Australia thump Pakistan by 10 wickets to clinch ODI series

Australian women cricket team players celebrate after taking a wicket of a Pakistani player in Brisbane, Australia, on January 18, 2022. (Photo courtesy: @PCB/Twitter)
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Updated 18 January 2023
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Australia thump Pakistan by 10 wickets to clinch ODI series

  • Australian women's team take unassailable 2-0 lead in three-match ODI series
  • Pakistan's batting coach blames defeat on lack of partnership between batters

ISLAMABAD: The Australian women's cricket team thumped Pakistan by 10 wickets on Wednesday to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match ODI series, as Pakistan's batting coach blamed the loss on lack of partnerships. 

This was Pakistan women’s team's first series defeat in the ICC Women’s Championship 2022-25 after they won their previous two series held last year. The three-match ODI series kicked off on Monday.

Pakistan, who won the toss and decided to bat first, handed a 126-run target from 43 overs to the hosts. The target proved far from challenging as opening batters Beth Mooney and Phoebe Litchfield scored 129/0 in 19.2 overs. 

Litchfield scored 67 off 61 balls and hit 10 boundaries while Mooney scored 57 off 55 balls, hitting six fours. Both batters remained unbeaten.

Earlier, Pakistan’s opening batter Sidra Amin was sent to the pavilion in the second over after having scored only 2 runs. Left-handed batter Muneeba Ali and captain Bismah Maroof added 41 runs for the second wicket before Ali was dismissed after scoring 18 off 41 balls.

Nida Dar came to the team's rescue by scoring a much-needed 24-run innings from 38 balls but ran herself out at the non-striker's end. Maroof, on other hand, scored 21 off 46 balls, hitting one boundary.

Australia's Darcie Brown, who was declared the player of the match, claimed 3/32 figures from the match, while Annabel Sutherland and Alana King bagged two wickets each.

Commenting on the team’s defeat, Pakistan’s batting coach Taufeeq Umer said the team could have done better with a stronger partnership.

“Lack of partnership is the main reason for this performance, besides, Australian conditions are helping the bowlers more as the pitches here have bounce,” Umar said. 

“Whenever you come from Pakistan to play here, it takes time to get used to the conditions,” he said, adding that in the upcoming matches, Pakistani batters will have enough potential to get good totals.

“Nida Dar is playing well. It is positive for us that the senior players are in form. I hope we will play better cricket in the coming matches,” he added.

Both teams will now play the third ODI of the series on Saturday, January 21, in Sydney.


Pakistan plans up to $5 billion joint venture to redevelop Roosevelt Hotel in New York

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Pakistan plans up to $5 billion joint venture to redevelop Roosevelt Hotel in New York

  • The hotel, a century-old Manhattan property owned by Pakistan International Airlines, has been closed since 2020
  • The PM’s privatization adviser says the plan will boost the value of Pakistan’s stake even as its ownership share falls

KARACHI: Pakistan plans to redevelop its Roosevelt Hotel in New York into a high-rise building through a joint venture (JV) that could involve up to $5 billion in equity and debt financing, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s aide on privatization Muhammad Ali told Arab News on Friday.

The hotel, a century-old Manhattan property near Grand Central Terminal and Times Square, is one of Pakistan’s most valuable overseas assets and is owned by the state through Pakistan International Airlines.

Closed since 2020 due to losses, the hotel has been under review for years as successive governments have weighed whether to sell, lease or redevelop it while pursuing state-owned enterprise reforms linked to International Monetary Fund bailouts.

“The redevelopment project would require up to $5 billion equity and debt capital,” said Ali, who also chairs the Privatization Commission of Pakistan.

Ali said the government had decided against an outright sale of the property after a detailed study conducted last year showed the site could support a significantly larger structure, potentially rising to 60 stories.

“The redevelopment under the JV privatization model is expected to increase value of the property and thus Pakistan’s stake by more than 200 percent [in terms of value],” he continued.

Under the proposed joint venture structure, the government would contribute the land while a private partner would inject equity, with the remaining financing raised through debt, Ali said

He added that that while Pakistan’s economic interest in the project would rise, its ownership share would be reduced to about 50 percent once the transaction is completed.

He said a range of international players, including commercial banks and technology firms, had expressed interest in developing their own premises at the site, though he declined to identify potential partners.

Ownership of the hotel was recently transferred to PIA Holding Company Limited, the parent company of Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Limited, which the government privatized last month, with the airline now owned by a consortium led by the Arif Habib Group.

ADVISER RESIGNATION

Pakistan’s plans for the Roosevelt Hotel have faced repeated delays in recent years as authorities weighed competing options, including demolition, amid shifts in government policy.

On Dec. 24, a day after the PIA privatization, Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said the government was working on structuring a transaction for the New York property.

Meanwhile, a privatization ministry official said on condition of anonymity that the country’s financial adviser for the hotel’s sale, Jones Lang LaSalle Americas Inc. (JLL), has resigned due to a “conflict of interest.”

The official said JLL stepped down after the transaction structure was approved by the federal cabinet and the Competition Commission of Pakistan in July.

“The Privatization Commission will finalize the new adviser in the next four to six weeks,” he said, adding that expressions of interest will be issued after the new appointment is made.

Asked about the development, Ali said the new adviser would engage with potential joint venture partners on behalf of the government.