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Surrey run out of chances against Kent Mark Pennell of the Kent Messenger Group - 14 August 2001
Kent captain Matthew Fleming - the distant cousin of James Bond creator Ian Fleming - was Spitfires' man with the golden arm as the hosts pulled off a remarkable 43-run Norwich Union League win over relegation threatened Surrey Lions. Chasing Kent's disappointing 42-over total of 207 all out, the basement Lions appeared to be coasting at 147 for three, but Kent's fielding and Fleming's incredibly accurate throwing turned the game on its head as Surrey conceded four run outs to the home skipper. Top-scorer Ian Ward, with 51 from 90 balls, started the rot when he chanced a single to backward point only to see Fleming throw down the stumps to spark a suicidal collapse that saw Surrey lose their last seven wickets for 17 runs in the space of 39 balls. Ben Hollioake suffered a seemingly ageless death when he was given out stumped after the fourth slow motion replay, then in the next over Nadeem Shahid edged a catch to Paul Nixon to lift a crowd of 7,500 - Kent's biggest crowd for a county match since 1993. That was the cue for Fleming's license to thrill as the Spitfires' skipper sent back Jonathan Batty, Saqlain Mushtaq and Martin Bicknell with three direct hits in the space of four balls. It was left to Martin McCague, making his first league appearance of the summer, to polish the job off by plucking out the middle stump of Ed Giddins to re-ignite Kent's title hopes. Spitfires had built their total around another steady one-day knock of 74 from 68-balls from overseas star Andrew Symonds. The Queenslander featured in a fourth-wicket stand of 93 with Rob Key (26), but otherwise no Kent batsman made it into the 20s in a disappointing display after winning the toss. The victory, Kent's seventh in 11 starts, leaves the Hop county in second spot, two points behind leaders Leicestershire who have two games in hand.
© CricInfo
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