Pakistan defeat Australia by 9 wickets

Fast bowler Haris Rauf took 5-29, and Saim Ayub scored 82 runs as Pakistan defeated Australia by nine wickets in the second one-day international.

Australia was 163 all out in 35 overs against Rauf’s relentless pace, and left-hander Ayub smashed six sixes and five fours as Pakistan cruised to 169-1 in 26.3 overs to level the three-match series.

Former captain Babar Azam (15 not out) clinched the victory with a pulled six off Adam Zampa.

Abdullah Shafique stayed unbeaten on 64 off 69 balls, which featured four boundaries and three sixes.

The series decider will be played in Perth on Sunday, with Australia resting five frontline players to prepare for the five-match home test against India, starting from November 22 at Perth.

“This win gives us confidence,” said Pakistan captain Mohammad Rizwan, who won the toss and elected to field. “We want to keep that confidence going. All the bowlers had plans, and they worked well.”

The opening pair of Ayub and Shafique had been criticized for a run of low scores in test matches, but both blunted the Australian pace with a match-winning stand of 137 runs after Pakistan kept faith in the duo in the white-ball format.

Ayub took his time against fast bowler Josh Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc before he grew in confidence and flicked Pat Cummins, Starc, and Aaron Hardie for sixes and smashed Zampa for two big hits.

The left-hander, who made his ODI debut at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Monday, got a reprieve just before reaching a half-century when Zampa dropped a sitter at third man, but he offered a tame catch at short third man just when he looked set for a century.

Earlier, Rauf, who nearly pulled off a victory for Pakistan in the first game, found the outside edges of the bats consistently by hitting the correct lengths.

Wicketkeeper Rizwan took six catches — four off Rauf’s bowling — and could have had a seventh one had he not dropped a top-edge off Zampa (18) before Australia was dismissed.

Shaheen Shah Afridi (3-26) provided the breakthrough inside the first power play. Jake Fraser-McGurk hit three crisp boundaries on the offside in Naseem Shah’s first over to get Australia rolling before Afridi’s twin strike pushed back Australia.

Afridi dropped Matt Short at deep fine leg when the ball burst through his hands to the boundary, but the left-arm fast bowler made amends when he caught Short at covers after trapping Fraser-McGurk plumb leg before wicket.

Afridi ended Australia’s below-par innings when Zampa played a full ball back onto his stumps. Zampa flicked Naseem Shah for a six and a four in an over, which enabled the home team to cross the 150-run mark.

Rauf sliced through the middle-order with only Steve Smith, scoring 35 off 48 balls before he, too, chased a wide short ball of Mohammad Hasnain and edged behind the wicket.

Hazlewood replaced Sean Abbott in Australia’s only change from the team that edged Pakistan in the first game.

Starc, Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Cummins, and Hazlewood will be rested for Sunday’s series’ final game. Wicketkeeper-batter Josh Inglis was named interim captain for the last ODI at Perth.

Inglis will also lead the side in next week’s three T20s against Pakistan, with Mitchell Marsh and Travis Head away on paternity leave.

“Wasn’t one of our best days,” Cummins said of Friday’s heavy loss. “You hope to get more than 160, (but) they bowled well. We got some catchers in, and tried to attack, but it wasn’t to be.”