Hyderabad Kingsmen 162 for 2 (Sadaqat 64*, Usman 64, Smith 1-14) beat Multan Sultans 159 for 9 (Masood 69*, Akif 2-30, Hunain 2-31) by 8 wickets
The Kingsmen came into this game off the back of the competition’s biggest win over Rawalpindiz, and played as if they still had net run rate catching up to do. The Sultans, meanwhile, had ominously lost their previous two games, and hadn’t won a match against a team that qualified for the playoffs since beating this very opposition 28 days ago.
Masood began to turn down singles at the other end, and produced a sumptuous array of conventional shots that he is so often able to convert into a decidedly modern scoring rate. He was especially strong through the covers, able to open up his body against both spin and pace, relying on his timing to keep the runs ticking along. He found a way to raid 56 off the final five, all but 14 had come off his bat.
The end of the Powerplay proved little hindrance to the scoring rate. Mohammad Nawaz’s torrid PSL concluded with a 19-run walloping in his only over as Usman Khan tore into him to bring up a 29-ball half-century. Turner was racing through his opetions – the 15.2 overs were delivered by eight separate bowlers – and there was time enough to smash Smith for a pair of sixes before the Australian finally goaded him into holing out at long-on. But by now, he had powered 64 off 35, and guaranteed he would have the last laugh.
Sadaqat brought up his own half-century, taking 25 balls, a couple of overs later, and there was even time for the out-of-form Saim Ayub to get some batting in as the end of the road neared for the Sultans. In the 16th over, Faisal Akram turned one sharply, and Josh Philippe clasped at thin air, letting the ball trickle through for byes. As far as endings to soggy performances go, this one felt rather apt.








