ESSEX became the first team through to 2023 Vitality Blast Finals Day after beating Birmingham Bears by two wickets in a thrilling quarter-final at Edgbaston.

The Bears charged through the group stage with 11 wins out of 14 but bowed out at the quarter-final stage for the third successive year in the face of a commanding display from Simon Harmer’s side.

Disciplined Essex bowling, backed up by excellent fielding, restricted the Bears to 167 for six.

Sam Hain struck a typically polished 52 (26 balls) but, tied down by Harmer (4-0-20-1) and Sam Cook (4-0-24-2), the home side needed some late flailing from Chris Benjamin and Dominic Drakes to least approach par.

Essex then reach 171 for eight with two balls to spare. Dan Lawrence underpinned the chase with a high-class 62 (41 balls) and Paul Walter’s violent 15-ball 27 retained his side’s control at a vital time mid-innings.

The Bears fought hard in the closing overs and Essex needed still three from the last two balls before Shane Snater hit the first of them for six.

 

Essex captain Simon Harmer said: "I feel for our supporters because we always find a way to make it close but luckily in the last two games and especially tonight we have found a way to be on the winning side.

"You can't take away from some of the sensational performances tonight which allowed us to get ahead of the game.

"You would like to finish the game a little bit earlier but sometimes cricket doesn't work that way.

"I think their score was par-ish but the way we batted in the powerplay and the few overs after the powerplay was what got us ahead of the game.

"We were looking at a run a ball from about ten overs out and that really shifted the pressure back on to Birmingham.

"We will enjoy tonight's win then regroup for a tough game against Lancashire at Blackpool and then go again here for Finals Day. 

 

"Look Birmingham Bears, they have been flying this entire tournament and were odds on favourites tonight but anything can happen very quickly in a T20 game.

"We are really looking forward to Finals Day but we know we will have to play some really good cricket and learn some lessons from tonight and then there are two huge games that we need to win."

Essex chose to field and started brilliantly as Daniel Sams delivered a wicket maiden.

Rob Yates skied the third ball of the innings to third man and it was not until the eighth that the Bears opened their account with a top-edged two. Five for one from 14 balls was not a start to excite the 10,812 crowd.

Glenn Maxwell pulled the 15th ball for six but Alex Davies fell in the next over, adjudged, after an interminable review, to have gloved a pull at Aaron Beard.

 

Maxwell added five fours to his six in a punchy 32 but then pulled Paul Walter to deep mid-wicket where Sams took a calm catch and celebrated with a fist-pump to the raucous Hollies Stand.

When, 17 balls later, the Aussie accepted another catch to oust Dan Mousley, this time he turned and shushed the Hollies…it had gone rather quiet!

Harmer increased the pressure by conceding just three in his first over and bowling Jake Bethell in his second. Hain posted his 25th T20 half-century, from 33 balls, but then sliced Cook to shirt third man.

With Hain went the Bears’ hopes of a really imposing total and it was left to Benjamin (24, 21) and Drakes (21 not out, 13) to eke 34 from the last 21 balls to heave the total over 150.

The Bears needed to strike early but Adam Rossington clouted 21 from 11 balls to make immediate inroads into the modest target. Rossington was run out by smart work from Davies but Essex thundered to 77 for one from 41 balls before a wobble arrived with two wickets in three balls, Michael Pepper slicing to short third man and Feroze Khushi socking a Jake Lintott full toss to deep mid-wicket.

Successive sixes by Walter off Maxwell reasserted the visitors’ control and Lawrence continued to work the ball round with consummate skill before his departure set up a tense finish.

With seven needed from two overs, Lawrence lifted the next ball, from Drakes, to mid on. A superb over from the West Indian cost just a single and saw Harmer run out from the last ball, leaving six still to find from the last over, bowled by Olly Hannon-Dalby.

That came down to three from the last two balls, the first of which Snater socked for a straight six to end Essex’s quarter-final hoodoo against the Bears who won both their previous meetings in the last eight.

Having squeezed through the group stage by the skin of their teeth, and now survived a tight quarter-final, Essex will return to Edgbaston for Finals Day on July 15 believing this may well be their year.