RESULT
1st ODI (D/N), Faisalabad, November 04, 2025, South Africa tour of Pakistan
(49.4/50 ov, T:264) 264/8

Pakistan won by 2 wickets (with 2 balls remaining)

Player Of The Match
62 (71)
salman-agha
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Pakistan overcome late scare to go 1-0 up in ODI series

Naseem and Abrar picked up three wickets, while Rizwan and Agha struck fifties as Pakistan got over the line by two wickets in a tense finish

Naseem Shah removed the well set Quinton de Kock, Pakistan vs South Africa, 1st ODI, Faisalabad, November 4, 2025

Naseem Shah picked up 3 for 40 in his 9.1 overs  •  Associated Press

Pakistan 264 for 8 (Agha 62, Rizwan 55, Bosch 2-32, Ngidi 2-46) beat South Africa 263 (de Kock 63, Pretorius 57, Naseem 3-40, Abrar 3-53) by two wickets
Naseem Shah and Abrar Ahmed inflicted a late collapse on South Africa to bowl them out for an under-par 263 in the opening ODI in Faisalabad.
On a dry, flat batting wicket, it allowed Pakistan to control the tempo of the chase, one in which they further tightened their grip with an 87-run opening stand in the first 15 overs. South Africa battled hard through the middle overs to drag the hosts back, but Mohammad Rizwan, freshly stripped of the ODI captaincy, shepherded his side calmly through the middle overs with 55, while Salman Agha chipped in with a half-century of his own.
But it wasn't without a dramatic late stumble that almost derailed Pakistan right at the death, needing a late Mohammad Nawaz six to see Pakistan through to a final-over two-wicket win that should have been more comfortable than it ultimately was.
Pakistan appeared to have complicated a chase that - at the outset - looked especially straightforward. With 12 overs to go, Pakistan needed just 69 with seven wickets in hand and their two most reliable batters, Rizwan and Agha, having compiled a 91-run partnership. But Corbin Bosch, Pakistan's tormentor-in-chief this series, struck when Rizwan flicked straight to deep backward square, and Pakistan suddenly began to find run-scoring hard.
However, they retained wickets as Hussain Talat and Agha kept counting the runs down, albeit a little more conservatively than Pakistan might have wished. The upshot, however, was a run-a-ball 45-run stand that took Pakistan to less than 30 runs away from a series lead. But when Talat misjudged a slower ball and looped one to mid-off, George Linde took a stunning catch diving forward, and threw the ball and the game back up into jeopardy.
Linde would come back into the attack, ball turning square by this stage, and send back Hasan Nawaz, who saw fit to come down the crease against the turning ball and attempt a straight slog, already halfway down the crease when he was stumped. Pakistan's plight became even drearier when, 12 runs shy, Agha holed out off Ngidi to Donovan Ferreira, who covered a huge chunk of the Iqbal Stadium before taking a catch that dismissed Pakistan's anchor.
With the equation suddenly ten in seven, it was thanks to one straight hit from Nawaz down the ground of the final ball of the 49th that brought the game irrevocably to Pakistan's control. There was time enough for Nawaz to be dismissed with the scores level, with Pakistan limping over the finish line - quite literally - when one thudded into Naseem's pads as they scuttled through for a legbye. It seemed an apt metaphor for the ultimate unconvincing manner of Pakistan's win.
It needed to be nothing like that, especially with Fakhar Zaman and Saim Ayub batting. The duo matched South Africa's opening pair in the venom of their opening stand, finding boundaries and sixes in the first 15 that took them to well beyond the required rate. It was only a half-hour of pressure from South Africa's spinners, Bjorn Fortuin and Ferreira, that turned a cakewalk into a contest.
Ferriera struck first with an arm ball that skidded into Ayub as he shaped for a cut. He would double up two overs later as Fakhar mistimed a slog that found long-on before Fortuin struck the dagger into Faisalabad's hearts. With Babar Azam crawling along to 7, he got one to skid along the angle and trap him plumb in front, both bowler and batter barely waiting for the umpire's decision.
But Pakistan's stalwarts of late salvaged the situation and steered Pakistan back on course. In their slightly humdrum yet dependable way, Rizwan and Agha kept turning the strike over and taking Pakistan closer to South Africa's total. Most crucially, they avoided the fate of South Africa in the middle overs, denying the visitors the constant flurry of wickets that had characterised the first innings, and hamstrung South Africa so.
This series has seen six captains across the two sides, and yet, it has been the home skipper who has one the toss each time. After winning their sixth on the trot, Pakistan elected to chase. Through the debutant Lhuan-dre Pretorius and the returning Quinton de Kock, the visitors may have given Pakistan reason to regret that decision with a near-flawless start.
They took on Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem early and refused to let the spin of Agha or Abrar settle either. Pretorius, who took much of the early impetus, danced down the ground to drive Agha over cover in the innings' eighth over, while de Kock smashed Abrar over long-off to bring up the 50-run stand.
By the end of his first three overs, Agha had leaked 30, and Shaheen was forced to turn to Saim Ayub, and that is where Pakistan began to regain some control. South Africa continued to tick along at a fair clip as Pretorius completed a 48-ball 50, but Pakistan starved him of the strike for the next few overs. Even so, South Africa had got to 98 in the 16th over before Pretorius tried to carve Ayub through the offside, only for Nawaz to complete a sharp catch diving to his weaker right side.
For the moment, though, South Africa were not to be slowed down by one bump. Tony de Zorzi made his intentions clear by creaming Nawaz over the top for a six so huge it flew out of Iqbal Stadium and required a replacement ball. De Kock was milking the spinners and getting a boundary away each over, with one through short fine off A,yub bringing up his own half-century in his comeback ODI.
The reintroduction of Naseem would serve as the first real break on South Africa's careening sled. He'd copped 19 in his first three, but coming around the wicket to the two left-handers, he conceded just one in his return over, and when Ayub kept things tight at the other end, Naseem struck in the following over.
It was the free-flowing de Kock who, cramped for room from the angle, chipped onto the stumps as he tried to guide the ball fine. Ayub struck six balls later to extinguish de Zorzi's innings in its embryonic stages, and the momentum began to shift.
South Africa lacked batting heft lower down the order. Sinethemba Qeshile's back-to-back boundaries off Shaheen broke the shackles while captain Matthew Breetzke walloped Abrar for a six and a four as South Africa attempted a relaunch. But Nawaz induced a top edge from Qeshile off the first ball of the next over, and from thereon Pakistan began to punch their way through a brittle South Africa.
It was the first of five wickets to fall within 37 runs as Pakistan gutted their way through South Africa. Abrar got rid of Breetzke and trapped Fortuin first ball, almost believing he had a hat-trick when the umpire raised his finger for his third delivery in a row, but on that occasion, an inside edge denied him the honour.
Bosch shielded Ngidi from the strike and put on a valuable 41 runs at the very end, but the resigned disappointment on South African faces at the ultimate score they'd posted told the real story. Four hours later, it was clear how just a few more runs might have made all the difference.

Danyal Rasool is ESPNcricinfo's Pakistan correspondent. @Danny61000

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