Seven consecutive wins between 2020 and 2023, a streak broken once, then three straight victories since, Surrey’s dominance of this fixture goes beyond a good run. At Lord’s on May 24, 2026, they chased 144 with six wickets to spare after Middlesex’s top order caved in a single over. The pattern is too consistent to be a coincidence. Surrey keep winning this derby because they’re structurally better equipped for T20 cricket than their London rivals.
Surrey Middlesex Vitality Blast 2026 London Derby Record
| Year | Venue | Surrey Score | Middlesex Score | Margin |
| 2020 | The Oval (6 Sep) | 116/4 (18.1 ov) | 113/9 (20 ov) | Surrey by 6 wkts |
| 2020 | Lord’s (15 Sep) | 218/5 (20 ov) | 188/5 (20 ov) | Surrey by 30 runs |
| 2021 | Lord’s (10 Jun) | 223/7 (20 ov) | 169/9 (20 ov) | Surrey by 54 runs |
| 2021 | The Oval (26 Jun) | 175/5 (19 ov) | 174/7 (20 ov) | Surrey by 5 wkts |
| 2022 | Lord’s (9 Jun) | 208/7 (20 ov) | 188/8 (20 ov) | Surrey by 20 runs |
| 2022 | The Oval (17 Jun) | 158/3 (15.1 ov) | 155/8 (20 ov) | Surrey by 7 wkts |
| 2023 | Lord’s (25 May) | 199/6 (20 ov) | 126 all out | Surrey by 73 runs |
| 2023* | The Oval (22 Jun) | 252/7 (20 ov) | 254/3 (18.5 ov) | Middlesex by 7 wkts |
| 2024 | Lord’s (20 Jun) | 185/9 (20 ov) | 129/8 (20 ov) | Surrey by 56 runs |
| 2025 | The Oval (21 Jun) | 194 (20 ov) | 119 (20 ov) | Surrey by 75 runs |
| 2026 | Lord’s (24 May) | 144/4 (18.3 ov) | 143/8 (20 ov) | Surrey by 6 wkts |
*Streak broken. Surrey have won every fixture since.
Sam Curran Settled It at Lord’s
Surrey were in trouble at 56/4 when Sam Curran walked in. What followed was 71 not out off 47 balls, 6 fours, 4 sixes, strike rate 151.06, and an unbroken 88-run fifth-wicket stand with Laurie Evans (34* off 21) that turned a nervy chase into a comfortable one. Curran’s form across the first two 2026 Blast matches tells its own story: 32 against Lancashire, 71 not out against Middlesex, 103 runs in two innings at an average of 103.00 and a combined strike rate of around 148. He hit 6 sixes across both games. That kind of middle-order firepower is precisely what Middlesex can’t match, and it’s been the recurring theme of this fixture for six years.
Middlesex’s Top Order Keeps Letting Them Down
Middlesex finished on 143/8, a total that looked competitive until it wasn’t. The collapse that defined their innings came in the sixth over, when wickets two, three, and four fell in quick succession. Adam Rossington was caught off Reece Topley for 6 off 13 balls. Leus du Plooy followed without scoring. Middlesex were 37/3 at the end of the powerplay with their top order gone. No batter passed 25, Luke Hollman’s 35 not out off 28, and Eathan Bosch’s 31 off 18 came too late to matter. A run rate of 7.15 across the innings tells you everything about how completely Surrey’s bowling strangled the chase before it started.
Why Surrey Keep Winning This Fixture
Surrey have fielded multiple current or recent England T20 players throughout this Surrey Middlesex Vitality Blast 2026 London derby, Curran, Pope, Roy, Topley, while Middlesex haven’t had a comparable England T20 core since 2022. Middlesex have reached only two T20 quarter-finals since winning the tournament in 2008, and 2026 brings further upheaval: Kane Williamson and Stephen Eskinazi, their leading run-scorer in 2025, have both departed, and new head coach Peter Fulton arrived from New Zealand. Surrey, by contrast, won both their opening 2026 Blast fixtures, posting 213/6 against Lancashire before this chase. The gap in T20 infrastructure between these two sides isn’t narrowing.
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