2nd T20I Match PAK Vs AUS 2018
PAK Vs AUS MAtch
Pakistan Beat TheAustralia
In
2nd T20I Match
Pakistan - 155/8 20/20 ov RR: 7.75
Pakistan
win by 11 runs
Test 2 of 3 (Pak Leads 2-0)

Pakistan - 147/6 20/20 ov RR: 7.35
Australia - 136/8 20/20 ov RR: 6.80
v
All-round
Pakistan take unassailable 2-0 lead in series
v
Pakistan
have won by 11 runs
v
Maxwell's
52 couldn't win it for Australia
v
Shaheen
Shah defends 23 runs in the last over
Babar Azam and Mohammad Hafeez
each made 40s, while Imad Wasim claimed 1/8, as Pakistan claimed an 11-run
victory in a cracker of a contest at Dubai.
Batting first, Pakistan made
their way to 146/7 thanks largely to a 70-run stand between Mohammad Hafeez and
Babar Azam. They helped rebuild after the early loss of belligerent opener
Fakhar Zaman, given out caught behind on review off Nathan Coulter-Nile.

Azam and Hafeez did well to
alleviate the pressure that dismissal brought and to build a platform, but with
their partnership occupying more than 10 overs, it left plenty for their
lower-order batsmen to do to get Pakistan up to a strong total; perhaps too
much.
Babar Azam's innings proved key Babar Azam's
innings proved key
It was Billy Stanlake who broke
the stand, enticing Hafeez into pulling straight to deep square leg for a
34-ball 40. Soon after, Short removed Azam for a 44-ball 45. He had struggled
to score fluently, striking just three fours, and in trying to up the rate,
only succeeded in holing out to Finch at long-off.

It was Short’s only wicket, but
the left-armer’s spell was still an impressive won. Though only rated as a
part-timer, he conceded less than a run a ball in his three-over spell of spin,
tying down Pakistan effectively.
With an opening secured,
Coulter-Nile resumed his work, and ensured Pakistan didn’t get a big finish. He
forced Hasan Ali and Shoaib Malik to mis-time and hole out, and finished with
superb figures of 3/18 from three overs.

Nathan Coulter-Nile starred with bat and ball
Nathan Coulter-Nile starred with bat and ball His exploits were made all the
more impressive by how his Australian pace-bowling counterparts struggled.
Stanlake and Andrew Tye leaked 76 runs from their combined eight overs, though
Stanlake did claim two wickets, adding the scalp of Asif Ali, who timed well
but found the man on the point fence, to his earlier dismissal.
Compared to how Australia’s
spinners fared – they conceded just 47 runs from their nine overs – it
demonstrated how the pitch suited slow bowling, and indicated that how
Australia’s batsmen took on Pakistan’s twirlers could be key to the result as
the home side attempted to defend a slightly below-par total.
In the end, despite Glenn
Maxwell’s heroics, it was Pakistan’s spinners who decided the contest.
Australia got of to a better start than in the first T20I, but considering they
lost two wickets in the first over of that chase it isn’t saying much, and they
soon found themselves 19/2 after five overs.
Imad Wasim's economical spell was vital Imad
Wasim's economical spell was vital
Left-arm spinner Imad Wasim
claimed both wickets, the first fortuitously via a deflected straight drive
which caught D’Arcy Short short at the non-striker’s end, and the second after
building up plenty of pressure with 15 consecutive dot balls, forcing Chris
Lynn to miscue to cover, where Shadab Khan took an acrobatic catch.
Wasim went onto complete a
four-over spell of 1/8, earning him his second Player of the Match award in
succession. It was the catcher of his second wicket who struck the next two
blows, Australia captain Aaron Finch holing out to long-on for just 3 in the seventh
over, and Mitchell Marsh caught behind fencing at a leg-break.
Marsh and Glenn Maxwell had added
30, and with Maxwell having a reputation as one of Australia’s best players of
spin, he just needed someone to stick with him.
Glenn Maxwell struck a half-century in vain
Glenn Maxwell struck a half-century in vain
Neither Alex Carey – caught at
extra cover off a leading edge off Hafeez – or Ben McDermott – run out by a
brilliant pick up and throw from Zaman – were able to, but Coulter-Nile, the
star with the ball, struck 27 off 17 to give Australia hope.
He and Maxwell put on a
half-century stand to rescue Australia from 73/6, but though Pakistan will have been worried,
the asking rate always looked too high. Maxwell reached an excellent fifty but
with 23 needed off the last over, both fell to Shaheen Shah Afridi, caught in
the deep attempting to go big.
The
result meant Pakistan claimed the series, leading 2-0 with a game to play. The
final match will take place on Sunday 28 November at the same location.
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