Kieron Pollard's 54 not out from just 18 balls saw Trinidad & Tobago to an unlikely victory over New South Wales.
Henrique concedes 43 from nine balls as New South Wales are beaten
Champions Twenty20 League A
Hyderabad
New South Wales 170-4 (P J Hughes 83, D A Warner 63) v Trinidad & Tobago 171-6 (K A Pollard 54 no)
Trinidad & Tobago beat New South Wales by 4 wkts
A devastating display of power hitting from Kieron Pollard's saw Trinidad & Tobago to an unlikely four-wicket win over New South Wales.
Replying to the Blues' total of 170-4, T&T looked down and out in the Super Eights fixture in the Champions League at 118-6 in the 16th over when Denesh Ramdin became the third batsman to be run out in the innings.
However Pollard single-handedly steered his side to glory, belting five sixes and the same number of fours in an unbeaten 54 from only 18 deliveries.
Maximum
The all-rounder finished the game with nine balls to spare, thumping a maximum down the ground which also took him through to his half-century.
Poor Moises Henriques was the bowler to suffer. After picking up the wicket of Dwayne Bravo for one during an early two-over spell that cost just six runs, his next nine deliveries ended up going for an astonishing 43.
While Pollard produced the fireworks Sherwin Ganga was left a mere spectator at the other end, contributing a mere four in a partnership worth 53.
In the end New South Wales paid the price for bowling out frontline seamers Doug Bollinger (1-22) and Stuart Clark (0-27) early on.
Skipper Simon Katich would have thought the job was done after fine work in the field by his team ended dangerous knocks by Daren Ganga (32), Dwayne Bravo (27) and Ramdin, who made 23 from 13 balls.
Hughes over-shadowed
Pollard turned the game on its head, though, to overshadow Phillip Hughes' fine innings of 83 for the Blues.
The left-hander faced 63 deliveries for his runs, hitting 11 fours and a six before falling to Dwayne Bravo, who finished with figures of 3-31.
David Warner made 63 to help put on an opening stand of 121 with Hughes, while Henriques chipped in with a quick-fire 17. Leg spinner Samuel Badree ended up conceding 24 from his one over, though that wasn't even the expensive over of the night in Hyderabad.
Instead Henriques was the man to end up with that unwanted honour, Pollard taking him for 27 to help engineer a comeback of Lazarus proportions.