Over the ropes: instances of batsmen hitting the last ball of the match for six to win

Following Dinesh Karthik's heroics against Bangladesh in the Nidahas Trophy final, we look at other instances of thrilling international matches that ended with a six off the final ball

March 19, 2018 04:37 pm | Updated 04:43 pm IST

The man who started it all - Javed Miandad

The man who started it all - Javed Miandad

Javed Miandad, Pakistan vs India, Sharjah, 1986

The shot that broke over a million hearts. In the Australiasia Cup final in Sharjah, Pakistan were chasing 246, with Javed Miandad scoring a century. Pakistan were nine down when the No. 11 Tauseef Ahmed joined Miandad. Four was needed off the last ball. Chetan Sharma made the mistake of bowling a friendly full toss and Miandad swatted it over square leg for a six. It sparked off wild celebrations and the effect of that six would haunt Indian cricket fans for several years during contests between the two sides.

Lance Klusener – South Africa vs New Zealand, Napier, 1999

South Africa needed 11 off the final over, bowled by Dion Nash, with three wickets in hand. Chasing 192 in a match reduced to 40 overs, South Africa lost the wicket of Mark Boucher in the second ball of the final over. Klusener was on strike for the last ball with four needed. Klusener smashed it over long-on and South Africa won the thriller by two wickets. Klusener gave a hint of what was to come at the World Cup a few months later.

Brendan Taylor – Zimbabwe vs Bangladesh, Harare, 2006

In this Harare thriller, Zimbabwe needed 28 off the last two overs. Brendan Taylor and Tawanda Mupariwa took 11 runs off the penultimate over, leaving 17 off the last. Mashrafe Mortaza bowled the final over. Taylor hit a six off the second ball, and to add to the drama, Mupariwa was run-out off the fifth ball. With five required off the last ball, a six seemed the only option. Taylor did the needful, lofting a six over midwicket.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul – West Indies vs Sri Lanka, Trinidad, 2008

As umpire Clay Duncan (R) signals, West Indies batsman Shivnarine Chanderpaul (L) jumps to celebrate his six that won the match on the last ball against Sri Lankan bowler Chaminda Vaas (not pictured) on April 10, 2008 at the Queens Park Oval in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, during the first of three One-Day International matches between West Indies and Sri Lanka.  West Indies won 236 for 9 to Sri Lanka's 235 for 7.   AFP PHOTO/Stan HONDA

4 + 6 = 10. No problem for Chanderpaul

 

The first match of the bilateral ODI series. Thirteen were needed off the final over, bowled by the experienced Chaminda Vaas. Chanderpaul had lost his partner Sulieman Benn in the previous over, leaving West Indies nine down before the 50th over. Chanderpaul was their only hope. It came down to ten needed off the last two balls. The fifth ball was drilled past mid-off for four. One big hit was needed off the final ball. Vaas made the mistake of bowling a full toss, which Chanderpaul lofted over deep midwicket.

Ryan McLaren – South Africa vs New Zealand, Potchefstroom, 2013

South Africa were staring at a 3-0 whitewash in front of their home fans in the final one-dayer of the series. They needed eight off the last over with two wickets in hand. South Africa needed to ensure that McLaren got as much of the strike as possible but Dale Steyn played out three deliveries from James Franklin and was out caught off the fifth ball. The saving grace though was that the batsmen had crossed so McLaren would have the strike for the final ball. With three needed, Franklin bowled it short and McLaren pulled it for six over long leg to give his team a consolation win.

Dinesh Karthik – India vs Bangladesh, Nidahas Trophy, Colombo, 2018

Another tournament final, but this time India were at the other side of the fence. India huffed and puffed in their chase of 167 and following a brilliant 18th over by Mustafizur Rahman, India needed an improbable 34 off the last two overs. The 19th over from Rubel Hossain changed the game. The over read 6,4,6,0,2,4 – all the runs scored by Karthik, who was strangely sent in below the more inexperienced Vijay Shankar.

 India’s Dinesh Karthik scored 29 off just 8 balls.

Dinesh Karthik managed the feat in a T20 international

 

It came down to a more manageable 12 off the final over. Shankar was caught off the fifth ball, but Karthik had crossed so he took strike for the final ball. Soumya Sarkar, a part-time bowler, had to hold his nerve. Bangladesh needed to ensure they don't concede a boundary, since a four would have tied the game. With five needed, Karthik smashed the sixth ball for a flat six over cover. If the Harare heartbreak was bad enough for Bangladesh, this was worse, since it came in a tournament final, against giants India.

An exception...

Asif Mujtaba, Pakistan vs Australia, Hobart, 1992

No team won this game, but for Australia, it felt like a defeat. Pakistan needed 17 off the last over when the Australia captain threw the ball to Steve Waugh, who during the previous World Cup established a reputation for bowling well at the death. It didn't work this time though as Asif Mujtaba, a middle-order batsman who had a reputation for being a good finisher, smashed the final ball for six to level the scores.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.