Tymal Mills continued his excellent men’s Hundred campaign with three more wickets to help Southern Brave beat the Manchester Originals by six wickets chasing 131 at Emirates Old Trafford and qualify them for Saturday’s Eliminator - against the same opponents.
The Brave leapfrogged Welsh Fire into third place in the table with their fourth win from eight games, one which also included a calm 54 off 40 balls from unbeaten New Zealand opener Devon Conway.
Mills’ deceptive left-arm was perfect for this used, pace off pitch. He returned three for 27 from 20 balls, and his tally of 15 wickets is now more than anyone else in the competition.
Brave, who won with five balls to spare, remain on course to reclaim the title they won in 2021 - the Hundred’s inaugural year - and they will face last year’s finalists Manchester at the Oval on Saturday evening.
The winners face the Oval Invincibles in the Lord’s final 24 hours later.
Manchester were all but qualified in second place before a ball was bowled. Brave needed to chase their target in 50 balls to knock them out.
England limited overs captain Jos Buttler top-scored 45 off 42 for the Originals, who made 130 for eight and were never able to break free having been inserted.
Phil Salt with two fours and a towering straight six in 17 off eight balls was their most aggressive batter, and sluggish conditions were best highlighted by Buttler lacking fluency.
Despite all being said about pace off, Buttler had to evade a fabulous early bouncer from left-arm seamer George Garton.
Buttler later reverse-swept a couple of his five boundaries but didn’t hit a six before being caught at long-on off Rehan Ahmed’s leg-spin.
At 110 for five with 16 balls remaining, it was evident the Originals were going to have to bowl well to win.
Ahmed finished with two for 26 from his 20 balls, while fellow spinners Mitch Santner and Colin Ackermann were miserly. The latter struck once, and the trio’s combined figures were three for 53 off 50 balls.
Mills had removed Salt caught at deep midwicket with the new ball before returning at death to outfox and bowl Jamie Overton off an inside edge and get Tom Hartley caught.
Manchester only scoring eight runs and losing three wickets in the last 10 balls of their innings felt decisive, and so it proved.
An eventful opening set of five balls at the start of the Brave chase saw Finn Allen hit two fours and an uppercut six before falling caught at short fine-leg against a Josh Tongue short ball - 14 for one.
Fellow Kiwi Conway then took on the aggressor’s role as some sweeping rain had everyone looking for the Duckworth Lewis Stern par score. But Brave were well ahead, reaching 25 balls at 51 for one.
Rain did briefly stop play at 52 for one after 26, but play resumed and Brave calmly sealed their qualification.
Either side of the rain delay, Conway and second-wicket partner James Vince hit sixes over long-on off Hartley in sharing 67, skipper Vince adding 33.
His departure, caught at long-on off Ashton Turner’s off-spin started a mini collapse from 81 for one after 53 balls to 91 for four after 64.
Pakistani pacer Zaman Khan’s slingy action had Derbyshire team-mate Leus du Plooy caught and Joe Weatherley lbw. Khan built pressure impressively with two for 22 to take the game down to the penultimate set of five balls.
But Conway reached his first fifty of the campaign off 38 balls and quelled concerns.
Southern Brave wicket-keeper batter Devon Conway:
“We’re very excited for the next couple of days. It’s a great opportunity to play against the same opposition. We’ve had a good sighting of what they have to offer with ball and bat.
“I understood that my role was to bat through and create partnerships with the guys coming in. I tried to stick to that recipe for as long as possible, and thankfully it came off.
“The rain helped, making the ball skid on.
“It will be different on Saturday, and the Oval looks like it’s been batter friendly. Hopefully it stays that way and we can get one over them.
“I’ve done pretty much nothing throughout this campaign, so to contribute today is nice.
“This short format of cricket is all about momentum, which we will take into the Eliminator. All we can ask for is to keep executing our skills and see where it takes us.”