One of the Sydney sides had to break their losing streak tonight, but
both teams did their best to keep it alive in a bizarrely entertaining
match at ANZ Stadium.
In a game that was morose at times, and resembled a black comedy at
others, the Sixers eventually claimed their second win of the
tournament, and consigned the Thunder to their eleventh consecutive loss
as a T20 franchise.
Chasing 133 to win the Sixers never really looked in complete control
with the exception of Daniel Hughes who made his first T20 fifty, a
match winning 51 not out from 36 balls. But even Hughes rode his luck
courtesy of a dropped catch and several misfields.
Hughes, the 23-year-old New South Welshman, was promoted to No. 3 in
just his second game. He watched early as Michael Lumb struck two
powerful blows straight before lofting one straight down the throat of
deep square-leg.
Hughes then watched a procession of team-mates come and go to some very
soft dismissals. Brad Haddin looked in good touch before he lost his
focus on the chase and lost a personal argument with Chris Gayle. Haddin
felt Gayle was not living up to his paycheque so far, yet he holed out
unnecessarily to his darts for 18.
Steve Smith then nicked Dirk Nannes, having clubbed him over the long-on
the previous delivery, before Moises Henriques played around a
straight-break from Gayle to leave the Sixers needing 44 from 34 balls
with just five wickets in hand.
Hughes took that as a cue to swing hard for the rope. He struck two
boundaries and two sixes, all over the leg side, in the next two overs
to take the requirement under a run-a-ball.
Nannes returned to skittle Steve O'Keefe's stumps via his pad to make
things interesting. But a misfield from Gayle, and a simple dropped
catch from Scott Coyte at mid-on, gifted Hughes four runs in two
deliveries to reach his half-century and all but bury the Thunder.
Brett Lee's winning strike, a top edge over the wicketkeeper, seemed an appropriate ending to a bizarre match.
Earlier, the game appeared as if it would not last the distance in front
of a crowd of nearly 21,000. It was a staggering attendance given the
poor recent crowds at ANZ and even poorer recent records of the two
teams on display.
Gayle again failed to fire, bowled by a cracking yorker from Josh Lalor,
having seen his captain Chris Rogers depart the previous over. Matt
Prior fell five balls later, in the identical fashion to his previous
dismissal, failing to clear mid-off with a lofted drive. When Sean
Abbott hit a full toss straight to point the 4 for 27 flashing on the
scoreboard had an all too familiar feel to it.
Thankfully Usman Khawaja found some much needed touch to put some
respectability to the Thunder's total. At one stage they were 5 for 75
with five overs to go but Khawaja, with help of Simon Keen and Coyte,
managed to score 57 from the last 30 balls to help set a target 132.
Khawaja's unbeaten 66 from 47 balls featured 11 crisply struck
boundaries, which in itself speaks volumes about the left-hander's class
given the slow outfield and two-paced nature of the drop-in wicket.
However, Khawaja's innings was to no avail. The Thunder have not won a
match since Gayle scored a match-winning century against the Adelaide
Strikers on December 23, 2011.
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