Gloucestershire 206 for 6 (Taylor 80*, Bancroft 44, Gorvin 3-26) beat Glamorgan 85 (Payne 3-7, Smith 3-33) by 121 runs
Still occupying fifth place in the South Group, Gloucestershire remain in with a chance of qualifying for the quarter-finals after Essex lost their penultimate match to Surrey. Gloucestershire must now win their final game against Middlesex at Chelmsford on Wednesday and hope Essex lose to Hampshire at Southampton.
“It was a great way to finish the Cheltenham Festival,” Taylor said. “It was really nice to get some runs, get the win and keep the campaign alive going into the final round of matches. Cameron Bancroft and James Bracey laid really good foundations at the top of the order, and that enabled Beau Webster and myself to come in and strike the ball through the middle during the later stages.
“I really enjoyed batting here and it was good to get a good score. Any score of 200 or more is a good score in T20 and we knew we could defend it. We were never going to risk sitting on our laurels and all five of our bowlers hit their lengths and did an awesome job in setting the tone. After taking those early wickets, we just had to keep it going.
“This win will help with our run rate and we’re pleased to be able to take it into the last game. We have to do our bit by beating Middlesex and then see what happens elsewhere.”
Glamorgan captain Kiran Carlson’ decision to field was justified when Timm van der Gugten opened up with a wicket maiden from the Chapel end, Miles Hammond driving the fourth delivery straight to mid-on. But Bracey wasted no time in changing the mood, twice pulling van der Gugten to the mid-wicket boundary and then helping himself to a trio of fours in a Dan Douthwaite over that yielded 13 runs, while Bancroft ramped Jamie McIlroy for four to afford the innings crucial early momentum.
Bancroft then took McIlroy for 23 runs in one over, including six off a no-ball, as Gloucestershire advanced their score to a useful 61 for 1 at the end of the powerplay. When Bracey hoisted van der Gugten high over cow corner for an imposing six, it took him to 1,000 runs in T20 cricket.
Taylor hit the ground running, raising two boundaries in one Mason Crane over and then smashing Gorvin for six over mid-wicket to put the home side back in credit. Having played himself in, Webster provided acceleration at the other end, hitting three fours in one van der Gugten over to exert additional pressure. Taylor then hit Crane down the ground for six to bring up the 50 partnership in 31 balls as the fourth-wicket pair raised the tempo.
Douthwaite had Webster caught at the wicket for a 36-ball 33, Marnus Labuschagne accounted for Ben Charlesworth and Ollie Price fell to Gorvin, who finished with 3 for 26 from four overs. But Taylor kept his foot to the floor, raising an exhilarating 24-ball 50 by smiting McIlroy for six over long-off before finishing with a flourish, taking 19 off the final over to further spoil Douthwaite’s figures and lift his side to an imposing total.
Gloucestershire further improved their position when Payne dismissed Will Smale and Carlson in the space of three deliveries with the new ball from the College Lawn end. Shaw then had Tom Bevan held at short third man and Matt Taylor took a return catch to send back Labuschagne as Glamorgan slipped to 18 for 4 in a lacklustre powerplay that yielded just two boundaries.
Worse followed, with slow left-armer Smith removing Chris Cooke and Ingram in quick succession and van der Gugten succumbing lbw to Webster as the visitors lurched to 48 for 7 in the tenth. Douthwaite became the seventh batsman to be out in single figures when he hoisted Shaw to deep midwicket, Payne returned to remove Gorvin and Smith wrapped up the innings with 4.1 overs unused.