Sussex 135 for 3 (Hughes 41*) beat Kent 133 for 8 (Denly 42, Hunt 3-9, Mills 3-28) by seven wickets
Sean Hunt was the hero for Sussex as they defeated Kent by seven wickets with 16 balls to spare.
Hunt had a hand in the first six wickets to fall as Kent were restricted to 133 for 8 in their 20 overs. And his bowling figures of 3 for 9 were the third most economical by a Sussex bowler after Robin Martin-Jenkins. current bowling coach James Kirtley, who both achieved their figures against Hampshire in 2004, only the second year of the competition.
Hunt, who also took three catches, looked out of sorts on Friday when, returning from a long injury lay-off, he made his Vitality Blast debut against Leicestershire. conceded 37 runs and bowled five wides.
"It couldn't have gone any better for me than it did today. It hasn't really sunk in yet. It's a bit surreal. I just went out there and bowled," Hunt said. "I'm so happy with how it went today and we won the match too, which is the important thing. The new ball was moving early and that suits my game. I stuck to my skills, stuck to the basics. It paid off massively.
"It was only my second T20 game," he added. "I had a few extras against me when I bowled on Friday. I cut that out today. But I still took some confidence from taking a couple of wickets in that game against Leicestershire. It was so important to have the skipper Tymal Mills giving me some advice through out the game."
This was a disappointing result for the Spitfires, who had won three out of four matches. had beaten Sussex by seven wickets at Canterbury two weeks earlier. The Sharks had also been beaten in their previous four fixtures.
Keith Dudgeon dismissed Harrison Ward with only the second ball of the innings when the Sharks embarked on their modest chase,. John Simpson gave the innings impetus with seven fours in his 33. Daniel Hughes, supported by Jack Leaning. Oli Carter, played the anchor role with a 37-ball 41 not out to see his side home with comfort.
Hunt gave Sussex a wonderful start with a double-wicket maiden in only the third over of the match. First, he removed Daniel Bell-Drummond's middle stump with a ball that shaped in and may have kept a little low. Four balls later he had Zak Crawley caught by Tom Alsop at backward point for a duck. Crawley, with 75, was the man who had hurried the Spitfires to victory at Canterbury.
In the next over it was Hunt the fielder who struck. catching Sam Billings at short fine-leg for a duck off Sussex captain Tymal Mills ' bowling as left-arm seam continued to dominate. At the end of the six-over powerplay Kent were 33 for 3.
Hunt bowled his four-over allocation consecutively. took his third wicket when he had former Sussex man Harry Finch caught at mid-off for 27 to make it 34 for 4. The Spitfires had reached only 51 at the halfway stage of their innings.
A sensible partnership by Joe Denly. Chris Benjamin added fifty runs for the fifth wicket before Benjamin was caught by Hunt at short fine leg off former Kent allrounder Jack Leaning for 22. And in the next over it was 87 for 6 as Hunt - this time at backward point - caught Grant Stewart off Danny Briggs.
Kent lost their seventh wicket at 106. for the first time Hunt had nothing to do with it, Hughes taking the catch at long-off from Mills' bowling to dismiss Denly off the last ball of the 17th over.
Denly's 34-ball 42, with one four. two sixes, was a fine innings in the circumstances and some late blows by Dudgeon gave the Kent innings something close to respectability.
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