Final takeaway? Cricket is about phases. Win more phases⦠you win the game. Pakistan Women won all three. Zimbabwe Women couldnāt win one decisively. Series now 1-0. Momentum? Firmly with Pakistan. And as the story continues⦠remember⦠big matches are not won in moments⦠they are built⦠over 50 overs⦠one smart decision at a time.
Until then, I am Dev Rajawat, signing off, along with my co-commentators, Manan Mehta, Mohammad Anab, and scorer Zeeshan Naiyer. Thatās it from our side. Thanks for joining. But cricket doesnāt sleep. Plenty is happening around the world. Switch tabs, follow the fun. Goodbye from this tab! TAKE CARE! BREATHE AND SMILE! CIAO!!!!
Fatima Sana (Pakistan Women Captain): (On the win and overall team performance) "Thank you. I think we were not up to the mark in bowling. We still need to improve in bowling and fielding. But the way the batters played was really good.
(On winning the game by 168 runs but still wanting improvement) Yes, we still need to improve because the opposition has also improved a lot. So we need to work more on our bowling and fielding. I think we should have restricted them to under 100 because we know we are capable of doing that.
(On Sadaf Shamasā innings) I think that was very important. As an opener, she played really well, especially in those hot conditions.
(On Najiha Alviās performance and fastest ODI fifty) Yes, definitely. She played really well at the end, and that was a very good innings from her. It was also her first fifty, which makes it even more special. Iām really happy for her."
Nomvelo Sibanda (Zimbabwe Women Captain): "(On pulling things back in the first innings) I think the team did well to bring the game at the backend of the first innings. A few good catches and a brilliant one from Christina so I thought that was a good effort.
(On the learnings from this game) Yeah, I thought it was just about changing the pace of the bowling. That was very crucial. Obviously there are a few lessons we have learnt from today's game and we will want to work on those before the next game."
Sadaf Shamas (POTM): "(On getting dismissed in the 90s) I don't know what to say. Maybe just bad luck.
(On batting conditions) The weather was not favorable for batting. It was very hot and hard to stay in the middle. I just kept talking to my batting partners and focused on scoring runs.
I would like to give credit to Sidra Amin. She guided me throughout the knock and also kept the scoreboard ticking by hitting boundaries. She didn't let me come under pressure.
(What was going through her mind during the nervous 90s?) I don't know. Just things got started getting mixed up in my mind. Maybe lack of concentration during that period denied me a ton today."
Player of the Match: Sadaf Shamas
Time for post-match presentations...
Biggest Win by Runs in a WODI Match at National Stadium, Karachi:
193 runs - India Women vs Pakistan Women, 2005
168 runs - Pakistan Women vs Zimbabwe Women, 2026 (Tonight)*
127 runs - South Africa Women vs Pakistan Women, 2023
Biggest Defeat by Runs for Zimbabwe Women in WODIs:
200 runs against New Zealand Women, Dunedin, 2026
180 runs against New Zealand Women, Dunedin, 2026
168 runs against Pakistan Women, Karachi, 2026 (Tonight)*
Biggest Win by Runs for Pakistan Women in WODIs:
193 runs vs Netherlands Women, Fatullah, 2011
168 runs vs Zimbabwe Women, Karachi, 2026 (Tonight)*
157 runs vs Ireland Women, Dublin, 2013
10:46 PM IST, 10:16 PM LOCAL TIME: In cricket, greatness is rarely loud⦠it builds quietly⦠partnership by partnership⦠and by the time you notice, the game is already gone⦠and tonight, Pakistan Women wrote that script perfectly. In Karachi, they posted a commanding 330/5 in 50 overs, before dismantling Zimbabwe Women for 162 in 36.4 overs. Margin? A dominant 168-run victory. Was it ever close? Honestly⦠not really. Pakistan owned the Powerplay⦠controlled the middle⦠exploded at the death⦠and then backed it up with clinical bowling. A complete performance. Almost textbook.
So how did the innings begin? With patience. With planning. With purpose. The first Powerplay brought 68/0. No wickets. No risks. Just smart cricket. Sadaf Shamas and Gull Feroza looked in no hurry⦠and that itself was the statement. Fifty came in 7.2 overs, helped by 15 extras - Zimbabwe offering freebies. Aggressive start? Not exactly. Effective start? Absolutely.
What happened as the innings progressed through the early middle phase? Stability turned into dominance. The opening stand kept growing⦠quietly⦠steadily⦠like a graph that refuses to dip. 100-run partnership in 16.5 overs. Drinks at 103/0 in 17 overs. Sadaf Shamas reached her 50 off 61 balls, filled with crisp boundaries - 9 fours. Feroza supported brilliantly. Zimbabwe kept rotating bowlers - Kudzai Chigora, Beloved Biza, Michelle Mavunga, but no breakthrough. Pressure? Entirely on the fielding side.
When did Zimbabwe finally strike? The breakthrough came at 162/1 in 28.2 overs, when Kudzai Chigora removed Feroza for a well-made 50 off 60. But by then⦠the damage was already done. That 162-run opening stand wasnāt just big⦠it was defining. It allowed Pakistan to play the rest of the innings with freedom. And then came Sidra Amin - fresh⦠positive⦠ready to accelerate.
Gradually, Pakistan turned control into command. They reached 200 in 34.4 overs. Drinks at 195/2 (33.3 overs) showed complete authority. Sidra Amin played a fluent knock - 67 off 59 balls, striking at over 113. Meanwhile, heartbreak for Sadaf Shamas, dismissed for 98, just two runs short of a century. Did that slow them down? Not one bit. Pakistan were already setting up for a big finish.
And then⦠the death overs. The final act. The fireworks. Enter Najiha Alvi. She didnāt just bat⦠she exploded. 56 off 30 balls. Strike rate 186.66. Her fifty came in just 24 balls - blistering. Add Fatima Sana smashing 11 off 3 balls, and suddenly the total skyrocketed. Pakistan went from 250 in 43.4 overs to 300 in 47.1 overs, finishing at 330/5. Was 300 enough? Or was this overkill? Probably both.
Now the chase. Could Zimbabwe respond? The answer started early. And it wasnāt promising. Fatima Sana struck twice, removing Christine Mutasa and Kelly Ndiraya. Score read 34/2 in 8.2 overs. Required rate climbing above 6.5. Pressure mounting. First Powerplay - 43/2. Platform for a chase? Not really. Just survival mode.
Was there any resistance? Yes. Brief. Beloved Biza fought hard - 53 off 53 balls, reaching her fifty in 46 balls (8 fours). Kelis Ndhlovu added 31 off 47. Drinks at 83/4 in 17 overs. But hereās the problem - no big partnerships. No momentum shift. Just small efforts in a big chase. Pakistan kept squeezing.
The middle overs of the chase? The slide. The quiet collapse. From 93/4 to 134/7. Syeda Aroob Shah picked 2 wickets, breaking resistance. Nashra Sandhu added control. Zimbabwe crossed 100 in 19.5 overs, but the equation was already unrealistic. Required rate climbing⦠wickets falling⦠game slipping.
And the end? Just a formality. Tasmia Rubab wrapped it up with 2 wickets, finishing with excellent economy - 2.73. Zimbabwe were all out for 162 in 36.4 overs. No late drama. No miracle. Just a steady march towards defeat. Pakistanās bowling? Disciplined. Structured. Ruthless.
So what defined this match? The opening partnership. The finishing burst. The bowling discipline. Everything clicked. Pakistan Women dominated every phase - Powerplay, middle, and death. Zimbabwe Women never quite found the rhythm. Result? A 168-run win that speaks volumes.