Pakistan opener Saim Ayub recorded a first-ball duck against India in the ACC Men’s T20 Asia Cup, matching an unwanted mark in the national list.
Hardik Pandya beat him with a length ball shaping away, and a tentative poke flew to Jasprit Bumrah at point. It was Saim’s seventh duck in T20Is, drawing him level with Babar Azam, Mohammad Hafeez, and Kamran Akmal for the joint third-most by a Pakistan batter.
Umar Akmal tops the list with ten, while Shahid Afridi has eight.
The number underlines the risk-reward nature of opening in T20s, where intent can bring either early boundaries or early exits.
First-ball dismissal brings seventh T20I duck for Saim
The moment arrived in a charged contest at Dubai International Cricket Stadium. Pakistan chose to bat but lost their left-hander at once, which set a cautious tone for the early overs.
Saim’s tally now reads seven ducks in 43 matches, alongside Babar’s seven in 128, Hafeez’s seven in 119, and Kamran’s seven in 58.
Strike roles, matchups, and powerplay fields create different risk profiles for each player. One ball can tilt numbers in this format, yet form often turns quickly for stroke-makers who back their method.
Scoreboard context and Pakistan’s measured batting response
Despite the setback, Pakistan found resistance through Sahibzada Farhan and a late lift from Shaheen Shah Afridi.
Farhan top-scored with a steady 40 off 44, striking three sixes and a four to hold the middle together. Shaheen’s 33 off 16, with four clean hits over the rope, pushed the total to 127 for nine.
Learning moment as young opener eyes stronger comeback
Saim’s dismissal will sting, yet it also offers a clear cue for adjustment. Tightening the initial trigger, trusting the leave outside off, and committing fully to either defence or stroke can reset the start.
He remains a high-ceiling talent whose intent suits modern T20 demands.
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