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Australia v Pakistan: first men’s one-day international – live | Australia cricket team

Key events

16th over: Pakistan 59-2 (Rizwan 9, Babar 36) Abbott enters his fourth over in his 25th ODI for Australia. Since debuting for New South Wales at the age of 18 and winning the Steve Waugh Medal as NSW player of the season with 27 wickets, Abbott has struggled a to reach his potential. Babar knows it too. Having watched Abbott fumble a couple of balls in the outfield, he applies even more pressure on the 32-year-old with a thumping square cut over backward point. That’s a much-needed boundary for Pakistan.

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15th over: Pakistan 51-2 (Rizwan 7, Babar 31) Hardie has started well here, zeroing in on a nagging length and hitting it consistently. He leaks two singles but Australia remain on top at the MCG.

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14th over: Pakistan 49-2 (Rizwan 6, Babar 30) Babar is leading the Pakistan comeback after the loss of those two early wickets. But the going is tough. Australia have bowled tight lines and Rizwan, normally a dasher, has only five from 20 and is still struggling to find his touch. They eke a single from the final ball of Abbott’s third over but the run rate is running at a trickle and stands at just over three-per-over.

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13th over: Pakistan 47-2 (Rizwan 5, Babar 29) Starc is off and Aaron Hardie is on for Australia. Hardie is a big man, standing over 190cm and as broad as he is tall. Bowls a good wobble seam does Hardie. He beats Babar with it on his second delivery but Babar hits back with the next ball, flicking Hardie off the pads for a fast-run two. Hardie was born in the UK but grew up in Western Australia and has clearly adopted the diet preferred by Cameron Green and Mitchell Marsh. This is the big unit’s ninth ODI for his country and his first over today is a good one, just two from it.

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12th over: Pakistan 45-2 (Rizwan 5, Babar 27) Sean Abbott is into his second over after leaking three runs from his first. Big appeal to the second delivery! Did it catch the edge? Abbott seems confident but Australia’s close fielders think not and there’s no review. Abbott is into the mid-130kph range but Babar works him through deep square for a single to retain strike.

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11th over: Pakistan 43-2 (Rizwan 4, Babar 26) Starc is back for another and Rizwan then Babar takes him for singles. They do it again from the next two deliveries. Finally, having done it in singles from fopur hots, Babar achieves the same dividend with a single shot, pulling a short ball through midwicket. Beautiful shot!

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10th over: Pakistan 35-2 (Rizwan 2, Babar 20) Here’s the bowling change we forecast: Sean Abbott replaces Pat Cummins and he’s bowling to Rizwan who is still on zero. And it’s almost a runout! The ball was full outside off, drives to cover and Babar took off despite the fielder being Marnus Labuschagne. He lunges and loops the ball at the stumps but misses as Rizwan dives. A direct hit would have had him there. Finally Rizwan gets off the mark with a weird slice that squeaks into covers for two.

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9th over: Pakistan 32-2 (Rizwan 0, Babar 19) Starc is into his fifth over now. His pace is rising and he has two wickets in his kitbag so the big man’s superb record against Pakistan is continuing today. He has new batter Rizwan on strike and thumps it into his gloves. Starc puts the next one wide. He knows Rizwan hasn’t scored from seven balls so far and is trying to tempt a wild slash. No dice this time but it’s another Starc maiden.

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8th over: Pakistan 32-2 (Rizwan 0, Babar 19) Babar cracks Cummins for four! Great shot by Pakistan’s 117-ODI veteran. Captain Pat might have to consider taking a breather here. He went for 10 off his last over and now he’s been spanked through midwicket with vim. Pat gets his radar right on the next few but goes short and straight on the final throw of the dice and Babar steps out to smack it down the ground. Another four!

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7th over: Pakistan 24-2 (Rizwan 0, Babar 11) Starc’s first ball is full but a tad wide of off stump and Abdullah meets it on the up, driving handsomely. Abbott manages to collar that one but Pakistan steal another two runs. Starc’s wicket with his fourth ball has brought Mohammad Rizwan to the crease and he sees off the final two deliveries.

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WICKET! Pakistan 24-2 (Shafique c Inglis b Starc 12)

Short and sweet from Starc! He pitched it up at Shafique who had battled to 12 from 26 balls. The batter tried to get out of the ball’s path but dropped his hands too late and it clipped the top edge on the way through and Inglis pouched an easy chance.

Shafique begins the walk back off the MCG pitch. Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/AP
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6th over: Pakistan 22-1 (Abdullah 10, Babar 11) Another misfield from Abbott! Babar drove Cummins into the offside and Abbott slid to meet it on the bounce but lost sight of it somehow and Babar ran two when he should’ve been reduced to a single. Now Babar slides one to fine leg for a single. Now Cummin s drops short to Abdullah Shafique and BANG! He rocks back and bashes it down the ground for Pakistan’s first boundary of the day. Grteat counter attack from Pakistan. And now they show finesse, Abdullah clipping off his ankles to steal another two runs through midwicket. A single from the last gives Pakiustan a 10-run over and Pat Cummins plenty of food for thought.

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5th over: Pakistan 12-1 (Abdullah 3, Babar 8) Babar lashes at that one! Great statement of intent from the Pakistani pulveriser. Only a finger flung to the right prevented a boundary on that occasion. He gets two runs from Starc. And now Abdullah runs a fast – and risky – single. For once, Cummins is imperfect, a wild throw negating any chance of a runout. Babar is back from a couple of weeks off. He’s been playing golf and, judging from that first shot of the over, has brought his long irons to the MCG today. He drives at Starc’s final delivery and draws a misfield from Sean Abbott. Three runs.

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4th over: Pakistan 5-1 (Abdullah 2, Babar 2) Here is Cummins, bustling to the crease. Babar Azam came to the middle after the loss of Ayub and immediately spanked neat two from Starc to draw even with Abdullah. The Pakistan batters can’t do better in this over, with Cummins bang on target straight away. It’s a maiden.

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WICKET! Pakistan 3-1 (Ayub bowled Starc 1)

Starc strikes. That ball was fuller and faster and Ayub pushed forward and got a thick and ugly inside edge into the stumps.First blood to the home side! It was a tentative shot from the young opener, normally an attacking batter, but nerves got the better of him on that occasion and Australia have their first scalp of the match.

The first Pakistan wicket falls. Photograph: Asanka Brendon Ratnayake/AP
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3rd over: Pakistan 3-0 (Ayub 1, Shafique 2) Starc returns. His first over tickled the speed gun at 136kph but there’s a deeper bend to the back this over. Ayub leaves the first few alone, keen to build a big innings and see off the Australian assassin…

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2nd over: Pakistan 3-0 (Ayub 1, Shafique 2) Saim Ayub now has the strike to Australia’s captain Pat Cummins and he gets some bat on the first delivery, not much but enough to run a single. Pakistan are off the mark and so is Ayub. Now Shafique gets off his duck with a strong punch through point. Glenn Maxwell retrieves it in the outfield. Now Cummins the conjuror appears! His fourth ball is a beauty, just back of a length and it whizzes past the edge of Shafique’s flailing blade. Good comeback by the skipper.

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1st over: Pakistan 0-0 (Saim 0, Shafique 0) Abdullah Shafique has survives the first couple of deliveries and already Starc has extracted a slight hint of swing back into the right-handed batter. Third ball is a fat full-pitched yorker on the offside and Shafique has a swish at it but is beaten for pace. He can’t get near the fifth and dead bats the final delivery. A maiden to get us started

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Mitchell Starc has the new ball and we are about to get under way with the first ball of the Australian international summer…

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Wiradjuri elder Aunty Joy Murphy Wandin is delivering a gentle and generous Welcome to Country to the teams and a small but vibrant MCG crowd. Melbourne is smack bang in the middle of its Spring racing carnival and many locals have taken today off work the Melbourne Cup, “the race that stops a nation”. Famously, American author Mark Twain, attended the Cup in 1895, and wrote: “The grandstands make a brilliant and wonderful spectacle, a delirium of colour, a vision of beauty. The champagne flows, everybody is vivacious, excited, happy.”

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Pat Cummins wins the toss and Australia will bowl first at the MCG

That means we’ll have to wait for the fireworks from young master Fraser-McGurk and we’ll have to content ourselves with the greatest fast bowling cartel in the cricket world. Players are taking the field at the MCG and we’ll have the first ball soon.

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Pakistan have long been an unpredictable cricket team and few predicted their Test series win over England last month. Having run up a first innings total in excess of 500, they looked primed for victory yet spectacularly capitulated to lose the first Test by an innings. Yet, under the calm resolute leadership of Gillespie, they fought back to win the next two Tests. Here’s how James Wallace made sense of such madness…

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Regardless of who wins the toss, many cricket fans will be hoping to see Australia’s 22-year-old batting superstar Jake Fraser-McGurk unleashed.

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Despite being the new coach of Pakistan, Jason Gillespie is a beloved figure in Australian cricket. The great-grandson of a Kamilaroi warrior, “Dizzy” is recognised as our first male Indigenous Test cricketer.

Sydney-born and Adelaide-raised, Gillespie’s celebrated 71-Test career produced 259 wickets plus another 142 scalps from his 97 ODIs. With his glorious mullet, magnificent moustache and a fast-bowler’s sneer that could curdle a batter’s bone marrow at 10 paces, he was a dream to watch and a nightmare to face.

Curiously, Gillespie’s most famous moment came with the bat: his maiden Test century was a scarcely-believable unbeaten 201 in Bangladesh – the highest score in history by a nightwatchman and an innings compiled over 574 minutes and 425 balls.

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Mohammad Hasnain might be familiar to a few Australians. The beanpole quick with the lightning right-arm was first sighted on these shores in 2019 when he made his ODI debut as an 18-year-old. Back then he was regularly nudging the speed gun at 150kph but injuries have derailed his career and cut into that express speed. Five years later he makes a welcome return as a 24-year-old for a 10th white-ball match for Pakistan.

Hasnain looked pretty good in MCG nets on Saturday as he rolled in under the watchful eye of Pakistan’s new Australian coach, Jason Gillespie…

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Preamble

Angus Fontaine

Greetings cricket fans! Welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the first men’s one-day international between Australia and Pakistan. This is game one of a three-match series and today’s action is coming to you from the Melbourne Cricket Ground. I’m Angus Fontaine and I’ll be steering you through the first fusillades of action.

Although these countries met in January for a Test series won by Australia 3-0, it’s been more than a year since they last crossed swords in the ODI format. That clash was at the 2023 World Cup clash in Bengaluru and Australia won by a 62-runs after a memorably mammoth opening stand of 259-runs between David Warner and Mitchell Marsh.

Much to Pakistan’s relief, neither of those veterans will be in the Australian squad today. Warner has retired at last and Marsh is on ice (ie. paternity leave) for the upcoming Test series against India where he will have to shoulder the bowling load of the injured Cameron Green. With master blaster Travis Head also enjoying the flush of fatherhood, it will be Matt Short and Jake Fraser-McGurk opening for the men in gold.

Pat Cummins returns as captain for Australia for this series and leads a formidable XI of Matt Short, Jake Fraser-McGurk, Steve Smith, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne, Aaron Hardie, Glenn Maxwell, Sean Abbott, Mitchell Starc and Adam Zampa.

Pakistan are fresh from a stirring Test series victory over England in England and have a new white-ball captain in Mohammad Rizwan, the 32-year-old from Peshawar in his 73rd ODI for Pakistan. They also have some new blood in their matchday XI with batter Muhammad Irfan Khan to debut and Kamran Ghulam to play his second ODI. Their four-man pace attack shapes as Shaheen Shah Afridi, Naseem Shah, Haris Rauf and the two-metre tall Mohammad Hasnain, who has been clocked at 155.1 kph!

Australia is experiencing a late-Spring heatwave so we have a warm, cloudy day in Melbourne and a clear forecast for this evening’s day-nighter. Play gets under way at 2.30pm AEST and you’re free to shoot me on email at any stage with interesting stats and stories, words of encouragement or clarifications for any errors as I clatter away.

Until then batten ‘em down and buckle ‘em up because the action isn’t far away.

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