Stevens’ return to the side this season came amid an availability crisis at Kent with several senior bowlers injured and Billings joining Zak Crawley on England Test duty. In a joyous comeback, he snared two wickets in four boundary-less overs and while his overall statistics were unremarkable, he was picked for every game he was available for, up until the quarter-finals.His recall on Finals Day brought with it a sense of inevitability. “We knew it was going to be his day,” laughed Daniel Bell-Drummond during the innings break, after he had thrashed his way to a vital 47 not out off 28 balls to drag Kent towards a competitive 168 and recover from a mid-innings wobble. The pick of his shots was an impudent scoop for four off Chris Jordan, an old dog showing off his new tricks.Then, brought on to bowl the eighth over with Sussex struggling in their run chase, Stevens induced a chop-on from David Wiese to strike with his first ball. He celebrated with a fist pump and a broad grin as his fan club – four men in retro Kent replica shirts and latex bald caps – jumped around wildly in the Hollies Stand. Stevens’ scriptwriter is the finest in the business.For all the light-hearted jibes that fly Stevens’ way, his continued success is a tribute to his insatiable appetite to improve and compete; county cricket has had few finest servants. He opened the batting with Virender Sehwag and was dismissed by Chris Silverwood on his T20 debut in 2003; the first of his two titles came in 2004, two weeks after his semi-final opponent Archie Lenham was born.”He said when we dropped him ‘don’t worry, get me to Finals Day and I’ll do it for you,'” Billings joked, struggling to conceal his joy at leading Kent into their first T20 final since 2008. “We’re living in Darren’s world, aren’t we?”

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