Having smacked 28 off 8, he sealed victory by bowling the final over of a seesawing thriller
Lahore Qalandars 168 for 7 (Shafique 52, Ghulam 30, Wiese 28*, Dawson 2-24) beat Islamabad United 162 all out (Azam 40, Hales 38, Rauf 2-31) by 6 runs
That couldn’t continue endlessly, and United struck back hard. Shadab Khan deceived Ghulam in the flight to break the partnership, and took a lovely catch off Maqsood’s bowling to remove Shafique, while some self-destructive running put paid to Harry Brooks. Qalandars slumped along to 141 in 19 overs, before, pricelessly, their perpetual saviour Wiese bludgeoned 27 off the final over to give his side something to bowl at.
Just as yesterday, however, Hales and Azam played vital knocks to keep United in the hunt. Azam smashed a four and a six off Mohammad Hafeez’s only over, while Hales dealt the same treatment to Samit Patel as United began to break the back of the chase. Qalandars briefly lost their discipline in the field. Three consecutive balls saw, in the following order: a Hales drop that went for six, five wides, and another Hales drop, suddenly making the equation a very favourable 55 off 47 with six wickets in hand.
A sloppy run-out to get rid of, predictably, Azam, brought Qalandars back into the contest, before a smart catch from Ghulam finally removed Hales. Suddenly, the Qalandars were sneaking into the United tail, though a poor final over from Shaheen put United back in pole position. Zaman Khan, who has had a breakout tournament, dismissed Hasan Ali as he tried to go for a six, and the game would go the distance.
The second innings would end as the first did, with Wiese trying to drag back this enigmatic Qalandars side into the contest. In a lot of ways, it’s felt like this South African-Namibian allrounder has personified Qalandars’ struggles these last few years, from their mesmeric brilliance to depressing listlessness. The joy on his face as Shafique took that final catch, though, suggested he wouldn’t change it for the world.
For United, though, a tournament in which they had little right to go as deep as this, given the injuries they’ve endured, would end with a fourth successive season without a final berth. For the side that prioritises six-hitting to an almost messianic extent, it was perhaps appropriate that they fell short by precisely that number.
Danyal Rasool is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @Danny61000