5 Strangest instances of a team losing in International Cricket

Here we look at five strange ways in International cricket where a team ended up on the losing end.

View : 176.2K

2 Min Read

4. Winning an ODI without dismissing the openers

Pakistan
Pakistan. (Photo Source: Getty Images)

Sharjah hosted an ODI Tri-series between Pakistan, India and South Africa in March 2000. Pakistan faced South Africa in the last league match before a possible final between the two sides. Pakistan needed to ensure they didn’t lose the match by a huge margin against the unbeaten South Africans. Electing to bat first confirmed Pakistan’s spot in the final but were bowled out for only 168 despite their innings lasting 49.2 overs.

Herschelle Gibbs kept South Africa on top with regular boundaries during the field restrictions in the chase. His opening partner Gary Kirsten got retired hurt in 6th over when the Proteas were 22/0. Mark Boucher walked to bat in the 8th over after the fall of Neil McKenzie’s wicket at the score of 29. Gibbs continued his attacking play while Boucher held things from one end.

South Africa was on course for an easy win as they were 74/1 after 16 overs with Gibbs batting on 44 from 49 balls which included 8 fours. Shoaib Akhtar began the 17th over by getting the better of Boucher with a fierce bouncer. Three balls later, Dale Benkenstein’s off-stump went for a walk and the over ended when Lance Klusener was cleaned up.

The match turned around from that over as wickets continued to fell even though Gibbs fought from one end. The Pakistan pacers wrapped up the Proteas’ inning for just 101 in 26.5 overs. Gibbs remained unbeaten on 59 from 79 balls while Kirsten didn’t return to bat. Thus, Pakistan created a unique record of winning an ODI despite not dismissing any of the opponent’s openers.

Prev
Page2 / 5
Next

Get every cricket updates! Follow Us:

googletelegraminstagramwhatsappyoutubethreadstwitter

Download Our App

For a better experience: Download the CricTracker app from the IOS and Google Play Store