Captain has led the way with the bat to keep Sussex in quarter-final hunt

Matt Roller15-Sep-2020If T20 can be a fickle game, no competition exemplifies it better than the Vitality Blast. While most leagues now incorporate an IPL-style play-off system – with the team finishing top of the group stage given a double chance – the Blast is a straight knockout from the quarter-finals. Even if you win every game in your group, one slip-up is enough for you to be dumped out unceremoniously.Sussex know that better than most. Across the last two-and-a-half seasons, they have the joint-best win/loss ratio (alongside Lancashire) in the competition, but no silverware to show for it. After losing a tight 2018 final to Worcestershire, they confirmed their knockout spot with two group games to spare last season, but Moeen Ali made a remarkable 121 not out after being dropped on 5 in the quarters to send them out.”No matter how good a team you are, we all know how random T20 can be on any given day,” reflects their captain Luke Wright. “We’ve been very, very close. All you can do is keep getting yourself into the quarter-finals and hope you get it right on the day.”It’s not always the best team that wins; it’s the one that gets some momentum at the right time. That’s what Essex did last year. They were nearly dead and buried at the halfway stage, but they timed their run brilliantly. Sometimes you almost want to scrape into the quarters: if you hit form once you’re into those, then you’ve got a massive chance.”ALSO READ: Essex ride their luck to make off with T20 spoilsSussex look well-placed to qualify with three games to go in the South Group this season. Defeat at home to Essex on Monday, thanks to a Dan Lawrence special – “he played out of his skin” says Wright – was a surprise, but two wins should be enough to secure a quarter-final berth.They have managed that despite the absences of Jofra Archer, Chris Jordan (both England then IPL), Phil Salt (England reserve), Laurie Evans, Reece Topley (both left for Surrey), Rashid Khan and Travis Head (both had their contracts cancelled) for much of the tournament to date, and plenty of that has been thanks to Wright’s own form.