Trinidad and Tobago were a notch above all the other teams in this year's tournament. They went thru the entire tournament unbeaten, and did so without their match-winning stars, Kieron Pollard and Dwayne Bravo, and coped without their inspirational captain, Darren Ganga, in the final. Like commie Jeff Dujon, I was concerned that the trinis would've lost this match because they'd already qualified for the CL, this was their third match in a row, and several key players were carrying injuries. But they approached the final professionally, which is something, considering that most of the team are amateurs who have to make ends meet by doing non-cricket jobs.
Spinners Danny Briggs and Samuel Badree bowled very well at the top of the order for Hampshire and Trinidad respectively, but the innings of class once again was Darren Bravo, who hammered an entertaining 41 from just 28 balls, and Denesh Ramdin chipped in with a quickfire cameo at the end to set up a challenging total for Hants in the end. Lendl Simmons made a laboured 31, and it's debatable as to whether his innings helped or hurt Trinidad....
But ever since leggie Badree bowled Johann Myburgh for a duck at the start of the Hampshire innings, the English county was always going to struggle. None of the other Hants batsmen had set the tournament on fire the way the South African has. It was a good team bowling effort, aided by some thought-provoking field settings to the spinners by stand-in captain Ramdin, and probably it's just as well that the winner of this tournament was a Caribbean team.
It was a great effort by Hants to reach a final on foreign soil, and in alien conditions, and shows that this English county has a lot of talented youngsters, which augur well for the future....