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Darren Sammy hogs limelight as his side quells Quetta Gladiators’ challenge by 58 runs
Agencies
Lahore
A year after they finished second in the inaugural edition, Quetta Gladiators once again found themselves on the wrong side of the result in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) Twenty20 final. This time, it was Peshawar Zalmi who trumped them at the final hurdle, by 58 runs to lift the title.
The thrilling final, watched by passionate fans at a packed Gaddafi Stadium, saw Peshawar Zalmi, who were put into bat, make 148 with Kamran Akmal making the most 40 runs off 32 balls (6x4s; 1x6) and former West Indies World Twenty20 winning captain Darren Sammy cracking an unbeaten 11-ball 28 (1x4; 3x6).
West Indian Rayad Ryan Emrit was the most successful bowler for the Gladiators claiming 3 for 31 with his medium pacers.
Chasing the target, the Gladiators lost three quick wickets being reduced to 3 for 13. Captain Sarfraz Ahmed (22 off 11; 5x4) and Sean Ervine (24 off 19; 2x4) then stiched a small partnership but the Zalmi bowlers kept making breakthroughs to eventually bowl the Quetta side out for just 90 runs in 16.3 overs.
Left-arm spinner Mohammad Asghar finished with 3-16 from his four overs.
Sammy was among nine foreign cricketers to arrive as stringent security measures were put in place around the 25,000-capacity stadium to ensure a trouble-free final.
Pakistan has not hosted a major Test playing nation since 2009 when terrorists attacked a Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore.
Sammy, his fellow West Indian Marlon Samuels and England's Chris Jordan were presented Pakistani army caps as they walked around the stadium with players from both teams getting loud cheers from the capacity crowd.
Sammy even obliged some of his fans, standing close to the fence and taking photos with them.
There was a festive mood inside the stadium but earlier thousands of spectators had started lining up in long queues to clear three checkpoints at least six hours before the final between Peshawar Zalmi and Quetta Gladiators begins at 1500 GMT.
"Even if we have to pass through a dozen security checkpoints we won't mind,"said Mohammad Afzal, a smiling 25-year-old Peshawar fan.
A special shuttle bus service was put in place at two security checkpoints that carried spectators to the 14 entry gates of the Gaddafi Stadium.
Peshawar will be led by Sammy, who is joined by three other foreigners in England's Dawid Malan and Jordan along with Samuels. However the flamboyant Shahid Afridi will be missing after the all-rounder was ruled out from the final when he injured his right hand in the last knockout match against Karachi Kings in the United Arab Emirates.
Last year's finalist Quetta had to reshuffle its team because four of its foreign players refused to travel to Pakistan due to security concerns. The team played its league matches in the United Arab Emirates.
But Quetta managed to convince Rayad Emrit of West Indies, Anamul Haque of Bangladesh, South African Morne van Wyk and Zimbabwe's Elton Chigumbura and Sean Ervine to play in the final.
All nine foreign cricketers involved arrived at the team hotel in the early hours of Sunday amid tight security en route from the airport. Security officials used sniffer dogs as part of a massive security sweep of the stadium.
"It's not a matter of who wins or loses tonight, it's a big day for Pakistan as we wanted to show the world we can host international matches too," said 18-year-old student Iftikhar Ahmed.
Since the attack in 2009, only Zimbabwe has visited Pakistan for a short limited-overs series in 2015. The Pakistan Cricket Board hopes Sunday's final will help it to regain the confidence of other Test playing nations.
A series of bomb blasts in Pakistan last month, including one in Lahore at a rally that killed at least 13 people, raised doubts over the staging of the PSL final in the city.
But the PCB got the support of the Punjab provincial government, the federal government and the Pakistani army to go ahead.
At least 8,000 security officials including policemen and soldiers had been deployed around the stadium and the route from the teams'hotel as part of the beefed up security ahead of the highly anticipated final.
PSL chairman Najam Sethi, who is also chairman of the PCB's executive committee, said on Sunday that he looked at the PSL final as the opening for Pakistan to bring back international cricket.
He said that the PCB was in talks with the cricket boards of Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to tour Pakistan later this year after successfully organizing Sunday night's Twenty20 match.
While dozens of provincial and federal government ministers are expected to witness Sunday's final, cricketer-turned politician Imran Khan had criticised the PCB's decision to choose Lahore for the final.
Khan called the decision"madness" and said the heavy security will send the wrong signal to the world.
Scores: Peshawar Zalmi 148 for 6 (Kamran Akmal 40, Sammy 28*, Emrit 3-31, Hasan Khan 2-34) beat Quetta Gladiators 90 (Asghar 3-16, Hasan Ali 2-13, Wahab 2-13) by 58 runs.
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06/03/2017
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