World SportsAus beat Pak by 41 runs to level ODI series

Aus beat Pak by 41 runs to level ODI series

LAHORE, JUN 3 (AP): Fast bowler Nathan Ellis grabbed a career-best 4-33 on yet another tricky wicket and led Australia to series-leveling 41-run win over Pakistan in the second one-day international.
Pakistan, which won the first game by five wickets on a turning wicket, was bowled out for 190 after Australia had scored 231-9 on a pitch that had plenty of turn for the spinners and variable bounce for the seam bowlers.
Half-centuries from captain Josh Inglis (51) and Cameron Green (53) were supported by Matthew Renshaw’s run-a-ball 43, while 19-year-old Oliver Peake added 31 off 32 balls after Pakistan captain Shaheen Shah Afridi won the toss and elected to field.
Left-arm spinner Arafat Minhas, who became the first Pakistani bowler to take five wickets in his debut ODI at Rawalpindi last Saturday, returned figures of 2-27.
Leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed had 2-34 while the pace duo of captain Afridi (3-36) and Haris Rauf (2-49) shared five wickets between them.
All-rounder Shadab Khan scored 71 off 104 balls to make amends for his wicketless return of 0-56 and took the Pakistan chase deep before he was the last man dismissed — stumped down the legside by Inglis off leg-spinner Tanveer Sangha.
Ellis struck in his first over when Maaz Sadaqat played the ball back onto his stumps, and then the fast bowler had Babar Azam (16) lbw off a delivery that nipped sharply into Pakistan’s premier batter in the fifth over. Pakistan’s middle-order struggled to cope with the spin of Matthew Short (3-36) and slumped to 78-6 before Shadab and Arafat Minhas (33) revived the chase with a 59-run partnership.
But Ellis broke the stand when he had Minhas trapped lbw in the 32nd over. Shadab got to his fifth half-century in ODIs and struck two sixes against Green.
The series concludes Thursday at the same venue.
Australia batters show plenty of patienceThe slowness of the wicket was evident after Alex Carey had dragged Afridi’s first ball of the match back onto his stumps and the Pakistan skipper didn’t hesitate to introduce his two best spinners — Minhas and Abrar — from both ends inside the power play.
Abrar had an early success when he found the leading edge of Short’s bat for a comfortable return catch and Marnus Labuschagne once again failed to bat on turning tracks when he top-edged a sweep against Minhas and fell for 5.
Inglis and Green then shut out expansive shots and shared a 51-run stand off 93 balls. Inglis raised his half-century with a reverse swept boundary against Abrar before he was undone by low bounce and was clean bowled by Minhas.
Green continued to grind out against spinners and together with Renshaw raised a 65-run stand before Green finally ran out of patience soon after scoring his half-century and holed out to long-on to give Abrar his second wicket.
Rauf then rattled Renshaw’s stumps with a full-pitched delivery from round the wicket in the 44th over, but Peake ensured Australia had enough runs on board by smashing two sixes and a boundary before he was bowled in the final over.

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