Nottinghamshire 181 for 6 (Munsey 51, Moores 40, Blatherwick 2-34) beat Lancashire 180 for 7 (Livingstone 47, Jennings 42, Patterson-White 2-24) by one run
Liam Livingstone (47 off 31) and Keaton Jennings (42 off 29) did much of the heavy lifting for Lightning, with 17-year-old Joe Moores – Tom’s cousin, and nephew of Outlaws head coach Peter – making 30 off 21 balls to keep his side in the hunt.
Three hours earlier, Lightning had chosen to bowl first and removed Joe Clarke in the opening over but Munsey quickly found his rhythm, launching Livingstone over the long-off boundary and hammering four fours in a row off Tom Aspinwall. The Outlaws were 53 for 1 after six.
They lost Jack Haynes sweeping across the line in reaching 78 for 2 at halfway. Munsey completed his fifth half-century in his last six Blast innings but mistimed one to mid-off soon afterwards, ending 415 minutes of continuous involvement in Blast action, following two not out innings.
Moores had momentum and Linde picked up the tempo, the fourth-wicket pair adding 52 in 28 balls before Moores picked out his namesake and cousin, Joe, at deep midwicket. Blatherwick then covered some ground to catch Benny Howell off his own bowling.
Linde twice sent Shadab soaring over wide long-on before top-edging Jimmy Anderson in the last over as Freddie McCann’s two boundaries raised the Lancashire target to 182.
Needing nine an over, Lancashire were on course at 88 for 2 from 10. Both wickets had gone to left-arm spinners, Linde removing Michael Jones with his first delivery. Jennings hammered two sixes off Mohammad Amir and another off Howell before Liam Patterson-White had him caught at long off.
Ben McDermott (24 off 17) and Livingstone departed in the 15th and 16th overs, the latter clearing the ropes three times before a brilliant piece of doubling up by McCann and Patterson-White saw him caught on the midwicket boundary.
By then the requirement was down to 33 off 26. Mohammad Ali raised home hopes with a superb 18th over, costing just two runs and claiming the wicket of Shadab via a boundary catch. Needing 19 off the last two, Moores and Hurst took 10 off Amir but another nine off Stone proved just too much.












