Stephen Eskinazi’s 94 proved in vain as Middlesex went down by four runs to Sussex at Lord’s to set an unwanted record of eight successive defeats at the start of this Vitality Blast campaign.
Seaxes skipper Eskinazi batted throughout the chase for 182 but needing to hit the last ball from Tymal Mills for six he swung and missed, leaving Sussex the victors. It means 12 successive defeats in all in the format for the men of Lord’s.
Sussex, for whom this was just the second win of the campaign, owed much to Pakistan international Shadab Khan’s 59 from 30 balls, during which he shared a fourth wicket stand of 91 with veteran skipper Ravi Bopara (38), a record for the south coast outfit against Middlesex in the Blast.
Luke Hollman and Ryan Higgins were the pick of the home attack with two wickets apiece.
Middlesex initially held sway in the powerplay, removing Michael Burgess and Tom Alsop cheaply.
The former’s scratchy effort ended when he nicked De Caires to Jack Davies and there was a second catch for the wicketkeeper when Alsop flashed at a wide one from Martin Andersson.
Tom Clark twice swung Andersson over the ropes but should have been caught attempting the hat-trick only for Higgins to drop a dolly at mid-wicket. And the opener was given another life when he charged Hollman only for Davies to miss the stumping.
Higgins atoned in part for the drop when he bowled Clark soon afterwards, but wicket-taking balls had been wasted and that proved costly when Khan and Bopara went on the offensive.
Khan was especially belligerent with two glorious straight hits among his five sixes as he sped to 50 in 24 balls, with his skipper, as he has done so often at Lord’s, Bopara proved an excellent foil.
Khan eventually slashed Higgins to Andersson on the point fence to spark a mini collapse which also witnessed the end of Bopara, but James Coles (21) employed the long handle to good effect as the visitors posted an imposing score.
The hosts made another poor start when Joe Cracknell lobbed Fynn Hudson-Prentice’s first ball to mid-on’s hands, but three successive fours from Eskinazi in Henry Crocombe’s first over gave them some impetus.
Eye in, Eskinazi flat-batted Tymal Mills over point for six as 60 came from the powerplay and he raced to 50 in 31 balls with a six and five fours.
Pieter Malan caught the mood, pulling Mills into the Tavern Stand hospitality boxes but Bopara, in a typically frugal spell, ended a stand of 85 when he bowled Malan for 36, with 79 needed from the final 48 balls.
Max Holden was reprieved on four when dropped at cover only to hole out at mid-wicket off Nathan McAndrew with 43 needed but successive fours from new man Davies kept the hosts in the hunt.
Two more fours from the wicketkeeper’s flashing blade off the expensive Mills left 21 needed from the final two overs and when Eskinazi lapped McAndrew that elusive win looked in sight.
Davies though departed to a brilliant catch by Clark on the mid-off fence and 12 off the last over proved too many.
“Frustration and disappointment, though that is a lot better than some of the past games. It is a really tough one to take because we got so close there at the end," said Middlesex bowler Tom Helm.
"I think all the boys feel for Eski who played brilliantly to finish on 94 but did not manage to get it over the line. He’ll be hurting a lot. No-one is going to blame him, but he’s going to take that one personally.
“The wicket was pretty good. I don’t think they got too many. It was probably a par score. The difference was the class they showed in the middle with Ravi (Bopara) and Shadab. They put us under the pump there with Ravi bowling his four overs for less than 30. But it was only four runs so it could be a misfield here or a six hit there.
“It is difficult mentally and confidence-wise in the dressing-room. We’re none from eight now. We’ve played brilliant patches of cricket in the last eight games, we’ve just not managed to do it for 20 overs and that’s the difference between winning and losing.
"You can do as well as you like for 15 overs and if you let it slip for five at the end, the start or the middle the game can get away from you.
“It’s a horrible cycle pretty much every other day and the games keep coming and there is no respite. It’s kind of good you get to forget the game before and try again with this one, but it’s a tough place to be.”
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