthy offering a return catch to D’Arcy Short via a leading edge as the holders lurched to 98 for five at halfway.
Dropped on 38 James Rew went on to smash a 23-ball 50 with six fours and two sixes to spearhead a thrilling recovery.
Rew plundered a brace of sixes in one Scott over and then cleared the rope at deep mid-wicket at the expense of Ahmed to bring up a magnificent hundred off just 43 deliveries, the second quickest in Somerset T20 history behind the 42-ball ton made by Johann Myburgh against Essex in 2018. He added 47 in four overs with Craig Overton for the seventh wicket and, crucially for Somerset, remained at large until the end.
Short met fire with fire, dominating a progressive alliance of 79 in 8.2 overs with Miles Hammond as Somerset’s bowlers initially struggled to contain the opening pair. Dropped in the deep by Smeed on 37, Short made Somerset pay, going to a swashbuckling half century via 31 balls with his eighth four.
Goldsworthy made the breakthrough, Short slicing the spinner’s second delivery to backward point, while Joe Phillips scooped a delivery from Josh Shaw to third as Gloucestershire reached halfway on 89 for two.
When Hammond holed out to Banton at deep long off for 23, Goldsworthy had a second wicket and the visitors had lost crucial momentum. Meredith then bowled Jack Taylor with the score 97 for four as Somerset assumed the upper hand.
Dhariwal and Scott added 55 for the seventh wicket to threaten a fightback, only for the latter to nick behind off the bowling of Sams with a further 43 required from 15 balls. Striking the ball cleanly, Dhariwal mustered two fours and three sixes before falling to Meredith, his dismissal signalling the end of Gloucestershire’s hopes. Meredith ended with 3 for 30 from his 4 overs.





Comments
This article has no comments yet. Be the first to leave a comment.