Australia captain Pat Cummins took 10 wickets in a masterclass of clutch bowling to end a stout Pakistan resistance and lead his side to a 79-run victory on the fourth day of the second Test on Friday, locking up the three-match series 2-0.
Just when it looked like the match would go down to the wire on the final day, the paceman stepped in to remove Mohammad Rizwan, Pakistan’s last recognised batsman, and claim his 250th Test wicket.
Cummins (5/49) followed that up with the wicket of Aamer Jamal for a duck to trigger an extra half an hour of play, during which he claimed his fifth wicket of the innings and 10th of the match to help mop up the tail.
It was his second 10-wicket match haul in 57 Tests and concluded a glorious year in which he led Australia to the World Test Championship, a 50-overs World Cup triumph and the retention of the Ashes in England.
Set an imposing victory target of 317 runs after bowling Australia out for 262 before lunch at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the visitors had put together a series of partnerships that frustrated the potent Australian attack.
There were some home nerves when the last substantial stand of 57 between Rizwan (35) and Agha Salman (50) got the target under 100 runs, but the match turned for good when Cummins separated the pair.
Shan Masood on Friday. Getty Images
Pakistan had threatened to take control of the match on several occasions over the first four days only to let the Australians off the hook.
Fired by an innings of 96 from Mitchell Marsh, Australia had dragged themselves back from 16/4 after lunch on Thursday and resumed on 187/6 on a sunny morning at the MCG.
Wicketkeeper Alex Carey scored 52 to help extend the lead before he was trapped
leg before by seamer Mir Hamza (4/32) to bring an end to the innings.
Pakistan were always going to be up against it given the fact that only one team had successfully chased more than 300 runs in the fourth innings in 146 years of Test matches at the MCG.
Abdullah Shafique, whose dropped slip catches in both innings had proved hugely costly to Pakistan, departed for four before lunch when he lunged at a Mitchell Starc delivery and Usman Khawaja took the catch in the cordon.
Cummins trapped Imam-Ul Haq in front for 12 soon after the resumption but a 61-run partnership between Shan Masood and Babar Azam stalled Australia’s progress.
Again, Cummins made the breakthrough by inducing Masood into an edge which Steve Smith claimed in the slips with the Pakistan captain on 60. Josh Hazlewood then removed Babar for 41.
Pakistan started putting together another partnership but it was worth only 16 runs when Starc (4/55) sent down a delivery that grew big on Saud Shakeel, who top-edged it behind to Carey for 24 with Pakistan still 155 runs from their target.