Having lost the first T20I, Pakistan will now come at Sri Lanka all guns blazing in the second, to level the series. Can the tourists pull off a second upset?
The format and the venue change, but Pakistan hope to keep the results the same.
The third and final ODI between Pakistan and Sri Lanka will be played at National Stadium, Karachi on October 2.
The match may have been pushed a day, but the excitement for the Pakistan-Sri Lanka series remains sky high.
Sarah Taylor announced retirement from international cricket; rain washed out the first ODI between at Karachi and forced the second to be postponed; Zimbabwe beat Nepal; Markram scored a hundred against the Indian Board President's XI; and Afghanistan appointed Klusener their head coach.
In Pakistan’s first ODI at home in a while, there is joy, but there is also a lot of pressure riding on the first game of a new era.
Sri Lanka's tour of Pakistan got a go-ahead; Akila has been banned from bowling in international cricket for a year; Scotland beat Netherlands; and the penultimate round of the County Championship got over.
PCB’s much-awaited series in doubt, Shastri dismissed talk of Kohli-Rohit rift, and Anderson blames England pitches for Ashes loss.
Afghanistan beat Bangladesh by 224 runs at Chattogram; Nabi retired from Test cricket; ten Sri Lankan stars have refused to tour Pakistan; and Pollard has been named ODI and T20I captain.