KARACHI: Saud Shakeel, a Pakistani middle-order batter, made history at the Perth stadium during the second innings of the first Test match against Australia on Sunday.
The 28-year-old cricketer became the first batter in the history of red-ball cricket to score at least 20 runs in each of his first 15 innings, a feat that placed him ahead of West Indies’ Everton Weekes who scored 20 runs in 14 consecutive innings.
With this historical innings, Shakeel, who was playing his eighth Test match, is now one innings away from equaling Australia’s Colin McDonald’s record, who posted at least 10 runs in his first 16 Test innings.
Pakistan collapsed badly during their chase of 450 runs and lost half of their wickets before 80 runs as a team.
Not a single batter could stay against the fierce Australian pace attack consisting of Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, and Josh Hazlewood.
Captain Shan Masood, leading in his maiden Test, didn’t stay much longer, nicking one to Carey off Josh Hazlewood for two, leaving his team in dire straits at 17-2.
Starc further troubled the batting side by dismissing Imam-ul-Haq lbw for 10, before Babar Azam and Saud Shakeel resisted momentarily.
However, their resistance crumbled when Azam edged Cummins on 14, caught again by Carey, leaving Shakeel on 10 and Sarfaraz Ahmed on one at the break.
Earlier today, Australia made a declaration at 233-5 in their second innings on day four after Pakistan were all out for 271.
Captain Pat Cummins decided after opener Usman Khawaja departed for a resilient 90 on a worsening pitch, following a 126-run partnership with Mitchell Marsh.
Marsh remained unbeaten at 63 as Pakistan managed to dismiss Steve Smith and Travis Head early in the day, momentarily sparking hope that quickly faded away.
Captain Salman Ali Agha says his target is to win T20I series
Sources say after meeting with ICC, other boards a day ago, PCB contacted various stakeholders
Pacer's absence likely to open door for Scott Boland to play in day-night Test
ICC instructs parties to come up with solution regarding fate of prestigious tournament
Tejashwi Yadav says "involving politics in sports is not good", asks why shouldn't Indian team travel to Pakistan
PCB has formally asked ICC to provide detailed and workable proposals ahead of board meeting