1st T20 Match PAK Vs NZ 2018
PAK Vs NZ MAtch
Pakistan Beat The New Zealand
In
1st T20 Match
Pakistan - 155/8 20/20 ov RR: 7.75
Pakistan
win by 2 runs
T20 01 of 03 (PAK Lead 1-0)

Pakistan - 148/6 20/20 ov RR: 7.40
New Zealand - 146/6 20/20 ov RR: 7.30
v
Pakistan
have won by two runs
v
New
Zealand pin winning hopes on Taylor
v
Munro
dismissed for 58, New Zealand wobble
v
Phillips
falls, Pakistan spinners fight back
v
30-year
old Ajaz Patel gets wicket on debut
In-form Pakistan rallied to beat
New Zealand by two runs in a thrilling Twenty20 International in Abu Dhabi,
which launched the three-match series in style.

Pakistan were bidding to extend
their winning streak in the UAE, having emerged victorious from the previous 11
T20I series. Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed, who has captained his nation to 26
wins in 30 T20Is, won the toss and elected to bat – a tried and trusted formula
in the 3-0 series victory against Australia.

It was new Black Caps coach Gary
Stead’s first national assignment and New Zealand's first slice of international
action for seven months. Stead admitted to being “nervous” and who could blame
him? Pakistan, the No.1-ranked team in the world according to the MRF ICC T20I
Team Rankings, were fresh from outclassing their Australasian rivals. It was a
tough first gig.

Sahibzada Farhan got an early
reprieve when Adam Milne was adjudged by the third umpire to have not quite got
his fingers underneath a catching attempt from an upwards straight-drive, but
the speedster soon removed Babar Azam, who nicked off. It was a big wicket –
Babar’s first score under 10 runs in T20Is.
Ijaz Patel then claimed his first
T20I scalp as Farhan swept straight to Colin Munro, who had looked rather
lonely on the leg-side. Recovering from 10/2, Asif Ali and Mohammad Hafeez
helped Pakistan reach 50 in the ninth over and they reached their own 50-run
partnership the next over, courtesy of a huge six by Asif.

Milne returned to remove Hafeez
(45 from 36 balls), owed to a brilliant catch by Tim Southee at backward-point.
Sarfraz, who tried to unsettle the Black Caps bowlers, began to vindicate his
decision to enter the crease ahead of Shoaib Malik.
Pakistan scored their runs at a
good rate between the 10th and 15th over, reaching three figures despite the
loss of Asif by a Colin de Grandhomme slower ball. But some good late-innings death
bowling by birthday boy Ish Sodhi and Southee, who was taking the pace off,
limited the damage.
Corey Anderson delivered a double
blow when he took a diving catch at long-off to remove Sarfraz (45 from 36
balls), who hit a six the previous ball, before running out Malik (8) with a
direct hit from the deep after a poor call by Faheem Ashraf.
Milne and Southee closed out the
innings as Pakistan posted 148/6 from their twenty overs, short of the
captain’s desired target of “above 160”.
It was a score that was made to
look more under-par when Colin Munro found form at the top of New Zealand’s
order. It was a cagey start at first from Munro and Glenn Phillips, but the
former soon went into blitz-mode, striking three straight sixes as New Zealand
reached their half-century in the sixth over.
Hasan Ali bowled Phillips and
spinners Hafeez and Shabad Khan applied the brakes, but New Zealand had the man
for the occasion – in 52 of Kane Williamson's T20I matches, he has been
dismissed only once by leg-spin. That man was Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi.
Munro required just 38 balls to
post his half-century, despite affording himself the luxury of playing himself
in, but Shadab terminated his innings four balls later. Strength turned
weakness when he holed out to mid-on.
Williamson tamely gifted one
straight back to the bowler, Imad Wasim, who deceived New Zealand’s skipper
with a slower ball. De Grandhomme was run out by Shadab and at 89/4 after 13.4
overs, with two fresh batters in the shape of Anderson and Ross Taylor, this
marked a critical stage in the chase.
After 17.1 overs both sides had
sat at 114/4 – it really was neck and neck. Shaheed Afridi had a close lbw
shout turned down by both the on-field official and the third umpire via the
DRS. Ten runs came off the 18th and Anderson holed out the next over off Hasan
(3/35), who then removed Tim Seifert for a golden duck – but Ross Taylor, into
the thirties, was still going strong.
Seventeen runs were required off
the final over with the experienced batsman on strike. Shaheen Afridi, the
18-year-old, was trusted once more and delivered. From a position of strength
at 79/1, New Zealand fell away as the leading T20I team in world cricket used
every ounce of their experience and confidence to see their side home in this
thrilling encounter.
The
second T20I takes place on Friday 2 November..
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