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Only Test, Harare, October 20 - 24, 2025, Afghanistan tour of Zimbabwe
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(12 ov) 127 & 34/1

Day 2 - Afghanistan trail by 198 runs.

Current RR: 2.83
 • Last 10 ov (RR): 29/1 (2.90)
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Curran century headlines day as Zimbabwe take big lead

Zimbabwe took a 233-run lead, and then prised out one Afghanistan wicket before stumps

Ekanth
21-Oct-2025 • 4 hrs ago
Ben Curran notched up a gritty ton in 217 balls, Zimbabwe vs Afghanistan, Only Test, Harare, 2nd day, October 21, 2025

Ben Curran notched up a gritty ton in 217 balls  •  Zimbabwe Cricket

Afghanistan 127 & 34 for 1 (Ibrahim 25*, Ngarava 1-9) trail Zimbabwe 359 (Curran 121, Raza 65, Ziaur 7-97) by 198 runs
Zimbabwe scored 229 runs and lost eight wickets. Afghanistan scored 34 and lost one. On paper, day two was a day of shared honours. In reality though, the hosts were left holding all aces after having bundled out Afghanistan for 127 on day one, and then converting a three-run lead to a 233-run lead, thanks mainly to a gritty, layered 121 from Ben Curran and a calculated (if not slick) 65 from Sikandar Raza.
Ziaur Rahman's 7 for 97 was a dreamy career-best on Test debut. He became the first bowler to take seven or more wickets via bowled or lbw in a Test innings since Imran Khan in 1982. Afghanistan batted for 12 overs before stumps and lost opener Abdul Malik to Richard Ngarava. Ibrahim Zadran got off to a start and was unbeaten on 25.
On a day tailor-made for pacers, the proactivity of Brendan Taylor and the experience of Craig Ervine were no match for the reveries of a Harare pitch offering up-and-down as well as sideways movement. Taylor got an edged boundary through gully (over 41.2) and a chipped four through mid-on (43.3).
Despite being decisive and even picking up a boundary to third from a semi-educated edge off a flashing cut and looking solid in defence, the right-handed Taylor fell to a vicious inducker from Ziaur, who then used his allies - low bounce and seam in - to trap the left-handed Craig Ervine lbw.
Curran, at the other end, grew into a natural rhythm. One undeterred by being beaten and edging. Raza came in with his problem-solver hat on, walking down the pitch and shuffling sideways against the pace of Ismat Alam and Ziaur. He had nervy moments - like a chip to cover off Alam (50.2) - but overcame them while disregarding the threats posed by the conditions and some skillful bowling.
Yamin Ahmadzai's accuracy and consistency in a six-over collection, split across two spells between overs 38 and 56, saw two maidens, just 11 runs but no wickets. The Morne Morkel-esque Ziaur didn't face a case of pretty figures. Alam created more nervy moments, especially against Raza, but also conceded more boundaries.
Curran and Raza built their 99-run stand in 160 balls with Curran scoring 33 despite facing a healthy share of 72 balls. The clear roles and the duo's commitment ground down Afghanistan, who had an upbeat presence at the start - with chatter and buzz from the keeper and cordons. Zimbabwe went into lunch on 214 for 4, with Curran on 79* and Raza 37*.
The older ball, tiring bowlers and the fewer challenges posed by Hashmatullah Shahidi's part-time bowling and Khalil Gurbaz's awkward action, helped the two batters consolidate.
Curran brought up his 217-ball ton off Shahidi's flick and virtually levitated with open arms, a bat in one hand and helmet in the other, in celebration.
Raza hit three fours off Sharafuddin Ashraf between overs 69 and 72, but then fell on 75.3, looking for the fourth, after top-edging a slog sweep to Yamin Ahmadzai running around from deep square leg to take the catch.
Afghanistan took the new ball one ball after it was available and got it changed 3.5 overs later. Meanwhile, Curran hit three fours in the space of four balls that he faced. There were immediately more threats after the second ball change.
Ahmadzai and Ziaur went back to what they did earlier in the day to first threaten edges and dry up scoring, and then Ahmadzai took Curran's wicket on the stroke of tea. Low bounce and seam in was a culprit again as Curran was hit on the back leg and was out plumb lbw for a 256-ball 121 across 423 minutes.
Zimbabwe slumped from 302 for 6 to 359 all out after tea. Ziaur came into his own against a helpless lower-middle and lower order as the final three batters fell for single figures. The carnage began with Tafadzwa Tsiga and Ngarava being lbw in successive balls.
Ahmadzai missed the chance to run Blessing Muzarabani out. Perhaps that was because the bowling division of the cricket Gods wanted to watch Ziaur send Muzarabani cartwheeling its way back halfway to the keeper. Evans pulled through against spread-out fields and took Zimbabwe past 350 before Chivanga fell to Ziaur, thus wrapping up the innings.
Muzarabani juggled jaffas with the odd bouncer to make Afghan opener Malik's short stay a scarring one. There were two close shaves in the third over where the ball nearly took the edge - one against each batter.
When Ngarava went after Malik with a less attacking plan of bowling short from around the wicket, an attempt to break the shackles was made and an aerial pull went into Muzarabani's hands at deep-backward square leg.
Amid lightmeter readings and some fiery pace bowling, Ibrahim seasoned a crafty little knock while Rahmanullah Gurbaz batted through to stumps. With the visitors still being in the deficit by 198 runs, an innings-win for the hosts is on the cards.

Ekanth is a sub-editor with ESPNcricinfo