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Pakistan’s Ali Raza had one of the crucial unusual runouts in cricket as he looked as if it would have forgotten about getting back to his crease.

Pakistan’s Ali Raza’s hilarious runout.
(PC: ICC/Screengrab)
For each cricketer, there are some moments of their profession that they appear back to and need might be erased from the world’s memory. For Pakistan’s young pacer Ali Raza, one in every of those incidents happened on Friday (January 16) through the Under-19 World Cup match against England.
He was on the non-striker’s end within the forty seventh over as Pakistan needed 38 runs with only one wicket left. His fellow tailender, Momin Qamar, hit the third ball to deep mid-wicket and rushed for a single. Raza reached the striker’s end comfortably but didn’t tap his bat in immediately. Just because the throw was coming in from the deep, he, for some reason, leaned backwards, as if to permit the ‘keeper to gather the ball.
It gave the look of a standard reflex avoid being hit, but much to Raza’s chagrin, he looked as if it would have forgotten to get back into his crease. Captain Thomas Rew gleefully grabbed the ball and dislodged the bails, and Raza was short. Pakistan’s last wicket fell in one of the crucial bizarre ways at hand them a 37-run defeat.
Watch it here:
It was a rain-marred match. England scored 210/10 in the primary innings, led by a 66 from Caleb Falconer. Pakistan’s bowling was excellent, and Raza took two wickets, including Falconer’s.
The Boys in Green’s batting allow them to down. Nobody crossed 20 aside from captain Farhan Yousaf, who scored 65.
“Felt like we were under par on the halfway stage,” Rew said after the match. “Was slightly bit low but must say an enormous thanks to the groundsmen. Getting a game was unreal. An enormous thing for us was not moving away from the highest of the stumps. Backed it up in the sphere. Some good catches. We took some momentum from those first two warm-up games. We’re in fine condition. Great to win our first game.”
January 17, 2026, 08:43 IST
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