Leicestershire blitz Nottinghamshire with the bat to begin title defence
Written by I Dig SportsLeicestershire 369 for 6 (Hill 81, Budinger 75, James 3-105) beat Nottinghamshire 89 for 6 (Slater 24, Scriven 3-20) by 15 runs (D/L method)
Leicestershire Foxes began their defence of the Metro Bank One-Day Cup with a victory over Group B rivals Notts Outlaws, albeit one achieved in unexpected fashion after India Test star Ajinkya Rahane had excited his latest home crowd with a debut innings of 71 - the match coming down to the visitors trying in vain to score 55 runs from 23 balls.
Chasing 370 would have been a tall task for an inexperienced Outlaws side had rain not left their reply stranded on 50 without loss from 10.1 overs. That would have consigned them to a five-run DLS defeat had no further play been possible. But after conditions improved following a two-and-half-hour stoppage, umpires Simon Widdup and Neil Pratt ruled that there was time enough for Notts to face another 3.5 overs, with a revised target of 105.
Needing 55 from 23 balls, the visitors added to the drama by retiring both Ben Slater and debutant Freddie McCann, the not out batters, in favour of big-hitters Jack Haynes and Tom Moores only to lose Haynes first ball - leg before to Tom Scriven - immediately followed by new batter Lyndon James, caught on the mid-wicket boundary.
Liam Patterson-White hammered Ben Mike to the midwicket boundary but immediately miscued back to the bowler for a simple return catch, then Matt Montgomery sliced Scriven in the air to be caught brilliantly by Mike as the ball swirled between him and Chris Wright at short third.
Moores then hammered four boundaries in four balls off Mike but the Outlaws were still 16 runs short of their target when the overs ran out. Scriven finished with 3 for 20.
Outlaws included three debutants - newly-signed all-rounder Rob Lord plus academy products McCann, 19, and off-spinner Farhan Ahmed, the brother of Leicestershire's Rehan. Farhan, at 16 years 153 days is the second youngest player to appear in senior cricket for Nottinghamshire, behind Paul Johnson, who was 32 days younger when he made his John Player League debut against Warwickshire at Edgbaston in 1981.
If there was frustration for the Outlaws, the Foxes will have been more than happy with the standard set by their batters. Budinger, who faced 74 balls, delivered an impressively measured performance containing 10 fours and a six, although he was expensively dropped 15 by wicketkeeper Tom Moores off Luke Fletcher.
Harry Swindells, who did not figure for the Foxes last season before his sensational match-winning century in the final, made 35 in an opening stand of 95 before mistiming to mid-on off Patterson-White.
A diving McCann eventually snared Budinger at long off, giving Notts a second breakthrough and Farhan - who conceded two sixes in his second over but recovered well - his maiden senior wicket.
That brought Rahane to the middle at 174 for two with Hill looking well set at the other end, and they advanced the score to 256 in not much more than 10 overs before Hill, who hit nine fours and a six, dragged one on from outside off stump to be bowled.
Rahane, wasting no time in giving his latest home crowd a glimpse of his quality, completed a 38-ball fifty shortly afterwards. He and Peter Handscomb added 48 before the Australian, having just cleared the long-on boundary, was athletically caught by Patterson-White at mid-off for 29 off 21 balls to give Lord his maiden scalp.
Rahane raised his boundary count to nine in a manner that suggested plenty more to come, so it came as a surprise to see him undone by a wide full toss from James, inelegantly hoicked into the busy hands of McCann at long-on.
The Outlaws might have hoped they could contain the Foxes at 350 or fewer with Rahane gone but five sixes in the last three overs - three from Cox (29 off 20) before he holed out to deep extra cover and two from Mike - one after he was dropped - provided a storming finish.
All-rounder James took three wickets for Outlaws, albeit at a cost of 105 runs.
Chris Wright, having completed his preparations in Monday's warm-up match against Buckinghamshire, bowled his first five competitive overs of the season following his suspension for an anti-doping offence as the Outlaws began their chase.