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Pakistan rode Sajid Khan's brilliance with bat and ball against a scratchy England in the second test on Thursday and eyed a long-awaited home test win. England, set a massive 297-run target for ...
The England cricket team toured Pakistan in October 2024 to play three Test matches against Pakistan cricket team. [1] [2] [3] The Test series formed part of the 2023–2025 ICC World Test Championship. [4] [5] The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) finalized the bilateral series as a part of the 2023–2027 ICC Future Tours Programme. [6]
Jamie Smith bailed out England with a gallant half-century against Pakistan's spin attack on an engineered dry pitch to start the decisive third test on Thursday. England was on the ropes at 118-6 ...
Third Test, Rawalpindi (day one of five) England 267: Smith 89, Duckett 52; Sajid 6-128 Pakistan 73-3: Atkinson 1-2 Pakistan trail by 194 runs. Scorecard. Jamie Smith’s fabulous 89 and a trio of ...
Rehan Ahmed was added to England's Test squad on 23 November. [30] England's Liam Livingstone was ruled out of last two tests after sustaining a right knee injury during the first Test. [31] On 5 December, Pakistan's Haris Rauf was ruled out of the remainder of the Test series, having sustained a quad injury in the first Test. [32]
England won the second match in Birmingham by 23 runs and that game saw Jofra Archer play his first international fixture in over a year due to injuries. [6] The third match, in Cardiff, was another washout. [7] England won the fourth match in London by 7 wickets and won the series 2–0. [8]
England vs Pakistan. 16:05. 43.1. Chris Woakes to Haris Rauf. Back of a length, outside off stump on the back foot pushing, to backward point for no runs, fielded by Malan. England vs Pakistan. 16 ...
Ahead of the tour to England, Pakistan were scheduled to play three One Day International (ODI) matches in the Netherlands, and two T20I matches in Ireland; [12] however, in April 2020, the matches in the Netherlands were postponed after the Dutch government banned all events in the country, both sports and cultural, until 1 September 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. [13]