Despite a remarkable maiden half-century from 16-year-old Rocky Flintoff, Lancashire could not avoid their sixth consecutive defeat in the One-Day Cup group stage, this time at the hands of Middlesex. Flintoff, the son of former England captain Andrew Flintoff, scored a commendable 88 runs as his team managed to post 233-9. However, Middlesex chased down the target with relative ease, thanks to impressive knocks by Joe Cracknell, who narrowly missed a century with 98, and Sam Robson, who remained unbeaten on 90.
Middlesex's victory, their third in six matches, propelled them within a point of the four teams tied at the top of Group A, namely Somerset, Hampshire, Worcestershire, and Derbyshire. Meanwhile, in Group B, the much-anticipated top-of-the-table clash between Warwickshire and Glamorgan was marred by rain at Edgbaston, leaving both sides on 11 points and still on course to qualify for the knockout stages. Defending champions Leicestershire, however, kept their hopes alive by defeating Yorkshire in Scarborough.
Flintoff Jr, who became Lancashire's youngest-ever player at 16 years and 113 days when he debuted against Kent on July 28 in this List A competition, had already made a name for himself with a century for England Under-19s in a youth Test against Sri Lanka and another in red-ball cricket for Lancashire's second XI this summer. He recently signed his first professional contract with Lancashire.
Batting at number four, Flintoff entered the fray with Lancashire in trouble at 25-2. As wickets continued to tumble around him, he anchored the innings, reaching his half-century in 77 balls. Later, he found valuable support from the experienced Tom Bailey, who contributed 30 runs in a crucial eighth-wicket partnership of 61.
Flintoff needed to hit two sixes from the final two deliveries to reach his century, but he failed to score off the penultimate ball. On the final delivery, he was caught at long-off by Josh de Caires, the son of former Lancashire and England captain Michael Atherton.
Middlesex then seized control of the match with a commanding 175-run partnership for the second wicket between Cracknell and former England Test opener Robson. Although the visitors lost four wickets late in their innings, Robson ensured Middlesex crossed the finish line with eight balls to spare, leaving Lancashire to rue another missed opportunity.