Pakistan 140 for 3 (Sarfraz 76*, Umar Akmal 27*) beat New Zealand 135 for 7 (Anderson 48, Ronchi 33, Tanvir 2-24) by seven wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Opening for the first time in a T20 international, Sarfraz Ahmed
made a breezy unbeaten 76 to steer Pakistan to a seven-wicket win over
New Zealand at the Dubai International Stadium. Sarfraz put on 51 with
Awais Zia for the first wicket, and an unbroken 43 with Umar Akmal for
the fourth wicket, to take Pakistan past their target of 136 with five
balls remaining, Akmal ending the contest with a straight six off James
Neesham.
New Zealand had two good partnerships in the middle part of their
innings, with Corey Anderson involved in both, but struggled either side
of them. Their total was at least 15 short of being genuinely
challenging, even if Pakistan kept the game interesting by losing two
wickets to run-outs.
Sarfraz had only batted once in his four previous T20 games for
Pakistan, at number eight, and he quickly set about showing what a waste
of talent that had been, slapping Mitchell McClenaghan to the point
boundary and stepping down the track to the debutant fast bowler Matt
Henry to sweep him over the fine-leg boundary.
At the other end, Awais Zia looked a little leaden-footed against the
pace of Henry and Adam Milne, but quickly realised he would be best
served giving Sarfraz the strike. The pair brought up Pakistan's first
half-century opening stand in 18 matches before lazy running brought
about its end at the start of the ninth over. When Luke Ronchi threw out
Mohammad Hafeez an over later, when the batsmen unwisely tried to pinch
a leg-bye off a fumble, Pakistan were in a bit of a bother.
Sarfraz, though, wasn't letting the wickets disrupt his flow. He
immediately crashed Corey Anderson for successive fours, and slogged him
for a six over cow corner to bring up his half-century. That over
brought Pakistan 17 runs, and brought the equation down to 59 required
off 54 balls.
Sarfraz simply needed someone to stay with him and Haris Sohail seemed
to be doing that before he swiped McClenaghan straight to the short
midwicket fielder with Pakistan still 39 short of their target. Akmal
came in, having missed out on Pakistan's recent Test upsurge, and
instantly reminded fans of what they had been missing. Henry returned to
bowl the 16th over, and Akmal took three fours off that over, the
middle one a sweet pick-up shot over wide long-on. It was a canter from
there on.
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Sent in to bat, New Zealand lost three wickets in their first three
overs, each to a different bowler. Anwar Ali and Sohail Tanvir trapped
Kane Williamson and Anton Devcich lbw, respectively, before Mohammad
Irfan then consumed Ross Taylor with one that lifted from just back of a
length and popped off the shoulder of the bat to point.
Martin Guptill and Anderson rebuilt the innings, picking up a boundary
roughly every other over and putting on 46 off 41 balls. Guptill made 32
before Shahid Afridi bowled him through the gate with a slightly slower
ball.
New Zealand entered their most productive period after the dismissal,
with Anderson and Ronchi bringing up their half-century partnership off
just 32 balls. Anderson's effortless power was in full evidence,
particularly when he pulled Anwar for two flat sixes in the 13th over,
and Ronchi was timing his drives through and over extra cover quite
exquisitely.
At 110 for 4 at the end of the 15th over, New Zealand looked set for 150
at least, but their scoring stalled once Anderson miscued a pull to
deep midwicket two short of 50. Irfan and Tanvir varied their pace
expertly in the last two overs, giving away just nine runs between them
and dismissing Neesham and Ronchi in the process. New Zealand found the
boundary only once in their last five overs, and even that came off the
bottom-edge.
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