Business Report

Proteas Women's sloppy fielding and ill-discipline with the ball allow Pakistan to power to 306/8

PAKISTAN TOUR TO SOUTH AFRICA

Zaahier Adams|Published
Proteas Women captain Laura Wolvaardt and her Pakistan counterpart Fatima Sana ahead of the 'Black ODI' at Kingsmead on Sunday.

Proteas Women captain Laura Wolvaardt and her Pakistan counterpart Fatima Sana ahead of the 'Black ODI' at Kingsmead on Sunday.

Image: Cricket SA

Pakistan Women’s opener Sadaf Shamaz benefited from a sloppy Proteas effort in the field to power the visitors to the 306/8 in the “Black Day” third ODI at Kingsmead on Sunday.

Each year, Cricket South Africa (CSA) marks Black Day as a visible stand against gender-based violence (GBV) in South Africa. It is a day where players wear black to mourn victims, support survivors and unite in solidarity against a persistent social crisis.

Shamaz struck 97 off 82 balls (16x4, 1x6) after being offered a reprieve early on when Proteas opening bowler Ayanda Hlubi overstepped. It was hugely disappointing for the young seamer as it was the perfect off-cutter that rattled the stumps.

But Shamaz grew in confidence after the let-off with a boundary down to fine-leg two balls later that kick-started her innings.

Shamaz was particularly severe on Tumi Sekhukhune after the medium-pacer was recalled to the side.

The opener dominated a 130-run partnership for the second wicket with Sidra Amin (41 off 64 balls) to set up a record chase for the Proteas at Kingsmead.

The Proteas’ outfield catching also left a lot to be desired with eight chances being put down.

Shamaz was well-supported from Pakistan captain Fatima Sana (60, 41 balls, 3x4,5x6) after Proteas off-spinner Sune Luus (3/42) pegged back the visitors during the middle period. Luus picked up the big wicket of Shamaz - just three runs shy of her century - when the opener chipped the ball back straight to her. 

SCORECARD

Pakistan: 306/8 (Shamaz 97, Amin 41, Sana 60, Luus 3/42, Mlaba 2/56)

South Africa require 307 runs for victory.