Shane Warne is targeting another Lord's final after the Hampshire Hawks crushed the Glamorgan Dragons by 137 runs at Swansea.
The Hawks are now third in the Friends Provident Trophy South Conference with two games remaining - against the only sides above them.
It means wins against the Kent Spitfires at Tunbridge Wells on Sunday and the Surrey Brown Caps at the Rose Bowl a week on Wednesday will ensure a home semi-final on June 20.
Warne said: "That would be a huge advantage so that's our aim.
"We've only lost one game so far. We had a real shocker against Essex but we've played well in most of the other games and need to continue the intensity and enthusiasm we showed at Swansea against Kent and Surrey."
An abandonment was feared yesterday morning, as the forecast was for torrential rain in south Wales, but the expected downpour did not materialise until the Hawks had completed their fourth one-day win of the season.
Hampshire amassed 283-6 after winning the toss, with Dimitri Mascarenhas (74) and Michael Lumb top scoring (66) before Stuart Clark took 4-25 as Glamorgan were bowled out for 146.
Warne added: "We're due a bit of luck and we got that with the weather.It was a day when everything went according to plan.
"When Kevin Pietersen got out we were 130-5 and thought 220 would be a really good score but once again Dimi Mascarenhas showed his class in a good partnership with Nic Pothas and good hits towards the end got us the 283 which we always thought was going to be 50 too many.
"Michael Lumb is hitting the ball really well, he was unlucky in how he got out.
"The plan was for Stuey Clark and Chris Tremlett to open the bowling to try and get early wickets and that's exactly what happened - and thankfully we got a whole game in."
The victory against Glamorgan was the perfect antidote to another drawn and rain-affected championship match.
Hampshire arrived in Swansea after failing to tempt Warwickshire to chase 260 in 65 overs on the last day of a match in which more than 150 overs had been lost to the weather.
Warne continued: "We've been horribly unlucky with the weather in the championship - if we had an extra day at Edgbaston we'd have probably beaten Warwickshire - but I thought 260 off 65 was pretty kind.
"They thought they could bowl us out but I didn't think they could if we played half decent.
"Teams should win nine times out of ten chasing 260 off 65 overs with a kiddies' boundary and with the wicket playing well so I was surprised they didn't take it.
"But Mark Greatbatch is their coach so what do you expect? Warwickshire captain Darren Maddy probably wanted to do it but Mark Greatbatch is pretty negative."
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