Coles Lord’s it to give Sussex Sharks winning start in 2025 Vitality Blast

James Coles smashed a career-best unbeaten 77 from 44 balls to set up a winning start to the Vitality Blast for Sussex Sharks as they held off Middlesex at Lord’s.

The 21-year-old’s destructive knock, which included five sixes and five fours, underpinned his unbroken fifth-wicket stand of 88 from 47 with Tom Clark and ensured that last year’s Blast semi-finalists totalled 202 for four.

That proved to be enough as the home side fell just short at 186 for seven in reply, despite a maiden T20 half-century by Ben Geddes (51 from 37) and Ryan Higgins’ fearless late display of hitting to rack up 44 from 16.

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Coles said: “I thought I was struggling a little bit – I was going at a run a ball for quite a while, but I said to the lads as they were coming out it was one of those pitches where you probably needed to give yourself a chance.

“There was a bit of extra bounce, the slow ones were holding a fraction and then it’s just finding your moments where you can try and shift a bit of momentum, which sometimes doesn’t come off and sometimes it does. Today it came off.

“On paper it did get close towards the end, Higgo played really well but luckily we were tight enough through the middle. It’s just about staying calm and I’d like to think it was inevitable we would win.

“They (Tymal Mills and Ollie Robinson) have both done it for so long now, you have so much trust that they know what they’re doing – as Robbo showed at the end. I could just tell he was going to get it done and that’s really reassuring.”

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Middlesex made an early breakthrough after winning the toss and opting to bowl, with Noah Cornwell’s opening delivery dragged on by Harrison Ward before John Simpson (22 from 12) and Daniel Hughes really got the scoreboard moving.

James Coles - who scored 77 - reacts as he bats during the Vitality Blast match between Middlesex and Sussex Sharks at Lord's (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)placeholder image
James Coles - who scored 77 - reacts as he bats during the Vitality Blast match between Middlesex and Sussex Sharks at Lord's (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Hughes began to open up after Simpson’s departure, flaying Henry Brookes for successive leg-side sixes but the Australian’s knock of 38 from 20 came to an abrupt end as Tom Helm’s fingertips deflected Coles’ drive onto the stumps at the non-striker’s end.

Luke Hollman’s astute spell of one for 38 prevented Sussex from gaining greater traction – although the leg-spinner’s figures were dented by a trio of sixes from Coles, who advanced to his third T20 half-century by drilling Cornwell over his head for four.

With Clark (26 from 21) taking on a supporting role, Coles scooped Higgins for another maximum as the pair accelerated during the death overs, taking 29 from the final nine balls of the innings to clamber above 200.

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Former New Zealand captain Kane Williamson, making his Middlesex debut, provided brief fireworks at the start of their reply, hitting two sixes in 14 from 12 before he fell to Ward’s smart diving catch on the point boundary – in which Sky Sports cameras captured Ward almost losing his trousers in sliding along the ground to hold on to the ball.

But, although Geddes pummelled both Tymal Mills and Brad Currie over the fence, Sussex’s seamers achieved a degree of accuracy that had eluded the home bowlers and the required run-rate soon soared.

Stephen Eskinazi (34 from 30) shared a partnership of 58 from 45 with Geddes before he fell to another boundary catch off Currie (two for 38), while Leus du Plooy and Jack Davies both departed cheaply as Sussex turned the screw.

However, a flurry of boundaries from Hollman (20 from nine) lifted the tempo and Higgins took up the baton, hammering Mills for two enormous sixes and two fours in the penultimate over to keep Middlesex’s faint hopes alive.

But Ollie Robinson (three for 27) kept his cool to send down a near-flawless final over, having Geddes caught in the deep and then yorking Higgins to seal Sussex’s victory.

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