Clinical Peshawar storm to PSL title

Peshawar Zalmi 148 for 6 (Kamran Akmal 40, Sammy 28*, Emrit 3-31, Hasan Khan 2-34) beat Quetta Gladiators 90 (Asghar 3-16, Hasan Ali 2-13, Wahab 2-13) by 58 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Kamran Akmal’s quickfire 40 at the top set the tone for Peshawar’s match-winning total © AFP

In a nutshell

A year after they finished second in the inaugural edition, Quetta Gladiators once again found themselves on the wrong side of the result in the Pakistan Super League final. This time, it was Peshawar Zalmi who trumped them, by 58 runs to lift the title.

On a pitch where run-scoring was hard work, Quetta needed their batsmen to be thrifty. Instead, one after the other they perished to extravagant shots. Mohammad Asghar, whose flat non-turners fetched him 3 for 16, benefitted in no small measure from the batsmen’s profligacy, which gave him two of those wickets. That’s not to say Peshawar’s bowlers did not earn their wickets. Hasan Ali was skiddy and found bounce and seam movement off the pitch. Mohammad Hafeez’s variations in trajectory and pace got him a wicket in his first over, against an anxious Sarfraz. By the eighth over, half of Quetta’s line-up had been sent packing. The rest of the innings followed the same template, and so swift was the slide that portions of the cricket-starved Lahore crowd had already made their way out by the time the end came about.

Peshawar’s start made for a stark contrast as they had raced away to 41 in four overs. It was only once the spinners were brought in that Quetta were able to apply the brakes. As the ball became old, it stopped on the batsmen, and variable bounce came into play as well. Quetta’s spinners were also able to make use of the dry, cracked surface to suffocate them with regular wickets. They really seized the advantage with Rayad Emrit’s double-strike in the 17th over, so much so that Sarfraz Ahmed could afford a slip in the 18th over of the innings. But Darren Sammy flexed his muscles as Peshawar clubbed 33 runs in the final two overs.

Where the match was won

Emrit, who arrived in Lahore on the morning of the final, sent down a superb three overs – jet lag and all – and had 3 for 13. The start had been exactly as he would have hoped. The finish – far from it. Emrit undid some of the good work in his final over – the 19th of the innings – and was taken apart for 18 runs. He got his lengths all wrong and Sammy’s brute force was too much to handle. If the first boundary of the over had been a lucky one that came off the outside edge, the last had Sammy’s signature all over it – a full-blooded bottom-handed thump that crashed into the sightscreen.

Sammy would club two more sixes off the final over, sent down by Anwar Ali. On a surface where it was proving hard to get on top of the bounce, Sammy picked Anwar’s harmless lengths early and swatted them over long-on. If there was pack of pace, Sammy made up for it with brawn. The late fireworks meant Peshawar, ambling along at 115 for 6 after 18 overs, recovered to 148 for 6.

The men that won it

The short ball proved to be the worst option for bowlers from both sides as batsmen were able to comfortably ride the bounce and whack it either side of the wicket. No one benefitted more from that, however, than Kamran Akmal. Quetta’s bowlers, seemingly not learning from their mistakes, repeatedly dragged their length in the early going, and Akmal duly punished them, pulling with authority and piercing the off-side field with his cuts. Even after the opening burst had ended, Kamran was able to use the shot as an effective pressure-buster. Four of his boundaries came through the cut and it set the tone for a good total. Good total became match-winning after Sammy’s blitz.

Moment of the match

Pakistan were robbed of a glimpse of their favourite son, with a finger injury ruling Shahid Afridi out of the final. But the packed Gaddafi was invested in a new hero. Sammy’s last-over heroics got the crowd into a frenzy. And when the second of the two sixes vanished into the stands over long-on, the crowd broke into a chorus of “Sammy Sammy.”

Later, after Zulfiqar Babar took out Hasan Ali’s off-stump to seal the game, Sammy called his boys for the selfie celebration as the crowd again erupted amid fireworks. Then, as if to show how much they had missed their and the locals’ hero, every member of the team attempted the Afridi star-man pose. It could have only endeared the crowd more to Sammy.

That he had won over their hearts was further validated when the Peshawar captain was greeted with loud cheers upon being called at the presentation ceremony. But so had the Lahore crowd, Sammy. “To me, it’s just more than a game,” he said. “It first started in the draft. Lala made the big announcement that I would be the captain. This trophy means a lot. Lala influenced my decision to come here. I felt tonight I brought a lot of smiles in Lahore and Peshawar. It is an amazing day.

“The Peshawar is not just a cricket team, we do a lot for the fans, the foundation. Thanks to the PCB, and the PSL. I am glad I came to experience the atmosphere here.”

Akshay Gopalakrishnan is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.


Source: ESPN Crickinfo

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