November 23, 2025
Pakistan came out swinging in the 4th T20I of the Tri-Series and stacked up a powerful 195 for five, a total built on sharp shot-making and relentless intent. Sahibzada Farhan looked in complete control from the first over. He drove on the rise, picked length early, and punched Zimbabwe’s seamers out of rhythm. His 63 off 41 balls carried clean hitting and smart placement, the perfect start for a side chasing direct qualification to the final.
Saim Ayub fell early after a fast, breezy attempt to dominate up front, but the tempo never dipped. Farhan kept striking gaps at will and forced Zimbabwe to reshuffle their plans inside the Powerplay.
Babar Azam joined Farhan and immediately lifted Pakistan’s composure. He worked singles with ease, opened up the off side with late touches, and then shifted gears with crisp lofted strokes. The pair added 103 for the second wicket, a stand that placed Pakistan in complete control and left Zimbabwe scrambling for breakthroughs.
Babar’s 74 off 52 balls came with authority. He read the surface early, judged length beautifully, and never let the innings drift. Zimbabwe had no answer to his rhythm, even when they tightened their lines during the middle overs.
Zimbabwe finally found a grip when Sikandar Raza stepped in. He removed the fluent Farhan, then trapped Pakistan into a temporary slowdown with sharp, flat spin and disciplined fields. Burl backed him with tidy overs, and the scoring rate dipped for the first time in the innings. For a brief stretch, Zimbabwe looked ready to drag Pakistan back to a middling total.
But Pakistan never lost control. Babar kept nudging the ball into space and ensured the innings didn’t stall, even as boundaries dried up.
The late surge arrived right on cue. Fakhar Zaman walked in with ten balls left and lit up Rawalpindi with a cracking cameo. He launched three towering sixes, dismantled Zimbabwe’s death bowlers, and turned a strong total into a punishing one. His 27 not out off 10 balls came with clean, fearless ball-striking and left Zimbabwe deflated.
Pakistan hammered 195 for five by the end of the innings, a total that carried the imprint of top-order control and late-overs brutality. Farhan set it up, Babar anchored it, and Fakhar finished it with a flourish. With that, Pakistan tightened their grip on the tournament and marched into the final with momentum firmly on their side.