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WATCH: Shaun Tait interrupted during interaction after he slams fellow coaches
`When we lose badly… they send me when we get beaten badly,` said Tait after Pakistan`s loss against England in the sixth T20I
Phil Salt's 88 trumped Babar Azam's 87 for England to beat Pakistan in the sixth T20I of the series, which will now go right until the end on Sunday (October 2). After Pakistan's disappointing defeat, bowling coach Shaun Tait was sent to the post-match press conference and he was not happy. Former Australia fast bowler said, "When they lose badly, they send me," before the question and answers round began.
As the press conference was just about to begin, the Pakistan Cricket official turned the mic off and asked the bowling coach whether he is okay to do the question and answer round or not.
Checkout the video here...
Coming back to the match, Both openers carried their bats through the sixth match, and Salt's extra ruthlessness was a big reason why England won by eight wickets to even the series 3-3. They play the seventh and last match on Sunday at the same Gaddafi Stadium.
Salt smashed an unbeaten 88 off 41 balls, propelling a chasing England to 170-2 in just 14.3 overs. Babar anchored Pakistan to 169-6 with an unbeaten 87 off 59 balls. Salt's brutal batting in the powerplay led England to 82-1, the most runs ever conceded by Pakistan in the first six overs.
Alex Hales made 27 off 12 balls and added 55 runs with Salt. Then Dawid Malan and Ben Duckett combined with Salt to get England home with 33 balls to spare.
"Thought the way we batted in particular was outstanding," England stand-in captain Moeen Ali said.
"Shows if you stick to the process, you don't have to slog, you can play proper shots. And I thought the seamers were outstanding."
In the absence of rested fast bowler Haris Rauf and an ill Naseem Shah, Pakistan's pace bowlers struggled to halt Salt's power-hitting. Salt scored only 59 runs in the previous five games, but hit 13 fours and three sixes in a brutal display as hundreds of home team fans left Gaddafi in disappointment midway through England's run chase.
"It's always a challenge at the top when you feel you're playing well but picking out fielders and finding ways to get out," Salt said about his previous innings.
"Pleased with the backing from the management about how they want me to play. Everyone's trying to put their best foot forward and show the coaches how good they are."
It was a remarkable turnaround for the visitors after failing to chase down below-par totals in the last two games, losing by three runs at Karachi and by six runs at Lahore on Wednesday.
Earlier, Pakistan was made to bat first and the top order struggled without the world's top ranked T20 batter, Mohammad Rizwan, who was rested after scoring four half-centuries in the previous five games. Rizwan's replacement, wicketkeeper-batter Mohammad Haris scored 7 on debut before slicing an easy catch to short third man off Richard Gleeson, who replaced the rested Chris Woakes.
Shan Masood continued to struggle at No. 3 as he was trapped lbw by David Willey for a duck, and Haider Ali couldn't impress again by holing out in the deep on 18 off Sam Curran.
Babar held the innings together with Iftikhar Ahmed (31) and Mohammad Nawaz (12) as Pakistan made 99 runs in the latter half of its innings.
"It was a good score, could have got 10-15 more," Babar said.
"England's use of the powerplay was the turning point, but our batters (in the middle order) need to take responsibility. Hope they will in the next game."
Salt and Hales combined for a rapid half-century stand off just 23 balls. Hales holed out while playing a slog sweep against legspinner Shadab Khan. Salt and Malan scored freely against fast bowlers Shahnawaz Dahani (0-33), Aamer Jamal (0-30) and Mohammad Wasim (0-29) before Malan was trapped by Shadab on 26. Duckett hit a breezy unbeaten 26 beside Salt to take England home. (With PTI inputs)