GLA vs GLO – T20 Blast 2026 Match Report | Statz

24th May 2026

Gloucestershire Edge Past Glamorgan Off the Final Ball in Cardiff Thriller

Gloucestershire won by 2 wickets (with 0 ball remaining) in a breathless T20 Blast encounter at Sophia Gardens, Cardiff. Match 10 of 112 in the 2026 season, and already we have a contender for game of the tournament. Gloucestershire, having won the toss and elected to bowl, hauled down 158 from the depths of 7/3 – and did it off the very last delivery.

Glamorgan’s Innings: Slow Start, Late Surge

Glamorgan were in deep trouble early. Will Smale was cleaned up for a golden duck in the first over, and Alex Horton managed just 7 off 8 before being bowled as the hosts slumped to 15/2 inside three overs. Kiran Carlson struck three fours in a brisk 18 off 14, but when he fell caught at 26/3 in the fifth over, Glamorgan were wobbling badly.

Sean Dickson laboured to 10 off 15 before being caught, and Ben Kellaway was bowled for 8 off 13 as Glamorgan crawled to 44/4 after 8.2 overs. On a Sophia Gardens surface that offered something for the bowlers early, the innings looked set for a below-par total.

Enter Chris Cooke and Henry Hurle. Cooke cracked 25 off just 16 balls with four boundaries, injecting urgency into a stalling innings. Hurle went bigger still – 46 off 31 with four sixes and a four, the most destructive knock of the Glamorgan innings. Their partnership pushed the score from 45/5 to 90 before Cooke fell caught, and Hurle continued to strike cleanly until he was bowled at 147/7 in the 19th over.

Timm van der Gugten chipped in with a handy 22 off 18 lower down, while Mason Crane finished unbeaten on 6 off 4 as Glamorgan scrambled to 157/8 – a competitive total given the early carnage.

With the ball, Duan Jansen was superb, claiming 3/27 from his four overs at an economy of 6.75. Jack Taylor was even more miserly with 2/24 at an economy of just 6.00 – figures that would prove even more significant later. Marchant de Lange kept things tight with 1/26 at 6.50, while Matthew Taylor (1/47) and Craig Miles (1/33) were more expensive.

Gloucestershire’s Chase: From Crisis to Last-Ball Glory

Gloucestershire‘s reply began in catastrophic fashion. D’Arcy Short nicked off for 4 with the score on 6 in just the first over. Next ball, Oliver Price was caught for a duck. Then Ben Charlesworth followed for nought – 7/3 after just 1.5 overs. Gloucester looked buried.

What followed was the defining passage of the match. Miles Hammond stood firm amid the wreckage and launched a counterattack that swung momentum entirely. He smashed 56 off 31 balls at a strike rate of 181, peppering the boundary with seven fours and three sixes. His partnership with Jack Taylor was worth 71 runs – from 7/3 to 78/4 – and it dragged Gloucestershire right back into the contest.

When Hammond was bowled at 78/4 in the ninth over, Gloucestershire still needed 80 from 68 balls. Taylor continued to accumulate patiently, reaching 34 off 31 with four boundaries. James Bracey managed just 3 before a bizarre hit-wicket dismissal at 84/5. Taylor eventually fell caught at 109/6 in the 14th over, and when Jansen departed at 115/7 and Miles was run out at 121/8, Gloucestershire needed 37 off 21 balls with only two wickets remaining.

Kamran Dhariwal and Matthew Taylor held their nerve in extraordinary fashion. Dhariwal struck 30 not out off 27 with a four and a six, keeping the scoreboard ticking and finding the boundary at crucial moments. Matthew Taylor was even more explosive at the death – 18 not out off just 9 balls at a strike rate of 200, crashing two fours and a six. Together they saw Gloucestershire home off the final delivery. Incredible stuff.

Glamorgan’s bowlers were far from disgraced. Mason Crane was outstanding with 2/16 from four overs at an economy of just 4.00 – a masterclass in T20 spin bowling that deserved to be on the winning side. Fazalhaq Farooqi struck twice early with 2/38, and Ned Leonard picked up 2/36. Kellaway was tidy with 1/29, while van der Gugten went wicketless with 0/39.

Statz MVP: Jack Taylor

Jack Taylor takes Statz MVP honours with a match impact rating of 103.54, calculated based on match context and overall contribution. No official Man of the Match was recorded for this fixture, but Taylor’s all-round display – 34 runs off 31 balls with the bat and 2/24 off four overs with the ball – was the standout performance of the match. He held Gloucestershire’s chase together after the top-order collapse and had earlier strangled Glamorgan’s scoring in the middle overs. A genuine match-winning contribution across both disciplines.

Top 5 Statz Ratings

  1. Jack Taylor (GLO) – mi_rating 103.54. All-round masterclass: 34 off 31 with the bat, 2/24 at an economy of 6.00 with the ball. Rescued the chase and controlled the middle overs.
  2. Mason Crane (GLA) – mi_rating 99.17. Superb with ball and bat: 2/16 at an economy of 4.00, plus an unbeaten 6 off 4. The best bowling figures of the match on a losing side.
  3. Miles Hammond (GLO) – mi_rating 90.92. His 56 off 31 at a strike rate of 181 turned the chase from hopeless to winnable. The most explosive innings of the match.
  4. Duan Jansen (GLO) – mi_rating 90.88. Three wickets for 27 at an economy of 6.75 set the tone in the first innings. Also top fantasy scorer with 136 Dream11 points.
  5. Henry Hurle (GLA) – mi_rating 70.90. His 46 off 31 with four sixes was the backbone of Glamorgan’s recovery from 45/5 to a competitive total.

Turning Point

At 7/3 after just 1.5 overs, Gloucestershire were staring down the barrel. Three wickets in nine balls – Short caught, Price caught, Charlesworth caught – and the chase looked dead before it had started. What saved them was the 71-run stand between Hammond and Taylor that took the score from 7/3 to 78/4. Hammond’s fearless strokeplay and Taylor’s composure rebuilt the innings from nothing. Without that partnership, this game was over inside the powerplay.

Match Context

It is very early days in the T20 Blast 2026 – just match 10 of 112 in the group stage. Glamorgan sit 10th after this defeat with no points and a net run rate of -0.150. Gloucestershire climb to 3rd with 4 points and a healthy NRR of +2.350, behind Surrey (1st, NRR +2.95) and Sussex (2nd, NRR +2.45). With both teams having played just one match, there is a long way to go – but for Gloucestershire, winning a game like this from 7/3 builds serious belief.

Full scorecard: Glamorgan vs Gloucestershire – Statz Cricket