Mohammad Rizwan anchored a clinical chase before his bowlers strangled the opposition, securing a maiden Pakistan Super League (PSL) title for the Rawalpindiz. The side dismantled their opponents by 24 runs in a high-pressure final that turned decisively in the middle overs.
Rawalpindiz managed a modest 158-6 after being put in to bat. Rizwan top-scored with a gritty 62 off 48 balls, anchoring an innings that threatened to collapse twice. The pitch at the National Stadium offered early movement, and the Rawalpindiz top order struggled to find rhythm against a disciplined pace attack.
The shift happened when the Rawalpindiz bowlers took the ball. They didn’t just defend the total; they hunted.
The opposition’s chase never gathered momentum. Tight lines and subtle variations kept the required run rate climbing, forcing errors from the middle order. By the 15th over, the pressure became insurmountable. The Rawalpindiz fielding unit was relentless, cutting off singles and turning half-chances into wickets.
“We knew 160 was about par, but it required discipline,” Rizwan said during the post-match presentation. “The boys executed the plans exactly as we discussed in the dressing room. This win belongs to the city of Rawalpindi.”
The victory marks a significant milestone for the franchise. After years of rebuilding and tactical shifts, the maiden trophy validates the team’s shift toward a bowling-heavy strategy.
For the opposition, the defeat marks a bitter end to a dominant tournament run. Despite entering the final as favorites, their batting lineup faltered when the stakes spiked. The failure to rotate the strike during the middle overs left them chasing shadows against a relentless attack.
As the fireworks lit up the Karachi skyline, the Rawalpindiz players gathered around the trophy. They didn’t just win a match; they claimed the franchise’s first piece of silverware, proving that in T20 cricket, composure often outweighs raw power.
