Faheem Ashraf Steers Pakistan to Narrow Win Amidst Tensions


Faheem Ashraf's explosive 29 off 11 balls, including 3 sixes, rescued Pakistan from a precarious position, securing a 3-wicket win over the Netherlands in the T20 World Cup opener. Pakistan was 114/7, needing 34 runs, but Ashraf's heroics turned the game around, finishing with a four in the last over. Pakistan's chase was going smoothly until Paul van Meekeren's double-wicket maiden turned the game around. They went from needing 50 in 9 overs to collapsing under pressure, losing 5 wickets for just 21 runs between the 12th and 19th overs. Babar Azam's dismissal to Roelof van der Merwe was a big blow. Faheem Ashraf's explosive 29 off 11 balls, including 3 sixes, ultimately rescued Pakistan, securing a 3-wicket win with 3 balls to spare. But Logan van Beek, who had struck earlier to dismiss Shadab Khan, found his first ball disappearing over cow corner for six. He varied the pace and got Faheem to scoop it straight up to long-on. Max O'Dowd got underneath it and got both hands to it, only to find to his horror the ball popping back out and harmlessly to his side. Faheem plundered two more sixes and a boundary before the over was out, and Netherlands realised their chance had gone. Pakistan's chase was flying with Saim Ayub and Sahibzada Farhan's aggressive starts, but Netherlands fought back hard. Paul van Meekeren's double-wicket maiden changed the game, and Pakistan stumbled. Netherlands made it a nail-biter, but Faheem Ashraf's explosive 29 off 11 balls rescued Pakistan, securing a 3-wicket win. Netherlands got off to a blazing start, putting Pakistan under pressure. Michael Levitt set the tone with a pulled six off Shaheen Shah Afridi, and they kept pushing hard. Despite being top-heavy, Netherlands took risks to keep their run rate high. It looked to be heading over the rope until Babar, seemingly out of nowhere, burst into frame and let the ball plant into his palms, before scooping it back up into the field of play a moment before he exited it. He had barely broken stride while Afridi, on the same wavelength, came across to complete the catch and make the game's crucial early breakthrough. So often a point of weakness for Pakistan, it was a sign of a flawless fielding and catching performance, one that didn't give Netherlands an inch. And, as witnessed at the end, every inch did matter. Pakistan 148 for 7 (Farhan 47, Faheem 29*, van Meekeren 2-20, Dutt 2-33) beat Netherlands 147 (Edwards 37, de Leede 30, Mirza 3-24, Ayub 2-7, Abrar 2-23, Nawaz 2-38) by three wickets