It is also the format where he is most confident in his using wide range of sweeps, reverse-sweeps and ramps, learnt in part through playing hockey growing up, to manipulate bowlers to his advantage. “I’ve always enjoyed trying to get the field set to how I want it, trying to have a man up where I would like him and then there’s always part of the ground that I’m able to access. Then trying to get various angles and gaps in the field I can then target. [It’s] definitely very enjoyable and quite a pleasing result when it comes off for you.”That’s probably where the sweeps and ramps and reverses [come in], then get men put in those areas and obviously if they’re back it allows a lot of access and gaps for almost normal or conventional cricket shots.”It is the unorthodox stuff that catches the eye, though – such as a brutal reverse-sweep for six off Sunil Narine against Surrey. “Not many people in the world play the way that he plays with some of the shots that he does,” Sams says. “Playing all his tricks, reverse-sweeps and stuff like that, they’re just [like] a normal forward defence.”Essex will return to Edgbaston on Saturday hoping that Pepper’s pep can spice up their challenge in the first semi-final against Hampshire. They lost twice to the reigning champions in the group stage, including being bowled out for 96 chasing 215, but the approach is bound to be the same: go big, or go home early.

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