Babar’s half-century leads Pakistan to series-clinching win

2 months ago 9

LAHORE, Pakistan:

Babar Azam made a triumphant return to T20 cricket with his 37th half century and led Pakistan to a series-clinching four-wicket victory against South Africa in the third and final game yesterday.

Pakistan rode Babar’s 68 off 46 balls to reach 140-6 in 19 overs. South Africa fell short for the second successive match and were restricted to 139-9 after losing a third successive toss in the series and being asked to bat first.

An inexperienced South Africa won the opening game by 55 runs at Rawalpindi before Pakistan made a strong comeback with back-to-back comprehensive wins at Lahore to clinch the series 2-1.

CONTROLLED CHASE

Babar controlled the chase well after left-handed opener Saim Ayub was out for his fifth duck in his last 10 T20 innings.

The selectors had ignored Babar for almost a year before recalling him for the series against the Proteas as Pakistan still search for the right batting combination for next year’s T20 World Cup.

Babar was out for a duck in the first match, but overtook Rohit Sharma’s record for most runs in T20s when he made 11 not out in the second match.

Babar started off cautiously against the left-arm spin of George Linde, but grew in confidence against the pace with bowlers finding it difficult to hit the right lengths with the wet ball because of heavy dew.

76-RUN STAND

He shared a match-winning 76-run stand with captain Salman Ali Agha (33) as South Africa struggled to get the breakthrough.

Babar brought the capacity crowd of over 32,000 on their feet at the Gaddafi Stadium when he reached his 50 with three successive boundaries against fast bowler Ottneil Baartman as Pakistan’s premier batter pushed the scoring rate with his skillful shots on both sides of the wicket.

Pakistan had a minor collapse and lost four wickets for 14 runs with Agha chipping an easy catch in the covers and Babar departing when only 15 runs were required for victory as he pulled Bosch’s short ball to Reeza Hendricks at deep backward square leg.

Lizaad Williams (2-26) and Andile Simelane (1-23), two of the three changes South Africa made from the team that lost the second game, picked up late wickets but by that time Babar’s knock had sealed the game in Pakistan’s favour.

“This innings was long due,” Babar said. “I backed myself, the team believed in me. I was hoping for such a knock. … It is about how you absorb pressure. I wanted to do what the team needed, play according to the situation.”

Pakistan and South Africa now play a three-match ODI series in Faisalabad, starting on Tuesday.

AP

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