Smith hits ton as Aussies hammer sloppy Pakistan
PERTH: Pakistan were left lamenting missed chances after Australia capitalised on their errors to win the One-day International on Thursday by seven wickets, with skipper Steven Smith scoring a century.
Pakistan made 263 for seven after being sent to bat, having looked set to post a much bigger score at several stages. The home side replied with 265 for three, winning with 30 balls to spare.
After paceman Josh Hazlewood applied the brakes to a promising Pakistan innings with three wickets, skipper Smith and ODI debutant Peter Handscomb put on 183 for the third wicket in the chase to set their team on the path to victory.
It could have been much different for Pakistan, as they squandered two golden opportunities to remove Handscomb early in his innings.
He was caught from a no-ball before he scored, and was then dropped on 10.
Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur could only rue the mistakes that helped Australia take a 2-1 lead in the five-match series.
“Our only chance of really exerting pressure was to take early wickets, and we nearly had that right,” Arthur said.
“And where we’re at as a team, we just can’t afford those little lapses, so very disappointing.”
When they claimed openers David Warner (35) and Usman Khawaja (nine) in five balls Pakistan had Australia wobbling at 45 for two.
One run later Handscomb was on his way back to the pavilion for a duck on debut, caught at first slip from the bowling of Junaid Khan.
Australia should have been 46 for three, but Handscomb was recalled to the centre due to a front foot no-ball.
To make matters worse, Handscomb had another life on 10 when a simple catch was dropped at point, with Junaid again the aggrieved bowler.
It proved to be Pakistan’s undoing.
Handscomb eventually fell for 82 from 84 balls, but the game was safely in Australia’s hands by then and the Australia batsman admitted he had a lucky day.
“I think I’m going to buy a lottery ticket tonight,” Handscomb said.
“As I was walking off, I started to hear the crowd going nuts, and couldn’t quite work out what was going on.
“So I looked up on the big screen and saw the no-ball.”
Smith brought up his eighth ODI century by pulling the 97th ball he faced to the mid-wicket boundary and finished unbeaten on 108.
Earlier in the day, Hazlewood reined the visitors in after they made a flying start, picking up 3-32 from his 10 overs.
He claimed the vital wickets of Babar Azam, who top-scored with 84 from 100 balls, Umar Akmal (39) and opener Mohammad Hafeez (4).
Babar played beautifully and appeared set to add another century to his blossoming career, before he was brilliantly caught by Handscomb.
In his 21st innings, the Pakistani number three equalled the record held by four other players for being quickest to 1,000 runs before falling to Hazlewood.
He attempted a pull shot and Handscomb took a great diving catch in the outfield, with the third umpire confirming the Australian got his hands under the ball.
Babar did have some luck and was twice dropped by bowlers on their follow-through.
He was dropped low down by James Faulkner on 31 and then Patrick Cummins grassed a tough chance when he was 74.
Umar should have been stumped on one to give part-time spinner Travis Head (2-65) a third wicket, but wicketkeeper Matthew Wade botched an easy dismissal.
Score Board
Australia won toss
Pakistan
*Mohammad Hafeez lbw b Hazlewood 4
Sharjeel Khan b Head 50
Babar Azam c Handscomb b Hazlewood 84
Asad Shafiq c Khawaja b Head 5
Shoaib Malik c Wade b Stanlake 39
Umar Akmal c Wade b Hazlewood 39
Imad Wasim c Head b Cummins 9
†Mohammad Rizwan not out 14
Mohammad Amir not out 4
Extras (lb 7, w 8) 15
Total (7 wickets; 50 overs) 263
Did not bat: Hasan Ali, Junaid Khan
Fall: 1-36, 2-85, 3-99, 4-162, 5-222, 6-244, 7-246
Bowling: Hazlewood 10-0-32-3 (3w); Stanlake 10-1-55-1 (2w); Cummins 10-1-42-1 (2w); Head 10-0-65-2; Faulkner 10-0-62-0 (1w)
Australia
D A Warner c Rizwan b Junaid 35
U T Khawaja c Rizwan b Amir 9
*S P D Smith not out 108
P S P Handscomb c Rizwan b Hasan 82
T M Head not out 23
Extras (b 1, lb 1, w 5, nb 1) 8
Total (3 wickets; 45 overs) 265
Did not bat: G J Maxwell, †M S Wade, J P Faulkner, P J Cummins, J R Hazlewood, B Stanlake
Fall: 1-44, 2-45, 3-228
Bowling: Hafeez 6-1-30-0 (1w); Amir 10-0-36-1 (1w); Junaid 9-0-58-1 (1nb); Hasan 10-0-62-1; Imad 8-0-59-0 (3w); Malik 2-0-18-0
ODI debut: P S P Handscomb (Australia)
Man of the match: S P D Smith (Australia)
Series: Australia lead the 5-match series 2-1
Umpires: S D Fry and C Shamshuddin (India). TV umpire: C B Gaffaney (New Zealand). Match referee: J J Crowe (New Zealand)
-
5 Celebrities You Didn't Know Have Experienced Depression -
Trump Considers Scaling Back Trade Levies On Steel, Aluminium In Response To Rising Costs -
Claude AI Shutdown Simulation Sparks Fresh AI Safety Concerns -
King Charles Vows Not To Let Andrew Scandal Overshadow His Special Project -
Spotify Says Its Best Engineers No Longer Write Code As AI Takes Over -
Michelle Yeoh Addresses 'Wicked For Good' Snub At 2026 Oscars -
Trump Revokes Legal Basis For US Climate Regulation, Curb Vehicle Emission Standards -
DOJ Blocks Trump Administration From Cutting $600M In Public Health Funds -
2026 Winter Olympics Men Figure Skating: Malinin Eyes Quadruple Axel, After Banned Backflip -
Meghan Markle Rallies Behind Brooklyn Beckham Amid Explosive Family Drama -
Scientists Find Strange Solar System That Breaks Planet Formation Rules -
Backstreet Boys Voice Desire To Headline 2027's Super Bowl Halftime Show -
OpenAI Accuses China’s DeepSeek Of Replicating US Models To Train Its AI -
Woman Calls Press ‘vultures’ Outside Nancy Guthrie’s Home After Tense Standoff -
Allison Holker Gets Engaged To Adam Edmunds After Two Years Of Dating -
Prince William Prioritises Monarchy’s Future Over Family Ties In Andrew Crisis