Kamran Akmal hit two sixes in paceman Jerome Taylor’s last over to help Pakistan beat the West Indies by four wickets in a dramatic finish to the first day-night international in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday.
Chasing a daunting 295, Pakistan needed a tough 17 off the 50th over, but Akmal hit the second and third balls for sixes to give his team an unexpected win with a nine-ball 24 not out to overshadow Windies skipper Chris Gayle’s brilliant century.
Gayle notched a 106-ball 113 to power his team to a challenging 294-9 in their 50 overs. Paceman Lionel Baker (3-47), making his one-day debut, almost derailed Pakistan before Akmal and Fawad Alam (26 not out) changed the script.
PHOTO: AFP
Akmal walked in at the fall of Shoaib Malik’s wicket whose enterprising 50-ball 66 was nearly in vain but Akmal and Alam notched the 33 needed off the last three overs to give Pakistan a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.
The second match will be played today.
Gayle’s counterpart, Malik hit six boundaries and a six during his knock to anchor Pakistan’s run-chase.
Besides Malik, opener Khurrum Manzoor scored an 89-ball 69 (five fours) in only his second one-day international while the experienced Younus Khan made a 62-ball 56.
Manzoor and Salman Butt (24) gave Pakistan a solid start of 64 before Baker bowled Butt who played on to a short delivery. Manzoor added 78 for the second wicket with Younus before Pakistan lost two quick wickets.
Manzoor edged Jerome Taylor to wicket-keeper Carlton Baugh, while Misbahul Haq (7) was bowled by left-armer Nikita Miller, trying to reverse-sweep a straight delivery.
Baker returned for his second spell to dismiss Younus and hard-hitting Shahid Afridi (4) before Taylor accounted for Malik to put West Indies in sight of a victory.
Malik said he had expected Akmal to pull his side through.
“Even when I was batting I had the feeling that Akmal is to come and I had full confidence that he can do something extraordinary. He snatched us a win from the jaws of defeat,” Malik said.
Gayle said the narrow defeat was hard to take.
“We made 294 so there were no complaints, then they batted well until the end and it didn’t just come good for Taylor in the last over,” Gayle said.
The West Indies were indebted to Gayle who scored his 17th one-day century and put his team on a solid footing with a 125-run opening stand with Sewnarine Chattergoon (33) after winning the toss and electing to bat.
Ramnaresh Sarwan (55 off 61 balls) and Shivnarine Chanderpaul (36 off 33) also punished the lackluster Pakistan bowling.
In the absence of Shoaib Akhtar, ruled out of the match because of a calf muscle injury, the Pakistani bowlers struggled to get early wickets. Sohail Tanveer was the pick of the bowlers with 3-42.
Gayle took full advantage of some short bowling. He smacked four boundaries in one Abdur Rauf over and then greeted first-change Gul with two powerful sixes as he reached his half-century off just 36 deliveries.
Gayle, who reached 100 with a single off Malik, failed to capitalize on a dropped catch by Gul off his own bowling and pulled straight into the hands of Shahid Afridi at mid-wicket in the same over.
Sarwan took over from Gayle and reached his 50 with a delightful cover drive off Gul for his fifth boundary.
He then fell to a smart leg-side catch by wicket-keeper Akmal off Afridi in the next over.
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