HAMPSHIRE are bottom of the Vitality Blast’s south division after collapsing to a fourth defeat in six games at Lord’s last night.

Ashton Agar and Steven Finn took three wickets apiece as Middlesex staged an astonishing comeback to win by 22 runs - less than a month after Hampshire’s Royal London One-Day Cup success at headquarters.

Hampshire appeared to be coasting at 89-1, chasing a modest target of 166 for victory, but somehow contrived to throw away their last nine wickets for just 54.

That turnaround secured Middlesex’s first win in five T20 games and lifted them off the bottom of the table.

Fidel Edwards (2-30) and spin duo Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Liam Dawson ensured that Hampshire restricted their hosts to 165-8 after winning the toss, despite Paul Stirling’s accomplished half-century.

Max Holden (22) kept Stirling company throughout the powerplay, but their stand of 58 was broken when the left-hander called a single that never looked on and was comfortably run out by Edwards’ throw.

Stand-in captain Eoin Morgan’s promotion to three in the order failed to pay off as he made just two before holing out to deep mid-wicket – and Middlesex’s innings never gained any kind of traction.

That was no reflection on Stirling, whose knock of 60 from 44 balls included five fours and three sixes before he eventually perished driving Colin Munro to long-on.

Dwayne Bravo hammered a rapid 20 but, once he was run out attempting a risky single, Middlesex’s hopes of a par score evaporated and only some spirited late blows from Tom Helm (13*) hauled them to 165.

James Vince (4) surrendered his wicket in the first over by spearing an attempted pull back to Finn (3-21), but Hampshire reached 89-1 in the ninth over.

Munro was soon into his stride, dispatching all the Middlesex seamers to the boundary with regularity as he rattled up 58 from 29 deliveries.

The New Zealander shared a second-wicket partnership of 85 with Sam Northeast (27) before the latter charged Agar (3-17) and missed, allowing John Simpson to whip off the bails.

Agar gave his side a glimmer of hope with two wickets in as many balls as Munro heaved one to long-on and Rilee Rossouw (4) scooped the next into the hands of Stirling.

Hampshire’s wobble soon turned into a full-scale collapse as Finn followed Agar by removing Chris Wood (0) and Tom Alsop (20) with successive deliveries.

Agar applied the finishing touch in the penultimate over, calmly taking a catch at long-on to dismiss last man Edwards (7).

Vince said: “If we’d won tonight, as we probably should have done, we’d be unbeaten in three and probably thinking we’re going in the right direction.

"As it is, we’re possibly going to have to look at tinkering with a few things and making some big strides if we’re going to qualify in this competition.”