Rilee Rossouw gives Derbyshire a rocket in record-breaking Somerset win

A 36-ball 93 leads hosts to 191-run victory as McKiernan goes for 82 off four overs

David Hopps09-Jul-2022″Carnage,” was how Rilee Rossouw described it and he was not exaggerating. It was a perfect night for batting at Taunton – a glinting summer’s evening, an inviting batting pitch and a Derbyshire bowling attack that ultimately found this quarter-final all too much. Somerset imposed the highest score in T20 Blast history on a night that will warm West Country hearts for many years to come. They are back in Finals Day, and just to rub it in their 191-run was the biggest victory margin too.Somerset struck 265 for 5, surpassing Birmingham’s 261 for 2, made against Nottinghamshire only three weeks ago. Eighteen sixes rained into a jubilant crowd. A hot air balloon sailing close to the ground would have been best advised not to lose altitude to take a closer look.Derbyshire have never successfully chased 200, so 266 was a bit of an ask. They capsized for 74, not a single six in response, although plenty fell short, their thoughts turning in on themselves long before they began the journey home. Their North Group campaign was worthy of respect as they drew every ounce of ability out of themselves but this could hardly have been a more horrific night.Derbyshire’s head coach, Mickey Arthur, did not mince his words. “It was embarrassing,” he said. “We are not happy with simply reaching quarter-finals and tonight we didn’t execute our skills. We were tentative, didn’t field well and didn’t nail our skills with the ball, with the exception of George Scrimshaw, who was outstanding. It was very disappointing because I felt we bottled it.”Rossouw’s 93 off 36 balls was also on course to become one of the fastest T20 hundreds in Blast history until Scrimshaw had him caught, pulling, at deep midwicket. One damning statistic then that Derbyshire managed to avoid. Scrimshaw has been impressive enough this season to win an England Lions call and his reputation will be enhanced by his return of 2 for 16 while all around him was bedlam. Mattie McKiernan’s legspin had a less rewarding night: his figures of 4-0-82-0 were the most expensive in the history of T20 cricket.McKiernan’s fate was sealed during a soul-destroying 15th over of the innings in which he conceded 36, comprising five sixes, a four and two no balls courtesy of a googly that landed off the cut strip. At least this only ranked as third in the all-time over of gloom – James Fuller once went for 38 for Gloucestershire and conceded 12 before he had bowled a legal delivery. If it is any consolation for McKiernan, Fuller, now at Hampshire, has been one of this season’s stand-out performers. It is possible to come back from this.