The match began an hour late after Pakistan reportedly threatened a pull-out following the recent handshake controversy in their previous game against India. Eventually, Salman Agha’s team backed down and showed up to play — and they made their presence felt.
Batting first, Pakistan stumbled early and kept losing wickets at regular intervals. Apart from a fluent 50 off 36 balls from Fakhar Zaman, the top order faltered again. However, Shaheen Afridi’s explosive unbeaten 29 off 14 balls gave the innings late momentum, lifting them from a precarious position to a fighting total of 146/9.
For Associate teams, chasing anything over 130 against a Test-playing nation can be daunting, and UAE’s reply never really got going. They were bundled out for 105 in 17.4 overs, with Afridi proving unplayable in his fiery spell of 2/16. He bowled Alishan Sharafu (12) off an inside edge, while UAE captain Muhammad Waseem (14) perished to a sharp leg-break from Abrar Ahmed (2/13), brilliantly caught by Mohammad Nawaz running backwards.
Saim Ayub (1/18) — who has more wickets than runs in the tournament so far — bowled Muhammad Zohaib with a skiddy straight delivery, and despite a fighting 35 from Rahul Chopra, UAE were never in contention as the asking rate spiralled.
Earlier, UAE’s bowlers impressed for most of the innings. Pacer Junaid Siddique (4/18) and Ludhiana-born left-arm spinner Simranjeet Singh (3/26) bowled superbly to reduce Pakistan to 88/5, with Simranjeet even celebrating one dismissal with a ‘Sidhu Moosewala’ style thigh slap. The surface slowed in the middle overs, gripping and stopping on batters, which made shot-making tough.
But Afridi’s late surge took Pakistan close to 150, a total that ultimately proved out of reach for UAE.
With this win, Pakistan have sealed their place in the Super 4s, setting up a high-voltage rematch with India on Sunday at the Dubai International Stadium.