Miandad’s six to Jadeja blitz: Six great India-Pakistan ODIs 

Former Pakistani Cricketer Javed MIandad plays a shot during his 100th Test match in which he scored 145 against India at the Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore, on December 6, 1989. (Pakistan Cricket Board)
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Updated 12 October 2023
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Miandad’s six to Jadeja blitz: Six great India-Pakistan ODIs 

  • Javed Miandad’s last-ball six at desert venue arguably remains most dramatic ODI outcome
  • Imran Khan’s best bowling figures of 6-14 were in a one-day international against India

AHMEDABAD: Cricketing powerhouses India and Pakistan renew their rivalry in the most hotly-anticipated match of the World Cup in Ahmedabad on Saturday. 

AFP Sport looks back at six memorable ODI matches between the bitter rivals ahead of their latest clash. 




Javed Miandad celebrates after scoring a last-ball six in this file photo. (Photo courtesy: Dawn)

Javed Miandad’s last-ball six at the desert venue arguably remains the most dramatic ODI outcome between the two sides as Pakistan clinched a one-wicket victory. 

Pakistan needed 246 to win in 50 overs and Miandad walked in at 61-3 to hit an unbeaten 116 off 114 balls. 

With four needed off the final delivery, Indian fast bowler Chetan Sharma bowled a full toss and Miandad blasted the ball into the crowd to trigger wild celebrations among the Pakistan team and fans. 

Miandad was later presented with a golden sword for his heroics. 




An undated file photo of Imran Khan bowling during a cricket match. (Photo courtesy: PCB/website)

Imran Khan’s best bowling figures of 6-14 were in a one-day international against India but for the flamboyant Pakistan fast bowler it was all in vain. 

Imran ripped through the Indian batting line-up at Sharjah to send the opposition packing for 125. 

But Pakistan’s own batting imploded, skittled for just 87 with Ramiz Raja, top-scorer with 29, one of only four batsmen in double figures. 

Imran, a former Prime Minister who now languishes in jail over corruption charges he denies, was still the man of the match in the low-scoring battle. 

India’s Ajay Jadeja blasted a 25-ball 45 in a late blitz that helped India knock out holders Pakistan in a highly-charged World Cup quarter-final. 




In this file photograph taken on April 4, 1999, Indian batsman and team captain Ajay Jadeja dives to save himself from being run out as a throw from a Pakistani fielder directly hits the wickets in the triangular series final match between India and Pakistan at the Chinaswamy Cricket Stadium in Bangalore. (AFP/File)

Jadeja was severe on Pakistan’s Waqar Younis as he hit the pace bowler for four fours and two sixes in the final few overs to propel the total to 287-8. 

In reply, Pakistan were sailing along when opener Aamir Sohail smashed India’s Venkatesh Prasad for a boundary before sledging his opponent. 

But Venkatesh got the left-handed batsman bowled on the next ball to bring the house down and Pakistan lost their way to lose by 39 runs. 




Pune Warriors captain Sourav Ganguly (C) celebrates their team victory against Delhi Daredevils during the IPL Twenty20 cricket match at Ferozshah Kotla stadium in New Delhi on April 21, 2012. (AFP/File)

Sourav Ganguly hit a match-winning century to trump Saeed Anwar’s 140 in a deciding best-of-three final of Bangladesh’s Silver Jubilee Independence Cup in Dhaka. 

Ganguly’s knock of 124 was laced with 11 fours and one six as India chased down their victory target of 315 with one ball to spare. 

The left-handed Ganguly was named man of the match but lesser-known Hrishikesh Kanitkar stole the show in the end when India needed three on the final two balls and he hit a boundary on the penultimate delivery. 

The chase was a world record at the time. 




Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar (L) and Pakistan's Shoaib Akhtar exchange words during their fourth One Day-International cricket match at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium in Gwalior, 15 November 2007. (AFP/File)

Sachin Tendulkar won many matches for India but his 98 against Pakistan at the 2003 World Cup remains special due his duel with fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar. 

Tendulkar stood tall in his 75-ball knock that guided India in their chase of 274 against a Pakistan bowling line-up boasting Wasim Akram, Waqar and Akhtar. 

He uppercut one of Akhtar’s express deliveries to a delightful six over third man — a shot that became iconic in Tendulkar’s career. 

Akhtar later got Tendulkar’s wicket but the damage had been done and India won by six wickets. 




Pakistan's Fakhar Zaman celebrates reaching his 100 during the ICC Champions Trophy final cricket match between India and Pakistan at The Oval in London on June 18, 2017. (AFP/File)

Pakistan came in as underdogs in the Champions Trophy final, but stunned India by 180 runs with a top performance riding on a sparkling century by Fakhar Zaman. 

Zaman’s 114 off 106 balls and a 128-run opening stand with Azhar Ali guided Pakistan to a mammoth 338 for four and deflated Virat Kohli’s India at the Oval. 

The left-hander clobbered the Indian attack, including fast bowlers Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Jasprit Bumrah, hitting 12 fours and three sixes. 

Pakistan’s bowlers then came firing and dismissed India for just 158 in 30.3 overs despite Hardik Pandya’s 76. Fast bowler Hasan Ali took 3-19. 


Pakistani Taliban announce fresh offensive amid Islamabad-Kabul conflict

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Pakistani Taliban announce fresh offensive amid Islamabad-Kabul conflict

  • Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militancy in recent months and blames it on TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, which operates in Pakistan, Afghanistan
  • The announcement of fresh offensive raises spectre of more violence in Pakistan’s border regions, further intensity in Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes

ISLAMABAD: The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or the Pakistani Taliban, have announced a fresh offensive against Pakistan, the militant group said on Friday, amid an ongoing conflict between Islamabad and Kabul over a surge in militancy in Pakistan.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant violence in recent months and blames it on the TTP, or the Pakistani Taliban, which operates both inside Pakistan and from Afghan territory. Islamabad accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban government of providing safe havens for the TTP, which Kabul denies.

The neighbors have clashed along the frontier since last Thursday, when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes. Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram, the capital Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar.

“Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan announces the beginning of its annual military campaign titled ‘Operation Nasir’,” the group said, without sharing any operational details.

The Pakistani government did not immediately respond to the announcement, which has raised the spectre of more violence not just in Pakistan’s western regions bordering Afghanistan, but also of further intensity in clashes between the neighbors.

At least 42 civilians have been killed and 104 wounded since Feb. 26, when Kabul launched border offensive, the UN mission in Afghanistan reported this week.

Islamabad is yet to comment on civilian casualties and said its troops have killed more than 460 Afghan soldiers. Afghanistan estimated Pakistani fatalities among troops at around 150. Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

On Thursday, the UN refugee agency said more than 100,000 Afghans and thousands of Pakistanis have been forced from their homes by fighting along their shared border.

“The situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan remains tense amid active conflict along the border, with reports of internal displacement in both countries,” UNHCR said, warning that “an estimated 115,000 people in Afghanistan and around 3,000 people in Pakistan” have been displaced.