It doesn’t seem to matter who turns up for New Zealand each year; the series they play in Pakistan invariably turn out to be competitive. After a below-par performance in the second T20I, a Mark Chapman-inspired New Zealand side brushed past Pakistan in the third to level the series up 1-1. Chapman would finish with a scintillating unbeaten 87 off 42 balls as he made light work of the 178 Pakistan had mustered, with the visitors getting there with ten balls and seven wickets to spare.
Chapman was New Zealand’s most impressive performer when a similarly understrength side visited in April 2023, and had little trouble picking up where he left off. New Zealand had begun brightly with the big-hitting Tim Robinson and Tim Seifert, but lost both within the space of seven balls to Abbas Afridi and Naseem Shah respectively. At that point, with inexperience to follow and a battery of impressive bowling options for Babar Azam, the chase felt in severe danger of being railroaded off course.
But Chapman demonstrated that his ability extended beyond power hitting, as he set about taking apart the dangerous duo of Shadab Khan and Abrar Ahmed. He understood the target wasn’t imperious enough to require reckless slogging and manipulated the field to pick boundaries in three successive overs the two bowled. There was a fateful slice of fortune when Naseem fluffed a fairly simple chance off a miscued sweep, and it resulted in the batter going back into his shell for a stray Iftikhar Ahmed over.
The reprieve ended up costing Pakistan dearly. Iftikhar was shown no such respect when he came back on, smashed for a huge six back over his head and as Chapman steered New Zealand towards Pakistan’s total with chanceless inevitability, the flair in his game began to shine through, too. For he wouldn’t just get New Zealand to their target, but land a psychological blow by decimating their two prized fast bowlers.
Shaheen Shah Afridi was the first to bear the brunt, as two boundaries and a six in the 15th over brought the asking rate below nine. Babar brought his ace Naseem back in immediately, but a worse fate awaited him. A carved six, a carved four, a straight six, and a pulled four. That’s how his first four balls went, sealing Pakistan’s fate in a 23-run over that plunged the required rate to under a run a ball.
It’s perhaps obligatory to say at this point that Dean Foxcroft was an able understudy, but in truth, this was a one-man chase. Just two boundaries came off Foxcroft’s bat in a 117-run partnership, and while Foxcroft struggled to keep his strike rate over 100, Chapman would finish at more than double that. Pakistan will rightly reflect on the quality of their death bowling, but the fact all it took was a solo effort to hunt down what they managed raises the question about the adequacy of that first innings total.
Pakistan were put in to bat on a pitch Babar said was the typical batting-friendly strip Rawalpindi is known for, in stark contrast to Saturday’s surface. But the approach Pakistan took to setting a target befitting such a pitch was muddled, at best. Saim Ayub got the side off to his trademark flyer, but in Zak Foulkes, Ish Sodhi and Will O’Rourke, New Zealand kept finding bowlers to sneak in tight overs and stymie Pakistan’s momentum.
That was especially true once Ayub departed and Babar and Mohammad Rizwan came together two balls after the powerplay ended. Overs six to 11 saw New Zealand allow just 36 runs as the momentum Pakistan had built up faded, with Rizwan, in particular, unable to find the gaps he so cannily does in the powerplay. He would go off shortly after with a hamstring injury, while captain Michael Bracewell coaxed a false shot from the Pakistan captain to send him on his way.