The Cape Cobras flattered to deceive in the Champions League Twenty20 and skipper Justin Kemp lamented his side’s inability to bowl at a high standard.
The Cobras, who made 137 for four after batting first, suffered a two-wicket loss in a thrilling Group A match after letting T&T off the hook at 105 for seven.
"It's disappointing, but to be fair we haven't bowled well at all, really. We've made crucial mistakes which you can't make at this level and unfortunately it caught up with us tonight. You can't be bowling three, four no-balls in one over, (which means) you're struggling. You're chasing a relatively low score, if you bowl a few wides too, it doesn't make it any easier," Kemp said.
"I thought with three overs to go, we were really in there, Robin Peterson's first five balls (in the 18th over) were fantastic and obviously the last ball was a six, and they were back in it. (But) that's Twenty20, that's how it works.
Cobras pacer Dale Steyn leaked 15 runs in the 19th over after a magnificent early innings spell of 3-1-3-1," he said.
Asked if he had considered letting Steyn complete his quota of four overs early, Kemp said, "He bowled beautifully, he's one of the world's best death bowlers. I've got to bowl my best death bowler at the death, unfortunately it didn't work out. We didn't execute what we wanted to execute, and that's why we are going home."
Kemp, whose team nullified the impact of T&T's spinners by repeatedly charging down the track for even singles or two, denied it was a conscious ploy.
"Obviously we had a look at them more than the other guys. It's not the kind of wicket where you can just kind of hit them over the top. I was happy with the overall score, I don't think it was a below-par score," he said