Ngarava and Curran lead Zimbabwe to first home Test win in 12 years
Ngarava's maiden Test five-wicket haul handed the hosts their first innings win since 2001
Sreshth Shah
22-Oct-2025 • 4 hrs ago
Richard Ngarava claimed his maiden Test five-wicket haul • Zimbabwe Cricket
Zimbabwe 359 (Curran 121, Raza 65, Ziaur Rahman 7-97) beat Afghanistan 127 (Evans 5-22, Muzarabani 3-47) and 159 (Ibrahim 42, Ngarava 5-37, Muzarabani 3-48, Chivanga 2-40) by an innings and 73 runs
It took Zimbabwe less than three hours on the third day to claim their first home Test win since 2013, their first innings win since 2001 and their biggest Test win. Richard Ngarava was the star, where in overcast conditions he took his first five-wicket haul in Tests. His movement through the air and off the pitch never looked exaggerated, but it was relentless enough to break the game open and leave Zimbabwe with a win by an innings and 73 runs against a listless Afghanistan batting unit.
The day began with Zimbabwe's Test squad lining up for a group photo, a clear suggestion they were keen to finish the contest on Wednesday itself. And they started with a surprise by giving the ball to Tanaka Chivanga ahead of Blessing Muzarabani.
It turned out to be a good decision as Chivanga's third over of the morning saw Rahmanullah Gurbaz flicking one down the leg side, and Tafadzwa Tsiga, alert behind the stumps, did the rest. Three overs later, Ngarava produced almost the same dismissal when Ibrahim Zadran, who had reached 42 with measured strokes, flicked another ball going down leg, and Tsiga took his second of the morning.
Hashmatullah Shahidi lasted briefly. A full delivery from Ngarava drew a hard-handed push that went to Craig Ervine at slip. Bahir Shah and Afsar Zazai then gave the innings some momentum. Bahir found six boundaries but his counter-attack ended after Muzarabani cramped him with a short ball. The fend popped up and Ben Curran swooped in from short leg. Zazai followed soon after, easing a half-hearted drive to backward point to end the morning session at 127 for 6.
The sun broke through after lunch but offered little relief to Afghanistan. Chivanga thought he had Ismat Alam caught, only for a front-foot no-ball to intervene. Ngarava corrected it soon after with a length ball outside off that induced a cut from Alam. Tsiga flung himself to his right and pulled off a one-handed catch that drew gasps even from the slips. Two overs later Sharafuddin Ashraf edged to second slip, giving Ngarava his fifth.
Muzarabani, quiet through much of the innings, finished it off with precision. First he flattened Khalil Gurbaz's leg stump, then beat Ziaur Rahman with a yorker that split middle stump. Those wickets gave him six for the match and ended a game Zimbabwe had controlled from the second hour of the first day.
Ngarava's five, Chivanga's pace, and Muzarabani's closing spell combined for a win that was both rare and easily earned. Curran's day-two performance of 121, which earned him a Player-of-the-Match award, and Sikandar Raza's 65 were the other highlights of their comfortable win.
After the game, Zimbabwe captain Ervine said a win in their final Test match of the year was satisfying.
"I'm ecstatic. A lot of credit to the boys for fighting and winning to end a tough year of Test cricket," Ervine said. "The way we started, in the first hour of day one wasn't good, but the way the boys pulled things back was excellent. Then with the bat, Curran's innings - full of composure and discipline - was outstanding.
"The wicket offered something throughout, so the boys did well to put on some good partnerships. The boys have learnt with the Test cricket they've played in the last six-seven months to find their game. Brad [Evans] with the five-for in the first innings and Richie [Ngarava] stepped up in the second innings. TK [Chivanga] was superb and Bless [Muzarabani] was unlucky not to take a few more wickets."
Shahidi, the Afghanistan captain, rued the batting collapse on the first day when Afghanistan slid from 77 for 1 to 127 all out.
"They played really good cricket, it was supporting the fast bowlers," Shahidi said. "Ball was seaming around but overall, we didn't play good cricket. We started the Test well with 80 for 1 [77 for 1] in the first innings, but that collapse let us down. I feel the lack of our Test-playing experience cost us since we kept losing back-to-back wickets. In Test cricket, winning the first day is very important."
The two teams now meet for the three-match T20I series starting October 29.
Sreshth Shah is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @sreshthx