Ollie Pope starred with his first half-century of the 2026 Vitality Blast as Surrey eased to an eight-wicket victory over Middlesex in a South Group derby at the Kia Oval.
Match Analysis
Ollie Pope struck his first half-century of this year’s Vitality Blast as Surrey coasted past Middlesex in a one-sided South Group derby at the Kia Oval.
Pope, who finished unbeaten on 51 from 33 balls, shared a second-wicket stand of 74 from 44 with Jason Roy (46 from 31) as they made short work of the chase to get Surrey’s T20 campaign back on track following successive defeats.
Earlier, Surrey’s seamers always looked on top and restricted their city rivals to a modest 130 for seven, with Reece Topley (one for 21) and Sean Abbott (two for 16) the pick of the bunch.
Middlesex all-rounder Luke Hollman, with an unbeaten 31 from 29, top-scored in a losing cause for the second successive game as Surrey triumphed for the 12th time in 14 Blast meetings between the sides.
Although the forecast rain never actually materialised, Sam Curran put the visitors in after winning the toss and was rewarded as his bowlers gave little away, reducing Middlesex to 54 for five.
Max Holden was bowled by Jordan Clark and, although Adam Rossington (20 for 17) cleared the fence twice in the powerplay before miscuing Topley to mid-on, his wicket was the first of four to fall in 25 balls.
Former Surrey batter Ben Geddes – having made a duck on his return to the ground in last year’s Blast – was run out for a single this time, while Josh de Caires was unlucky to drag a pull off Abbott onto his stumps.
With Leus du Plooy skying Clark (two for 31) to mid-on, Middlesex’s prospects of posting a competitive score looked forlorn, despite a valiant partnership of 47 from 39 by Hollman and Ryan Higgins (27 from 29).
Riding his luck at times, Hollman landed some valuable blows and, although Sebastian Morgan thumped Tom Curran’s final ball over cover for four, the visitors’ total never looked remotely adequate.
Will Jacks, having survived a low caught and bowled chance to Noah Cornwell in the first over, provided a solid base with 24 from 17 before Tom Helm (one for 25) nipped one back to hit the top of the stumps.
But Roy dabbed Eathan Bosch to the third man boundary to take Surrey past 50 at the end of the powerplay and, with an absence of scoreboard pressure, he and Pope were able to be selective with their shots.
Roy missed out on a first half-century of the tournament, spearing Cornwell to mid-on, but Pope stepped up a gear as he dispatched Morgan for two leg-side sixes before slamming a four to reach his 50 and simultaneously clinch victory.
Surrey batter OLLIE POPE said:
“Sometimes you can lose sight of the simple things in T20, but on this wicket you just needed to hold the top of the stumps and hit the pitch as hard as you can. That’s what we did and we kept them to a really good score.
“Obviously it was a really disappointing performance against Kent (on Sunday) so it was just about re-setting. We were well up for this game and it was good to get the win.
“I’ve not played much T20 cricket over the last year or so, with the way the schedule’s worked. I feel like my game’s in a really good place, it’s just about trying to get that game plan completely right and I did that tonight – it was good to get the boys over the line.
“We finished it in good time so that’s good for our net run-rate, to get the job done as quickly as possible. Another win on Friday (against Hampshire) would put us in a good place going into the second half of the T20.”
Middlesex head coach PETER FULTON said:
“We came up against a really strong team who have got a lot of experience at this level. Coming off a couple of losses, they were out to make amends and they completely outplayed us.
“It was probably similar to the game on Sunday (against Hampshire). We made some self-inflicted errors with the bat and if you’re 60-odd for five, you’re right up against it and it’s going to be hard to win too many games of T20 cricket.
“I think in the last two games, we’ve looked like we lack a bit of self-confidence and belief with the bat. We’ve had one game where we played really well, but we haven’t been consistent enough in general.
“That self-belief and confidence is the job of the coaches – we’ve got to make sure we’re instilling that confidence in them. The talent’s there but we’re a little bit short in backing ourselves out in the middle.”
Match Summary
Surrey vs Middlesex
Surrey 134/2 (14.1 ov)
Middlesex 130/7 (20 ov)
Surrey won by 8 wickets
SCORECARD
Partnership
London Derby double ??
Surrey bounce back to winning ways with a clinical performance against Middlesex at the Kia Oval ????
?? | #VitalityBlast pic.twitter.com/XFJcymogIj
— Surrey Cricket (@surreycricket) June 3, 2026
Match Stats
Middlesex Fall of wickets: 1-24 (Max Holden – 3.2 ov), 2-39 (Adam Rossington – 5.1 ov), 3-43 (Ben Geddes – 6.2 ov), 4-44 (Josh De Caires – 6.5 ov), 5-54 (Leus du Plooy – 9.2 ov), 6-101 (Ryan Higgins – 15.5 ov), 7-115 (Eathan Bosch – 18.1 ov)
Surrey Fall of wickets: 1-38 (Will Jacks – 4.4 ov), 2-112 (Jason Roy – 11.6 ov)
Manhattan
Playing XI
Surrey
Middlesex
Match Details:
Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2026 18:30
Venue: Kennington Oval, London
Toss: Surrey elected to bowl
Weather
Clouds, broken clouds
Temperature 18°C, Humidity 73%
Wind Speed 11.99 mph, Clouds 61%
Pitch
Pitch Condition – Flat Track Pitch
Batting Condition – Average
Pace Bowling Condition – Pace & Bounce
Spin Bowling Condition – Slow Spin
© Cricket World 2026
