Advertisement

Brendon McCullum climbed barrier to throw his shirt to fans

  • Web Desk
  • Share

Brendon McCullum

Brendon McCullum climbed barrier to throw his shirt to fans

Advertisement
  • Brendon McCullum had a shirt to give away but couldn’t free it in time.
  • Ex-cricketer climbed the fence at National Bank Cricket Arena in Karachi.
  • Former New Zealand captain and current England coach Brendon McCullum.
Advertisement

Brendon McCullum, former captain of New Zealand’s Test squad and now head coach of England’s side, climbed the fence at the National Bank Cricket Arena in Karachi during the third Test.

McCullum had a shirt to give away to the stadium’s enthusiastic patrons, but he was unable to free it from the barrier in time. The ex-cricketer, however, sprang to action, climbing the fence in order to free the shirt and toss it into the crowd below.

Azhar Ali failed to score in his final Test innings on Monday as England spinner Jack Leach swung the final Test in Karachi in six deliveries.

Leach sent Pakistan’s top three batters back to the pavilion, keeping England’s chances of a historic series sweep alive.

Openers Abdullah Shafique and Shan Masood erased England’s 50-run lead without losing a wicket.

Leach bowled Shan, who attempted a dangerous reverse sweep, for 24 and then knocked over Azhar’s stumps four balls later.

Advertisement

The home team’s score dropped to 54-3 when Leach got Shafique lbw with the first ball of his following over due to a batting error caused by a delivery that barely turned.

Babar Azam, the captain, and Saud Shakeel, the vice captain, held off the English for the duration of the first session.

Pakistan will find a 49-run lead at the cost of three important wickets hard to chew at lunch, especially with a 3-0 whitewash at home still a possibility.

It is worth noting that England won the first Test by 74 runs on a dead pitch that offered little to the bowlers because they won the toss and had a deep batting lineup.

With seven hundreds and five fifties, Rawalpindi scored 1,768 runs during the course of four innings, good for third most in Test history.

Team headed by Ben Stokes won the second Test in Multan by 26 runs after Pakistan fell short of chasing down 355.

Advertisement

After deciding against visiting Pakistan for Test matches in the years after 2005 due to safety concerns, England has finally made their way there for a visit.

Also Read

England’s winning starts at Lord’s for Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum

Nasser Hussain accepts England's five-wicket victory over New Zealand is 'immense' for...

Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Live News.


Advertisement
End of Story
BOL Stories of the day
Four-Time Gold Medalist Ariarne Titmus quits swimming
Rain denies Pakistan Women's team victory against England
 Pakistan team celebrates Diana Baig’s 30th Birthday
Nauman Ali breaks Abdul Qadir’s 37-year-old record
Italy sends Israel out of the tournament
Pakistan defeats South Africa by 93 runs in Lahore Test
Next Article
Exit mobile version