Leicestershire Foxes Win Metro Bank One Day Cup Final
Sun 17 Sep 2023
Sun 17 Sep 2023

Leicestershire won
their first one-day final for 38 years, beating Hampshire by two runs to lift
the Metro Bank One-Day Cup in a thrilling finish at Trent Bridge after
wicketkeeper Harry Swindells had marked his first appearance in this season’s
competition with a magnificent unbeaten 117 - his first century in
limited-overs cricket.
Swindells and Sam Evans, both Leicester-born, were the Foxes’ unlikely heroes,
sharing a seventh-wicket partnership of 151 with Evans posting a maiden List A
half-century in only his third appearance of the campaign.
They rescued Leicestershire from 19 for four and 89 for six after opting to bat
first to set the 2018 champions a target of 268 to win.
Hampshire, for whom Keith Barker and Scott Currie took three wickets each, ran
them close, with half-centuries from Tom Prest and Liam Dawson, but ultimately
came up short after needing eight off the last over.
At that point, 19-year-old left-arm pace bowler Josh Hull - Leicestershire’s
most expensive bowler on the day - holding his nerve when it mattered to
concede just five runs and take his second wicket to see the Foxes home.
It is Leicestershire’s first trophy since lifting the 2011 Twenty20 Cup and
their first in List A cricket since David Gower’s side beat Essex to win the
Benson and Hedges Cup in 1985.
Man of the moment Swindells, 24, was called up only because Australia
international Peter Handscomb, the Foxes’ preferred glove man in this year’s
50-over competition, had to return home after the semi-final to prepare for his
own domestic season.
After appearing in just two group matches, 25-year-old Evans replaced injured
seam bowler Matt Salisbury in the XI after the Foxes opted to stick with the
squad who had helped them reach the final rather than draft in 19-year-old
England all-rounder Rehan Ahmed, who was available.
The Foxes’ calamitous start came after Barker and Ian Holland had put their all
into exploiting early overcast conditions.
Rishi Patel prodded nervously outside off stump to be caught behind in the opening
over before Sol Budinger, unable to contain his aggressive instincts even with
the new ball consistently beating his bat, skied one to be caught at cover.
Colin Ackermann, whose unbeaten 93 was the match-winning innings as the Foxes
beat Hampshire at the Ageas Bowl in the group stages, was caught low down at
midwicket, before South African all-rounder Wiaan Mulder, with five
half-centuries to his name in the competition, was beaten on the inside to be
leg before without scoring as Barker claimed his third scalp.
Hints of a recovery were extinguished when Louis Kimber swung with anchored
feet at a ball from Currie and was caught behind. Hill, having played nicely
for his 42, departed after an injudicious slash at Currie - currently a
team-mate in red-ball cricket on loan to Leicestershire - gave ‘keeper Ben
Brown a third catch.
At 89 for six, it was hard to see the Foxes posting anything like a competitive
score - until Swindells and Evans stepped up in their county’s hour of need.
After pushing ones and twos to ensure that spinners Mason Crane and Liam Dawson
did not impose a mid-innings squeeze on top of the earlier carnage, they
loosened their to score at above eight an over before Evans, a maiden
half-century under his belt in only the sixth List A match of his career,
miscued to deep point for an 84-ball 60.
Swindells, who had twice cleared the rope at wide long on off Barker, kept up
that momentum in the last couple of overs, completing his 90-ball hundred by
hoisting one over Barker’s head for his seventh four, finishing off with an
uppercut over backward point for his third six and a four over long-off as
Currie conceded 17 off the final over.
Hampshire lost openers Fletcha Middleton and Nick Gubbins in posting 41 for two
from their opening powerplay, Mulder executing a smart run-out from mid-off as
Gubbins chanced a single off Chris Wright before bowling Middleton off an
inside edge, but luck seemed to be with them as Ben Brown was spared when
Ackermann missed a run-out chance and two lbw reviews went in their favour.
Three overs of Ackermann’s off-spin could not dislodge the third-wicket pair
but when Wright returned in his place at the pavilion end a double breakthrough
came. Brown pulled straight to short midwicket, he and Tom Prest having added
79, before Aneurin Donald fell victim to the same bowler-fielder combination
off a top-edge.
Prest, the 20-year-old batter whose impressive season had included a hundred
and two fifties before this match, hammered Josh Hull for a monstrous six over
long-off before completing another half-century off 61 balls but when he then
offered a simple return catch in the same over the outcome was in the balance
at 136 for five.
Yet sixth-wicket pair Dawson and Joe Weatherley were able to head off this
mini-crisis for Hampshire so that the last 10 overs arrived with 73 needed.
Leicestershire appeared to have only five bowling options, and while none was
leaking runs heavily, it took an excellent diving catch by sub fielder Will
Davis at deep backward square as Weatherley slog-swept Ackermann to crank up
the pressure again, leaving Hampshire 218 for six, needing 50 more from 40
balls.
Holland’s improvisation brought him 16 from 13 balls but he too fell to a
brilliant catch by Hull running round from long leg as he ramped Mulder,
leaving 25 needed from 18.
Dawson eased the pressure with a maximum off Hull to leave 11 needed off two
before a tight over from Wright conceded just three, leaving Hull to have the
final word. Three singles preceded the end of Dawson, caught at long leg off a
paddle-sweep. New man Currie took a single, leaving Barker needing a four off
the final delivery, which he squirted towards the off-side boundary but with
insufficient power to beat the fielder as Leicestershire’s celebrations began.