Pakistan cops backlash after India World Cup belting
Jasprit Bumrah and Kuldeep Yadav triggered a stunning Pakistan collapse and shared four wickets in India's dominant victory over its arch-rival at the Cricket World Cup on Sunday morning (AEDT).
The seven-wicket win in front of a crowd of more than 100,000 fans at Narendra Modi Stadium was India’s eighth consecutive victory over Pakistan in World Cups in a streak that began in 1992.
Bumrah took 2-19 in seven overs and Yadav picked up 2-35 in 10 overs as Pakistan crashed from 2-155 (29.3 overs) to 191 all out in 42.5 overs with five of India's six bowlers taking two wickets each.
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Then, Indian skipper Rohit Sharma blazed a 36-ball half-century as India raced to the victory line with almost 20 overs to spare.
Sharma scored 86 runs off 63 balls, including six fours and six sixes, as India finished with 3-192 in 30.3 overs.
India smashed Pakistan at the Cricket World Cup by seven wickets. (Aijaz Rahi/AP)“The bowlers set up the game for us today. It was not a 190 pitch — at one stage, it looked like a 280 score,” Sharma said.
“Whoever gets the ball does the job for us. That’s something we pride ourselves in.”
Pakistan was blasted by cricket greats, commentators and fans.
"For all the pre-match stress, India are absolutely toying with Pakistan here," wrote Indian cricketer commentator Harsha Bhogle on X, formerly Twitter.
"They have owned this game."
Pakistan cricket legend Shoaib Akhtar said Sharma and Virat Kohli had faced "more pressure in nets".
"India have a psychological edge over Pakistan," wrote former England cricket captain Michael Vaughan.
"Pakistan have so much talent but they play like a team that doesn't believe they can beat the men in blue."
India leads with six points — ahead of New Zealand on net run-rate — after three straight wins. Pakistan, after its first loss of the tournament, has four points from three games and is fourth in the points table.
Chasing 192, fit-again Shubman Gill set a hectic pace as he struck four boundaries to score 16 off 11 balls. His timing was impeccable before Shaheen Afridi (2-36) cut short his comeback innings, and he was caught at backward point.
Sharma and Kohli (16) then added 56 off 42 balls for the second wicket. They didn’t offer any chances for Pakistan to make the game interesting.
Kohli was out against the run of play — a false pull shot off Hasan Ali caught at mid-on in the 10th over.
Sharma added 77 off 71 balls with Shreyas Iyer for the third wicket, as India reached 100 in only 13.5 overs.
The Indian skipper fell 14 short of an eighth World Cup hundred — caught at mid-wicket off a slower delivery from Afridi.
Iyer and Lokesh Rahul (19 not out) didn’t suffer any further hiccups, adding 36 runs for the unbeaten fourth wicket.
Iyer eased his way to 53 not out off 62 balls, including three fours and two sixes, the last of which rang in India’s victory.
Earlier, put into bat, Pakistan got off to a steady start even as the stadium full of Indian fans waited for the first breakthrough.
Abdullah Shafique (20) and Imam ul Haq (36) added 41 runs for the first wicket, before Mohammed Siraj provided the breakthrough in the eighth over. He trapped Shafique lbw for 20 runs.
Another 4.3 overs passed before the next wicket came through, while Imam and skipper Babar Azam added 32 runs for the second wicket.
India's captain Rohit Sharma. (Rajanish Kakade/AP)Hardik Pandya had Imam caught behind, which brought Azam and Mohammed Rizwan together. The duo defied Indian bowlers for 103 balls, during which they picked easy boundaries and kept the scorecard ticking.
It was the best passage of play for Pakistan through the day.
Azam-Rizwan put on 82 for the third wicket, which included two DRS reviews involving Rizwan. He appealed against Ravindra Jadeja’s lbw call in the 14th over, and the decision went in his favour. Then, in the 25th over, he was lucky against Yadav as the review stayed not out owing to umpire’s call.
At the other end, Azam hit seven fours as he scored 50 off 58 balls. Then came the turning point as Siraj returned to the attack and bowled the Pakistan skipper.
The crowd burst into joy and there was no looking back for India thereafter as Sharma rolled the dice.
He changed ends for Yadav, who choked Pakistan with his wrist spin. In the 33rd over, he trapped Saud Shakeel lbw for six. Four balls later, Ifitkhar Ahmed played a slower delivery onto his stumps.
An over later, Bumrah bowled in some magic. An off-cutter seamed in and bowled Rizwan through the gate, and then eight balls later, Shadab Khan was bowled for two runs.
Rizwan was out for 49 off 69 balls, including seven fours, and his dismissal was the point of no return. Pakistan had lost five wickets for 16 runs in the space of 34 deliveries.
At 7-171, India went in for the kill and the last three wickets fell for 20 runs.
An Indian fan watches on. (Pankaj Nangia/Getty Images)Jadeja picked up 2-38, while Pandya too finished with 2-34.
In total, Pakistan lost its last eight wickets for 36 runs — a collapse that only spelled defeat.
Political reasons constantly obstruct the teams' bilateral series. They haven’t met in a Test series in 16 years and one-day international and Twenty20 series in 10 years. As recently as last month at the Asia Cup, India refused to go to host Pakistan, so Pakistan accommodated by sharing hosting duties with Sri Lanka.
Mickey Arthur, Pakistan's team director, regretted the one-sided atmosphere at the match.
“It didn’t seem like an ICC (International Cricket Council) event to be brutally honest ... It seemed like a BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket in India) event. I didn’t hear ‘Dil Dil Pakistan’ coming through the microphones too often tonight,” Arthur said.
“It plays a role, but I am not going to use that as an excuse. We didn’t play well tonight, and didn’t execute our plans.”
Amid visa problems, there appeared only a handful of Pakistan fans among the huge crowd on Saturday with at least three of them having travelled from the US and Canada.
Pakistan has never beaten India at the Cricket World Cup. Even when Pakistan won its only title in 1992 it lost to India in Sydney. The trend continued in 1996, 1999, 2003, 2011, 2015 and 2019.