3rd ODI ICC Match Pak vs Zim 2018
Pak vs Zim mtach
Pakistan Beat Zimbabwe
In
3rd ODI Match

PAK won by 9 wickets
ODI 2 of 5 (Pak Leads 2-0)
Zimbabwe(194)49.2
Pakistan (195/1)36
v Pakistan
win by nine wickets
v Fakhar
Zaman unbeaten on 117
v Four
wickets for Usman Khan Shinwari

Fakhar Zaman’s second ODI century, and seven wickets shared
between Usman Khan and Hassan Ali, ensured Pakistan completed a nine-wicket win
and took a 2-0 lead in the five-match ODI series.
Pakistan were always heavy favourites for this series after many
of Zimbabwe’s best players ruled themselves out due to an ongoing pay dispute,
and though the result is not yet decided – the tourists lead 2-0 with three to
play – it seems certain they will secure the rubber at some point.

Much of the interest therefore is not in the overall result, but
instead in how close Zimbabwe can get, and whether this slightly ramshackle
group of players can challenge not this time, but perhaps in one, two or even
five years' time. To that end, there were some positives to be taken for the
home side.
For
this wasn’t quite as demoralising a thrashing as the 201-run marmalising in the
first ODI; there was heartening fight shown by Zimbabwe. There were gritty
fifties for Moor and Masakadza, several other starts besides which indicated
there may be more to come from this side, and a testing new-ball spell from
Blessing Muzarabani, who conceded just 19 from his first five overs and found
the edge on more than one occasion.
But
in the end, and worryingly but not unexpectedly, Pakistan’s skills were simply
far superior. In Usman Khan and Hassan Ali they had a pair of quicks who looked
capable of making incisions at any stage of the game, while Zaman and Imam-ul-Haq
showed the ability to defy tricky spells of bowling, and then to cash in when
conditions allowed.
Usman
was the star with the ball, starting the match with a special new-ball spell
which accounted for both Zimbabwe’s openers, Brian Chari nicking a lovely
away-swinging delivery through to the keeper, and Chamu Chibhabha under-edging
a cut to a ball that was too full for the stroke. He then returned to stymie
Zimbabwe’s late charge with two searing yorkers in two balls, the first of
which smashed into Donald Tiripano’s stumps, and the second was only prevented
from doing so by Liam Roche’s pads.
In-between,
Hassan Ali struck regularly through the middle overs, a skill he has proved
himself as good at as any pace bowler in the world over the last year and a
bit. He angled one in to Tarisai Musakanda to have the No.4 lbw and break a
62-run stand, brought one back in miles to demolish Ryan Murray’s stumps, and
out-thought PJ Moor in the death overs, encouraging him to flat-bat a length
ball skywards.
Either
would have been a worthy candidate for Player of the Match were it not for
Zaman’s stunning century that sealed the win. He and Imam again added 100
together for the first wicket without fuss, and this time it was the senior
man’s turn to make a century, and Imam’s to fall short, run out unfortunately
for 44 as his bat bounced up before being grounded over the crease.
Though
Zaman’s runs came at close to a run a ball, this was no mindless thwack; that
would have been unnecessary. Instead, he waited to put the bad ball to the
boundary, tucking the good ones for singles in the meantime.
Victory
was eventually completed as Tiripano dug one in, only for it to pass harmlessly
down the leg side for a wide. It summed up Zimbabwe’s day. They tried hard and
couldn’t be faulted for effort; it was Pakistan’s skill that won out.
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