Pakistan wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan was involved in a hilarious moment with West Indies spinner Kevin Sinclair on Day 2 of the 1st Test in Multan on Saturday. The incident happened after Sinclair walked to bat out with West Indies reeling at 6/42 in the second session.
Sajid Khan performed the thigh-five celebration with Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan after Pakistan beat West Indies by 127 runs in the opening Test at the Multan Cricket Stadium.
Pakistan wicketkeeper batter Mohammad Rizwan was seen sledging West Indies batter Kevin Sinclair during day 2 of the first Test between the two teams in Multan.
Notably, the hosts completely dominated the game as they had finished Day 2 with a sizeable lead of 202 runs in their second innings. Earlier, after getting bowled out for 230 runs, Pakistan clawed back into the game as the spin duo of Noman Ali and Sajid Khan spun a web to bamboozle the West Indies batters completely.
Off-spinner Sajid Khan masterminded Pakistan’s emphatic 127-run victory against the West Indies with a match haul of nine wickets in the first Test on Sunday. After the game, he made Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan do his famous thigh slap celebration.
Rizwan playfully taunted West Indies batter Kevin Sinclair with a 'come to the graveyard' remark after Pakistan spinners Sajid Khan and Noman Ali dominated the West Indies batting lineup.
Half-centuries from Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan revived Pakistan to 143-4 after top-order batters stumbled in the first cricket test against West Indies.
West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite shared his thoughts after his team 127-run defeat to Pakistan in the first Test at Multan While acknowledging the team
Pakistan captain Shan Masood reflected on his team comprehensive 127-run victory against the West Indies in the first Test at Multan on Sunday Masood credite
Pakistan completely outplayed the West Indies on Day 3 of the first Test of the ongoing series, clinching a 127-run victory at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan. In a low-scoring thriller, it were the spinners who reigned supreme,
Pakistan captain says batters "have sacrificed individual milestones for team results", while seamers could have chance to shine when subcontinent teams visit