BASHLEY captain Simon Watkins lauded his bowling unit after spinners Tom Andrews and Sam Thomson tied Burridge up in knots.

Andrews claimed five for 20 and Thomson four for 46 to help Bashley seize a three-wicket win at BCG.

Burridge were dismissed for just 96 in the Southern Premier League clash, a total which the hosts surpassed in the 24th over with seven wickets down.

And while Andrews and Thomson earned memorable figures, Watkins insisted that seamers Kevin Nash and Jake Lilley had also deserved credit.

Nash in particular impressed with just 10 runs conceded in five overs, which included three maidens.

Watkins told the Daily Echo: “The seamers set the tone up front and although they didn’t get any wickets, both bowled incredibly well.

“There seemed to be at least three misses an over from their batsmen and we didn’t give them many bad balls and built pressure right from the off.

“Kevin had one of their batsman completely tied up – he just couldn’t get near the ball.

“The spinners took it on from there. The batters had felt pressure from the seamers so they had to play a few shots against the spinners and wickets came our way.

“We were patient, kept hitting our areas and that gave us some joy. We were very pleased to get them out for 96 because we felt it was comfortably a 200 pitch.

“It was a fantastic performance by the bowlers. Only having to use four bowlers when we had others in the locker showed how good those four were.”

The recalled James Morris top-scored with 27 as Bashley did just enough to secure victory with their reply. Opener Michael Porter also contributed 22 to the cause.

Watkins continued: “We always knew we were going to get the runs, it was just a case of how difficult we made it for ourselves. We took off the gas a bit but we always knew we’d win.

“We still have some work to do on our batting if we want to get close to the top two teams in the league.”

Elsewhere in the Premier Division, Lymington suffered back-to-back league losses as they fell to defeat at home to St Cross Symondians.

Lymo were put in to bat first and set a target of 199, which St Cross reached in 36 overs for the loss of just four wickets.