3rd T20I Match PAK Vs AUS 2018
PAK Vs AUS MAtch
Pakistan
Beat The Australia
In
3rd Test Match
Pakistan - 155/8 20/20 ov RR: 7.75
Pakistan
win by 33 runs
Test 03 of 03 (Pak Win 3-0)

Pakistan - 150/5 20/20 ov RR: 7.50
Australia - 117 19.1/20 ov RR: 6.10
v
Pakistan
have won by 33 runs, complete 3-0 series sweep
v
Australia's
batting fails again, Pakistan bowlers revel
v
Shadab
Khan's 4/39 inspires hosts to convincing victory
v
Australia's
batting order re-jig in vain
v
Babar
Azam scores a half-century, in rich vein of form
Australia slipped to yet another
defeat in the third and final T20I in Dubai as Pakistan secured a 3-0 win in
the series.

The match, which Pakistan won by
33 runs, completed a disappointing tour for Australia, who lost the two-match
Test series one-nil after a heavy defeat in Abu Dhabi.
Babar Azam’s 50 had been the
highlight of Pakistan’s innings after their skipper Sarfraz Ahmed won the toss,
and chasing a middling target of 151 to win Australia got off to a fantastic
start.

Promoted to open in place of
D’Arcy Short, who slid down the order, wicket-keeper Alex Carey smashed Imad
Wasim’s first over for 20, with two fours and two sixes.
But captain Aaron Finch failed
yet again – he’d made just 1 before hitting to the hands of mid-on off Faheem
Ashraf in the second over. With Carey hitting a tame leading edge to mid-wicket
off the first ball of the third over (which Mohammad Hafeez was bowling), the
visitors’ chase was derailing fast.

Chris Lynn and Ben McDermott
started to build a bit of a partnership and with a relatively modest total to
attain the match quickly looked like Australia’s again. But Lynn attempted a
slog sweep to Shadab Khan’s first delivery – the eight over – and hit it down
the throat of deep mid-wicket for 15. Three balls later, with Glenn Maxwell
having replaced Lynn, McDermott got himself run out for the third successive
time in his third T20I. Hitting to cover and running, once he realised Maxwell
wasn’t interested it was too late, and he had to depart for what had been a
decent 21 off 20 balls.
Maxwell didn’t last long either,
clothing Shadab to long-on first ball of the 10th over to leave Australia 75/5,
but in Mitchell Marsh and D’Arcy Short – a more than handy duo at six and seven
– their hopes remained very much alive.
With that pair at the crease
Pakistan required 59 from the last six overs, and with Shadab keeping it tight,
Marsh couldn’t get the access he wanted and hit a straight ball to the hands of
Shoaib Malik diving forward at long-on to give to leg-spinner his third wicket.
Though Short got a boundary away later the same over, he was out first ball of
the next, smacking Usman Khan to deep mid-wicket where 37-year-old Malik again
took a superb sliding catch. Coulter-Nile was run out first ball to make the
score 100/8, and the game was pretty much up for Australia, who seemed
demoralised. Shadad ended with the superb figures of 3/18 from his four and
Australia were bowled out for 117, Zampa the last to fall.
It hadn’t been plain sailing for
Pakistan with the bat. Sure, after Safraz won the toss on a turning surface,
Babar Azam and Sahibzada Farhan – the latter was selected in place of Fakhar Zaman
for this final match – got off to something of a flier.
Babar Azam's 50 was the basis of Pakistan's
total Babar Azam's 50 was the basis of Pakistan's total
While the first two overs brought
just 10 runs, Babar in particular opened his shoulders, and when Farhan smashed
Andrew Tye for six over long-on last ball of the sixth over, Pakistan ended the
batting Powerplay on 54/0.
From then on though, the
wrist-spin combination of D’Arcy Short (left-arm) and Adam Zampa (right-arm)
held back the scoring rate with some tight bowling, although Farhan did get
Zampa away for an almighty slog-swept maximum over cow corner in the 12th over.
The 22-year-old was out for a
38-ball 39 soon after, spooning a Lyon full toss to Tye at deep mid-off.
In the very next over Babar
chopped a Tye slower ball on to his stumps for a well-made 50 off 40 balls, and
having squeezed the scoring Australia were now in an ideal situation.
Hafeez
hit well to end not out on 32 from just 20 balls, while Malik chipped in with a
valuable 18. It was Australia’s bowlers who seemed to have the most impressive
stats, Zampa the standout with 1/25 from his four overs. But once their own
batsmen had tried and failed to salvage a win from this disappointing tour, it
was clear that Pakistan’s total had been quite sufficient.
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