Mohammad Rizwan achieves major milestone in T20I cricket
Pakistan's wicketkeeper-batsman, Mohammad Rizwan, etched his name in T20I cricket history during the second T20I against New Zealand at Seddon Park on Sunday. In a display of remarkable prowess, Rizwan smashed his 77th six off Tim Southee's delivery in the initial over of Pakistan's pursuit of a 195-run target, surpassing the previous record held by Mohammad Hafeez with 76 sixes.
Rizwan now stands atop the leaderboard for the most sixes by a Pakistani batter in T20Is, outshining both Hafeez and the legendary Shahid Afridi. Despite this achievement, Rizwan's stint in the match was short-lived, as Adam Milne dismissed him after contributing seven runs.
At the time of this report, Pakistan needed 86 runs from seven overs, with Babar Azam and Aamir Jamal holding the crease.
In the earlier phase of the game, New Zealand made an impressive start after opting to bat. Allen and Devon Conway formed a formidable partnership, amassing 59 runs for the opening wicket within the powerplay. Aamir Jamal managed to break this partnership by dismissing Conway (20) in the sixth over, bringing skipper Kane Williamson to the crease.
Williamson and Allen contributed a brisk 52 runs before Williamson had to retire hurt due to a hamstring injury after scoring 26 off 15 deliveries. Allen continued his aggressive performance, achieving his third T20I half-century in just 24 balls but was eventually bowled out by a clever googly from Usama Mir.
Allen's exhilarating innings comprised 74 runs off 41 balls, featuring seven boundaries and five sixes. Abbas Afridi's consecutive dismissals of Daryl Mitchell (17) and Mark Chapman (4) in his two overs slowed New Zealand's scoring rate. Mitchell Santner, however, managed to counter Aamir Jamal, hitting him for 14 runs in the 18th over.
The tide turned in Pakistan's favor when Haris Rauf bowled a spectacular three-wicket over, restricting New Zealand to 187-7. Santner's entertaining cameo came to an end with a run-out in the final over after scoring 25 runs from 13 balls, including three boundaries and two sixes.
New Zealand concluded their innings at 194-8, with Tim Southee (5) and Ben Sears (1) remaining unbeaten, setting a target of 195 for Pakistan to chase. Haris Rauf claimed bowling figures of 3-38, while Abbas Afridi secured two wickets for Pakistan.
Playing XIs
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan (wk), Aamer Jamal, Usama Mir, Shaheen Afridi (c), Abbas Afridi, Haris Rauf
New Zealand: Finn Allen, Devon Conway (wk), Kane Williamson (c), Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner, Adam Milne, Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi, Ben Sears
Muhammad Rizwan, T20I Cricket, Pakistan vs New Zealand, Khan Sports.
Pakistan's wicketkeeper-batsman, Mohammad Rizwan, etched his name in T20I cricket history during the second T20I against New Zealand at Seddon Park on Sunday. In a display of remarkable prowess, Rizwan smashed his 77th six off Tim Southee's delivery in the initial over of Pakistan's pursuit of a 195-run target, surpassing the previous record held by Mohammad Hafeez with 76 sixes.
Rizwan now stands atop the leaderboard for the most sixes by a Pakistani batter in T20Is, outshining both Hafeez and the legendary Shahid Afridi. Despite this achievement, Rizwan's stint in the match was short-lived, as Adam Milne dismissed him after contributing seven runs.
At the time of this report, Pakistan needed 86 runs from seven overs, with Babar Azam and Aamir Jamal holding the crease.
In the earlier phase of the game, New Zealand made an impressive start after opting to bat. Allen and Devon Conway formed a formidable partnership, amassing 59 runs for the opening wicket within the powerplay. Aamir Jamal managed to break this partnership by dismissing Conway (20) in the sixth over, bringing skipper Kane Williamson to the crease.
Williamson and Allen contributed a brisk 52 runs before Williamson had to retire hurt due to a hamstring injury after scoring 26 off 15 deliveries. Allen continued his aggressive performance, achieving his third T20I half-century in just 24 balls but was eventually bowled out by a clever googly from Usama Mir.
Allen's exhilarating innings comprised 74 runs off 41 balls, featuring seven boundaries and five sixes. Abbas Afridi's consecutive dismissals of Daryl Mitchell (17) and Mark Chapman (4) in his two overs slowed New Zealand's scoring rate. Mitchell Santner, however, managed to counter Aamir Jamal, hitting him for 14 runs in the 18th over.
The tide turned in Pakistan's favor when Haris Rauf bowled a spectacular three-wicket over, restricting New Zealand to 187-7. Santner's entertaining cameo came to an end with a run-out in the final over after scoring 25 runs from 13 balls, including three boundaries and two sixes.
New Zealand concluded their innings at 194-8, with Tim Southee (5) and Ben Sears (1) remaining unbeaten, setting a target of 195 for Pakistan to chase. Haris Rauf claimed bowling figures of 3-38, while Abbas Afridi secured two wickets for Pakistan.
Playing XIs
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan (wk), Aamer Jamal, Usama Mir, Shaheen Afridi (c), Abbas Afridi, Haris Rauf
New Zealand: Finn Allen, Devon Conway (wk), Kane Williamson (c), Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner, Adam Milne, Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi, Ben Sears
Muhammad Rizwan, T20I Cricket, Pakistan vs New Zealand, Khan Sports.Pakistan's wicketkeeper-batsman, Mohammad Rizwan, etched his name in T20I cricket history during the second T20I against New Zealand at Seddon Park on Sunday. In a display of remarkable prowess, Rizwan smashed his 77th six off Tim Southee's delivery in the initial over of Pakistan's pursuit of a 195-run target, surpassing the previous record held by Mohammad Hafeez with 76 sixes.
Rizwan now stands atop the leaderboard for the most sixes by a Pakistani batter in T20Is, outshining both Hafeez and the legendary Shahid Afridi. Despite this achievement, Rizwan's stint in the match was short-lived, as Adam Milne dismissed him after contributing seven runs.
At the time of this report, Pakistan needed 86 runs from seven overs, with Babar Azam and Aamir Jamal holding the crease.
In the earlier phase of the game, New Zealand made an impressive start after opting to bat. Allen and Devon Conway formed a formidable partnership, amassing 59 runs for the opening wicket within the powerplay. Aamir Jamal managed to break this partnership by dismissing Conway (20) in the sixth over, bringing skipper Kane Williamson to the crease.
Williamson and Allen contributed a brisk 52 runs before Williamson had to retire hurt due to a hamstring injury after scoring 26 off 15 deliveries. Allen continued his aggressive performance, achieving his third T20I half-century in just 24 balls but was eventually bowled out by a clever googly from Usama Mir.
Allen's exhilarating innings comprised 74 runs off 41 balls, featuring seven boundaries and five sixes. Abbas Afridi's consecutive dismissals of Daryl Mitchell (17) and Mark Chapman (4) in his two overs slowed New Zealand's scoring rate. Mitchell Santner, however, managed to counter Aamir Jamal, hitting him for 14 runs in the 18th over.
The tide turned in Pakistan's favor when Haris Rauf bowled a spectacular three-wicket over, restricting New Zealand to 187-7. Santner's entertaining cameo came to an end with a run-out in the final over after scoring 25 runs from 13 balls, including three boundaries and two sixes.
New Zealand concluded their innings at 194-8, with Tim Southee (5) and Ben Sears (1) remaining unbeaten, setting a target of 195 for Pakistan to chase. Haris Rauf claimed bowling figures of 3-38, while Abbas Afridi secured two wickets for Pakistan.
Playing XIs
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan (wk), Aamer Jamal, Usama Mir, Shaheen Afridi (c), Abbas Afridi, Haris Rauf
New Zealand: Finn Allen, Devon Conway (wk), Kane Williamson (c), Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner, Adam Milne, Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi, Ben Sears
Muhammad Rizwan, T20I Cricket, Pakistan vs New Zealand, Khan Sports.Pakistan's wicketkeeper-batsman, Mohammad Rizwan, etched his name in T20I cricket history during the second T20I against New Zealand at Seddon Park on Sunday. In a display of remarkable prowess, Rizwan smashed his 77th six off Tim Southee's delivery in the initial over of Pakistan's pursuit of a 195-run target, surpassing the previous record held by Mohammad Hafeez with 76 sixes.
Rizwan now stands atop the leaderboard for the most sixes by a Pakistani batter in T20Is, outshining both Hafeez and the legendary Shahid Afridi. Despite this achievement, Rizwan's stint in the match was short-lived, as Adam Milne dismissed him after contributing seven runs.
At the time of this report, Pakistan needed 86 runs from seven overs, with Babar Azam and Aamir Jamal holding the crease.
In the earlier phase of the game, New Zealand made an impressive start after opting to bat. Allen and Devon Conway formed a formidable partnership, amassing 59 runs for the opening wicket within the powerplay. Aamir Jamal managed to break this partnership by dismissing Conway (20) in the sixth over, bringing skipper Kane Williamson to the crease.
Williamson and Allen contributed a brisk 52 runs before Williamson had to retire hurt due to a hamstring injury after scoring 26 off 15 deliveries. Allen continued his aggressive performance, achieving his third T20I half-century in just 24 balls but was eventually bowled out by a clever googly from Usama Mir.
Allen's exhilarating innings comprised 74 runs off 41 balls, featuring seven boundaries and five sixes. Abbas Afridi's consecutive dismissals of Daryl Mitchell (17) and Mark Chapman (4) in his two overs slowed New Zealand's scoring rate. Mitchell Santner, however, managed to counter Aamir Jamal, hitting him for 14 runs in the 18th over.
The tide turned in Pakistan's favor when Haris Rauf bowled a spectacular three-wicket over, restricting New Zealand to 187-7. Santner's entertaining cameo came to an end with a run-out in the final over after scoring 25 runs from 13 balls, including three boundaries and two sixes.
New Zealand concluded their innings at 194-8, with Tim Southee (5) and Ben Sears (1) remaining unbeaten, setting a target of 195 for Pakistan to chase. Haris Rauf claimed bowling figures of 3-38, while Abbas Afridi secured two wickets for Pakistan.
Playing XIs
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan (wk), Aamer Jamal, Usama Mir, Shaheen Afridi (c), Abbas Afridi, Haris Rauf
New Zealand: Finn Allen, Devon Conway (wk), Kane Williamson (c), Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner, Adam Milne, Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi, Ben Sears
Muhammad Rizwan, T20I Cricket, Pakistan vs New Zealand, Khan Sports.Pakistan's wicketkeeper-batsman, Mohammad Rizwan, etched his name in T20I cricket history during the second T20I against New Zealand at Seddon Park on Sunday. In a display of remarkable prowess, Rizwan smashed his 77th six off Tim Southee's delivery in the initial over of Pakistan's pursuit of a 195-run target, surpassing the previous record held by Mohammad Hafeez with 76 sixes.
Rizwan now stands atop the leaderboard for the most sixes by a Pakistani batter in T20Is, outshining both Hafeez and the legendary Shahid Afridi. Despite this achievement, Rizwan's stint in the match was short-lived, as Adam Milne dismissed him after contributing seven runs.
At the time of this report, Pakistan needed 86 runs from seven overs, with Babar Azam and Aamir Jamal holding the crease.
In the earlier phase of the game, New Zealand made an impressive start after opting to bat. Allen and Devon Conway formed a formidable partnership, amassing 59 runs for the opening wicket within the powerplay. Aamir Jamal managed to break this partnership by dismissing Conway (20) in the sixth over, bringing skipper Kane Williamson to the crease.
Williamson and Allen contributed a brisk 52 runs before Williamson had to retire hurt due to a hamstring injury after scoring 26 off 15 deliveries. Allen continued his aggressive performance, achieving his third T20I half-century in just 24 balls but was eventually bowled out by a clever googly from Usama Mir.
Allen's exhilarating innings comprised 74 runs off 41 balls, featuring seven boundaries and five sixes. Abbas Afridi's consecutive dismissals of Daryl Mitchell (17) and Mark Chapman (4) in his two overs slowed New Zealand's scoring rate. Mitchell Santner, however, managed to counter Aamir Jamal, hitting him for 14 runs in the 18th over.
The tide turned in Pakistan's favor when Haris Rauf bowled a spectacular three-wicket over, restricting New Zealand to 187-7. Santner's entertaining cameo came to an end with a run-out in the final over after scoring 25 runs from 13 balls, including three boundaries and two sixes.
New Zealand concluded their innings at 194-8, with Tim Southee (5) and Ben Sears (1) remaining unbeaten, setting a target of 195 for Pakistan to chase. Haris Rauf claimed bowling figures of 3-38, while Abbas Afridi secured two wickets for Pakistan.
Playing XIs
Pakistan: Mohammad Rizwan, Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Fakhar Zaman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Azam Khan (wk), Aamer Jamal, Usama Mir, Shaheen Afridi (c), Abbas Afridi, Haris Rauf
New Zealand: Finn Allen, Devon Conway (wk), Kane Williamson (c), Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, Mark Chapman, Mitchell Santner, Adam Milne, Tim Southee, Ish Sodhi, Ben Sears
Muhammad Rizwan, T20I Cricket, Pakistan vs New Zealand, Khan Sports.
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