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CWC 2023: Pakistan Beat Netherlands By 81 Runs

Pakistan beat the Netherlands by 81 runs to open their World Cup campaign in Hyderabad on Friday, after half centuries from Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan.

Shakeel and Rizwan both scored… Read More

Pakistan Beat Netherlands By 81 Runs

Pakistan Beat Netherlands By 81 Runs

 

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Pakistan All Out For 286 (Scorecard)

Netherlands bowled out Pakistan for 286 in the second game of Cricket World Cup 2023. Dutch all-rounder Bas de Leede took four wickets as Pakistan were bowled out for 286 in the World Cup on Friday, derailing an innings which featured half-centuries from Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan.

Check out the full scorecard

Pak-NED

Pakistan 106/3 After 21 Overs

Pakistan 106/3 After 21 Overs

Father-son pairs in ODI World Cups

Father-son pairs in ODI World Cups

Don Pringle (East Africa), Derek Pringle (England)

Lance Cairns, Chris Cairns (New Zealand)

Chris Broad, Stuart Broad (England)

Geoff Marsh, Mitchell Marsh, Shaun Marsh (Australia)

Rod Latham, Tom Latham (New Zealand)

Kevin Curran (ZIM), Sam Curran (England)

Tim de Leede, Bas de Leede (Netherlands)
 

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Netherlands Opt To Bowl Against Pakistan

Netherlands Opted To Bowl Against Pakistan in the second game of the Cricket World Cup 2023 at Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium in Hyderabad on Friday.

Check out the teams:

Netherlands (Playing XI): Vikramjit Singh, Max ODowd, Colin Ackermann, Scott Edwards(w/c), Bas de Leede, Teja Nidamanuru, Saqib Zulfiqar, Logan van Beek, Roelof van der Merwe, Aryan Dutt, Paul van Meekeren

Pakistan (Playing XI): Imam-ul-Haq, Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam(c), Mohammad Rizwan(w), Saud Shakeel, Iftikhar Ahmed, Shadab Khan, Mohammad Nawaz, Hasan Ali, Shaheen Afridi, Haris Rauf

Pakistan’s Batting Looks Very Fragile, Says Harbhajan Singh

Legendary Indian spinner, Harbhajan Singh,shared his predictions for the World Cup semi-finalists and also provided valuable insights into the team's mindset and performance, he said, “The first three teams are certain for me- England, India, and Australia. The fourth team could be any team but we were thinking about Pakistan previously, but recently what I have seen is the way they batted, they look very fragile.”

To be honest, when the ball swung, they had no clue; when the ball spun, they had no clue. So you will not get those flat tracks where you just put your foot down and hit, this will happen, but maybe only at a couple of venues. But when there is a phase, quality bowling like when people will be looking to swing and spin the ball, I don’t see them going that far. So, the fourth team is either New Zealand or South Africa for me

Pakistan vs Netherlands Probable XI

Pakistan vs Netherlands: Probable XI

Pakistan: Fakhar Zaman, Imam ul Haq, Babar Azam (c), Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Agha Salman, Iftikhar Ahmed, Shadab Khan, Mohammad Nawaz, Mohammad Wasim Jr, Shaheen Afridi, Haris Rauf.

Netherlands: Vikramjeet Singh, Max O'Dowd, Wesley Baressi, Bas de Leede, Teja Nidamanuru/Colin Ackermann, Scott Edwards (c, wk), Logan van Beek, Saqib Zulfiqar, Roelof van der Merwe, Paul van Meerkeren, Aryan Dutt

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Pakistan vs Netherlands: Head To Head ODI Record

Pakistan vs Netherlands ODI Head-To-Head Record

Match: 6

Pakistan: 6 wins

Netherlands: 0 wins

Tied: 0

Pakistan vs Netherlands Results In ODI World Cups

1996: Pakistan won by 8 wickets, Lahore

2003: Pakistan won by 97 runs, Paarl

Match Results

26/02/1996: Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore - Pakistan won by 8 wickets

21/09/2002: Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo - Pakistan won by 9 wickets

25/02/2003: Boland Park, Paarl - Pakistan won by 97 runs

16/08/2022: Hazelaarweg, Rotterdam - Pakistan won by 16 runs

18/08/2022: Hazelaarweg, Rotterdsm - Pakistan won by 7 wickets

21/08/2022: Hazelaarweg, Rotterdam - Pakistan won by 9 runs

Pakistan vs Netherlands: Match Preview

Pakistan tackle outsiders Netherlands in their opening match of the World Cup on Friday desperate to avoid a repeat of the disastrous start of four years ago which undermined their campaign. In 2019, Pakistan lost to the West Indies first up in Nottingham.
Shot out for a paltry 105 in 21.4 overs, Pakistan went down by seven wickets. They eventually missed out on a semi-final spot on net run-rate.

Four years on and Pakistan are already riding a familiar tournament rollercoaster.

They crashed out of last month’s Asia Cup after a big defeat against arch-rivals India before being ousted by Sri Lanka in the Super Four stage.

They also lost both their recent World Cup warm-ups against New Zealand and Australia.

Despite the sketchy form, captain Babar Azam insists his team are ready for the World Cup in a country which only two of the squad have ever visited. Pakistan last played in India in 2016 at the Twenty20 World Cup.

“We had good practice in the last week since our arrival and two useful workouts in the warm-up games,” said Azam.

The captain is the top-ranked batsman in ODI cricket and reinforced his credentials with knocks of 80 and 90 in the two warm-ups, returning to form after a dismal Asia Cup.

“The first match of a tournament is always very important so we are definitely looking forward to a winning start,” he said.

Six out of six

Babar insisted 1992 champions Pakistan will not underestimate the Dutch, a team they have defeated six times in six meetings.

The Netherlands, ranked 14 in the world, had to come through the qualifying tournament in Zimbabwe earlier this year and made it to the World Cup alongside Sri Lanka.

“I want to congratulate the Netherlands for playing in this World Cup. They played some good cricket in the qualifiers and that is why they are here,” added Babar.

“There is no room for complacency and we will be on the ball from the first match.” Pakistan will hope their spin trio of Shadab Khan, Usama Mir and Mohammad Nawaz, backed by part-timers Iftikhar Ahmed and Agha Salman, expose opponents’ weaknesses against slow bowling at the tournament.

Although they are without the injured Naseem Shah, spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi and Haris Rauf will pose a formidable new ball threat.

The Netherlands have only ever won two matches at the World Cup since their maiden appearance in 1996.

Spinners Colin Ackermann and Roelof van der Merwe, and pacer Paul van Meekeren are back after missing the qualifiers.

Wesley Barresi, the only surviving member of the 2011 World Cup on the sub-continent, lends experience to the batting which also boasts prime run-getters Max O’Dowd, Vikramjit Singh, Teja Nidamanuru and skipper Scott Edwards.

But their hopes will rest largely on all-rounders Bas de Leede and Logan van Beek, key performers at the qualifiers.

De Leede scored 285 runs and picked up 15 wickets in Zimbabwe while Van Beek smashed 30 runs and took two wickets in the knife-edge Super Over win against the West Indies.

“The opportunity to play in a World Cup is something that a lot of these guys have dreamt of,” said Tonga-born Edwards.

Despite their status as rank outsiders, the Dutch do not lack confidence.

“We hold high hopes going into this World Cup that we can put in a couple of really big performances and those can result in wins,” coach Ryan Cook told AFP.

“We’ll be putting everything that we can in to getting five or six wins to take us into the semi-finals. “

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Pakistan beat the Netherlands by 81 runs to open their World Cup campaign in Hyderabad on Friday, after half centuries from Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan.

Shakeel and Rizwan both scored 68 runs to guide Pakistan to 286 all out in 49 overs with Bas de Leede grabbing 4-62.

The Netherlands were bowled out for 205 in 41 overs with de Leede scoring 67.

PAK 286 (49) | NED 205 (41)

Player Of the Match - Saud Shakeel

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