Sports
Fakhar Zaman’s 180* leads Pakistan to their second-highest ODI chase
When Fakhar Zaman has these kinds of days, there’s very little any side can do about it; and what makes him so special is he has days like these with frightening regularity. A third successive ODI hundred – this one a monster century – by Pakistan’s premier ODI opener blitzed New Zealand, as he cracked an unbeaten 180 off 144 balls.
It helped his side coast to their second-highest chase in the format, running down New Zealand’s 336 with seven wickets and almost two overs to spare. A 135-run stand with Babar Azam, who scored 65, formed the backbone of the chase, while a devastating counter-attacking partnership with Mohammad Rizwan swept the game out of New Zealand’s reach.
New Zealand had done plenty of things much better than they did in the first ODI, and yet, this game simply felt like a repeat. Daryl Mitchell scored a hundred, and New Zealand set themselves up for a huge total. And while they did get much further along than they managed in the first ODI by posting 336, a tight final three overs from Pakistan ensured the hosts grabbed some momentum at the death.
And Pakistan began the chase brightly once more, though Matt Henry did strike to remove Imam-ul-Haq in the final over of the powerplay; but the hosts kept coasting at above seven runs an over. Coming in at No. 3, Babar struggled through the first few overs of the innings, scoring just 16 runs in his first 25 balls. Thus, the onus fell on Fakhar to ensure Pakistan remained on top of the asking rate, a burden he fulfiled with aplomb.
The real acceleration came in the 21st over when he launched Ish Sodhi for 17, speeding along to his tenth ODI hundred. He had brought up three figures in 83 balls, before launching Rachin Ravindra for a huge six over midwicket, as by now Pakistan were purring. Babar had rediscovered his own touch too with a pair of boundaries against Henry Shipley, and was coasting towards another half-century.
New Zealand ran through the bowling changes but could simply find no way through, until an unforced error from Babar himself provided the breakthrough. He had tonked Sodhi for a six and a four in the 30th over, before a leading edge saw the ball fly up to Chad Bowes at short cover.
The visitors were then provided a glimmer when debutant Abdullah Shafique was prised out by Shipley, but Rizwan hit back with another effective counterattacking knock. It began with a regal cover drive off the first ball and continued with the same elegance. Fakhar had much of the pressure taken off him as both experienced batters tore chunks out of the bowlers, particularly the inexperienced Ravindra.
Fakhar brought up 150 and carried on, while Rizwan’s own half-century arrived off the penultimate ball he faced as Pakistan eased to the win in the end.
Earlier, Mitchell’s second successive hundred of the series had helped New Zealand to an imposing total of 336. A 183-run stand for the third wicket between him and his captain Tom Latham was the foundation of New Zealand’s biggest ODI total in Pakistan, with Latham’s 98 from 85 balls ensuring his partner had plenty of support at the other end.
Unlike the first ODI where New Zealand fell away sharply in the final ten overs thanks to a rock-solid bowling display by Pakistan, there would be less of a let-up at the death this time. New Zealand cranked through the gears in the final few overs to press home the advantage of the dominant position they had worked themselves into by plundering 98 runs in the final ten overs, with their innings featuring Mitchell’s career-best 129 off 119 balls.
Pakistan had won the toss and reprised the decision to field first, and while New Zealand made a more urgent start than they did on Thursday, Haris Rauf struck to remove Will Young early. But aside from Naseem Shah, whose accuracy and menace forced them into caution, no pace bowler was really spared. Ihsanullah, making his debut, bore the brunt of the third-wicket partnership’s punishment. Rauf wasn’t spared either, and in the 17th over, Mitchell tonked him for a four and a six, bringing up the side’s 100.
Haris struck again after Bowes reached his maiden fifty, but it brought together the defining stand of the innings when Latham and Mitchell got together. Latham had found strokeplay a struggle on Thursday, but had no such problems on the day, getting off to a brisk start and milking the spinners effectively. Mitchell looked characteristically imperturbable, and New Zealand’s platform was being built beautifully.
Pakistan were sloppy in the field in the first game, and must have rued the chance to get rid of Mitchell before he brought up three figures on Saturday too. Naseem put down a dolly at mid-on in the 39th over, with Mitchell four away from the milestone, thus denying Usama Mir the wicket his bowling deserved. Four balls later, Latham pulled Mir away for four to bring up his own half-century, while Mitchell eased his way to a hundred the following over.
The shackles were broken at that point, and in the absence of the same quality from the Pakistan bowlers as in the first ODI, run-scoring was easier. The final 11 overs brought 107 runs for New Zealand, with Latham central to much of the boundary-hitting. He was denied a century when, in the 47th over, Pakistan reviewed a not-out verdict to find that Latham had inside-edged to the wicketkeeper off Rauf when on 98. And eventually, a tight final three overs from Pakistan ensured New Zealand were kept below the 350 they had threatened.
But with Fakhar and Pakistan in this chasing form, there’s little to suggest even that would have been enough on a day Pakistan motored along in Rawalpindi, while New Zealand petered out. (cricinfo)
Scores:
New Zealand 336 for 5 wkts in 50 Overs (Daryl Mitchell 129, Tom Latham 98; Haris Rauf 4/78)
Pakistan
337 for 3 wkts in 48.2 Overs (Fakhar Zaman 180 n.o. Babar Azam 65; Henry Shipley 1/58)
Sports
Gujarat Giants comfortably overcome sloppy UP Warriorz
Sophie Devine’s all-round effort (50 & 2-16) and Rajeshwai Gayakwad’s spell of 3 for 16 paved the way for Gujarat Giants to return to winning ways in Women’s Premier League 2026. They ended UP Warriorz two-match winning streak, beating the Meg Lanning-led side for the second time this season and moved to second spot on the points table with their massive 45-run win in Vadodara on Thursday.
Put in to bat, Giants made a solid start with Danielle Wyatt-Hodge, playing her first match of the season, cracking three boundaries early in the innings. Her stay lasted for only eight balls, but Beth Mooney (38) steadied the innings in the company of Anushka Sharma, Ash Gardner and Devine for a brief while.
A bit scratchy and out of form this season, Mooney couldn’t get the move on like she would’ve wanted. Just when it seemed like she was about to cut loose with a couple of boundaries off Chloe Tryon, she threw her wicket away in the 13th over, mistiming a shot to mid off.
Having paced away to 38 for 1 within four overs, the scoring rate had clawed back. With Warriorz striking at regular intervals, Giants found themselves at 93 for 4 in the 13th over. Devine measured her attack even in the death overs, but with wickets falling regularly at the other end while the batters looked for the big shots, Giants couldn’t find the required pace. However, Devine clubbed a couple of sixes in the last over, which yielded 16 runs, to register her half century and help Giants to a competitive 153 for 8.
In response, Warriorz struggled in the chase. Kiran Navgire fell for another duck; this time stumped to a delivery down the leg side by Renuka Singh. The onus fell yet again on Meg Lanning and Pheobe Litchfield to control the innings. It was going well till the fifth over when Lanning missed a pull to a delivery that didn’t rise as high as she had anticipated before she too was stumped in similar fashion to that of Navgire.
However, Litchfield, with her range of strokes, kept the scoreboard ticking. Even as Harleen Deol struggled to pick pace in her innings, at the time of the southpaw’s dismissal in the eighth over when she was dismissed playing a reverse sweep, Warriorz were very much in the hunt of the target. But her dismissal triggered a collapse.
Gayakwad, returning to the XI, ripped through the middle order, sending back Deepti Sharma, Shweta Sehrawat and S Asha in quick succession. By then, Harleen’s innings was also cut short for a painful 12-ball three. Devine returned for her second spell and ran through the tail while Tryon attempted to put up a solo fight. Warriorz were bundled out in the 18th over for 108.
Brief Scores:
Gujarat Giants Women 153/8 in 20 overs (Sophie Devine 50, Beth Mooney 38; Kranti Gaud 2-18, Sophie Eccelestone 2-22) beat UP Warriorz Women 108 in 17.3 overs (Phoebe Litchfield 32, Chloe Tron 30*; Rajeshwari Gayakwad 3-16, Sophie Devine 2-16) by 45 runs
Sports
After fall from grace, Asalanka aims to bat on for Sri Lanka
Charith Asalanka faced the media for the first time since being stripped of Sri Lanka’s T20 captaincy and there was no bitterness in his tone. Instead, he sounded like a man choosing to play with a straight bat, pragmatic, reflective and determined not to let emotions drag him into more trouble after a bruising few weeks.
Asalanka has long been earmarked for leadership. Groomed for the role for more than a decade, he cut his teeth at Richmond College, Galle, winning multiple titles alongside a cohort that included Wanindu Hasaranga, Kamindu Mendis and Dhananjaya Lakshan. He was the obvious choice to captain Sri Lanka Under-19s and repaid that faith handsomely, steering the side to a series victory in England. Coached then by former great Roy Dias, Asalanka was marked out early as a special talent with an old head on young shoulders.
When he graduated to the senior side, the signs were clear, this was a captain-in-waiting. He did little to disappoint his backers. Under his watch, Sri Lanka ticked off important ODI series wins over Australia and India, arresting a worrying slide in the 50-over format. T20 cricket, however, proved a trickier pitch. Progress there was slow and the Asia Cup became his stumbling block. Questionable bowling changes, coupled with perceptions that he didn’t fully trust his bench, led to murmurs of clique-building, a charge that stuck.
Matters came to a head in Pakistan when players, despite security assurances from both boards, revolted and demanded an early return home. Asalanka was widely believed to be the ring-leader, summoned back and relieved of the captaincy. There is little doubt he had begun to look a touch too big for his boots. But cricket, like life, rarely deals in absolutes; there is no sinner without a past and no saint without a future.
Having paid his dues, Asalanka now deserves clarity and backing to move forward at least as the leader of the ODI side. He has continued to deliver with the bat, scripting several come-from-behind victories. It is the calmness he brings to nerve-jangling run chases that sets him apart, ice in the veins, eyes firmly on the prize. He remains Sri Lanka’s sole representative in the ICC’s top ten ODI batters, a testament to his consistency and temperament.
If Asalanka can recalibrate his leadership, steering the team by destiny rather than chasing cheap popularity, Sri Lanka may yet reap rich dividends in the years ahead. In cricket, as ever, the long game matters most.
Sports
Mendis’ unbeaten 93 anchors Sri Lanka to 271 for six against England
Kusal Mendis played the sheet-anchor with a surgeon’s touch as Sri Lanka posted a competitive 271 for six after opting to bat first in the opening ODI against England at Colombo’s R. Premadasa Stadium on Thursday.
The wicketkeeper batter was left stranded on 93, but his knock proved the glue that held Sri Lanka’s innings together after the top order wobbled against England’s spin.
At 124 for four, with leg-spinners Rehan Ahmed and Adil Rashid asking probing questions, Sri Lanka were staring down the barrel. Mendis counterpunched with nimble footwork and soft hands, milking the wrist-spin for singles and punishing anything remotely loose.
Mendis battled cramps midway through his innings but refused to throw in the towel, adding a vital 88 run stand for the fifth wicket with Janith Liyanage off 98 balls to steer the innings back on course.
Liyanage, very consistent in the lower middle order since his debut two years ago, looked set to cash in before Rashid struck on his return, inducing a return catch. His 46 came from 53 deliveries, laced with five fours and two sixes.
Mendis was on 92 heading into the final over, but the strike stayed away from him as Dunith Wellalage hogged the limelight. Sri Lanka were hardly complaining as the last over from Jamie Overton disappeared for 23 runs, Wellalage launching three fours and a six in a blistering cameo of 25 not out from 12 balls.
England leaned heavily on spin, sending down 33 overs through Rashid, Ahmed, Liam Dawson and Jacob Bethell, the second-most overs bowled by their spinners in an ODI, behind the 36 delivered in Sharjah against Pakistan in 1985.
Rashid was the pick of the bowlers, finishing with figures of three for 44 from his ten overs.
-
Editorial6 days agoIllusory rule of law
-
News7 days agoUNDP’s assessment confirms widespread economic fallout from Cyclone Ditwah
-
Editorial7 days agoCrime and cops
-
Features6 days agoDaydreams on a winter’s day
-
Features6 days agoSurprise move of both the Minister and myself from Agriculture to Education
-
Features5 days agoExtended mind thesis:A Buddhist perspective
-
Features6 days agoThe Story of Furniture in Sri Lanka
-
Opinion4 days agoAmerican rulers’ hatred for Venezuela and its leaders
