Pakistan National Cricket Team vs West Indies Cricket Team Stats

Pakistan National Cricket Team vs West Indies Cricket Team Stats

The Pakistan vs West Indies rivalry is pure cricket magic – a fiery clash of Caribbean flair and Pakistani grit that has delivered drama, heartbreak, and glory for over six decades. From Sobers’ world-record tons and Wasim-Waqar’s reverse swing terror to Babar’s calm chases and Shaheen’s fiery spells, every era brings fresh legends, raw aggression, and fan passion that turns stadiums into battlegrounds of pride.

Latest Matches

Recent Pakistan National Cricket Team Vs West Indies National Cricket Team Timeline encounters across formats (as of February 2026)

Head-to-Head Summary Table

Top 5 All-Time Wicket-Takers (All Formats Combined)

Top Standout Batters (Modern Era + Recent H2H)

The First Encounters: 1950s Dominance and Pakistan’s Gritty Awakening

The rivalry ignited in the Caribbean during Pakistan’s 1957-58 tour, where West Indies, boasting legends like Everton Weekes and Clyde Walcott, asserted dominance in a five-Test series. The opener at Bridgetown ended in a draw, but not without drama: Pakistan collapsed to 106 first up, West Indies replied with 579/9d led by Walcott’s 145, then Hanif Mohammad’s epic 337 in 970 minutes anchored Pakistan’s 657/8d for survival. West Indies won the next two convincingly, including a crushing innings victory at Kingston where Garry Sobers smashed a world-record 365 not out in their 790/3d. Pakistan fought back in Georgetown, winning by eight wickets after a bold chase of 325, finishing 325/2 thanks to Saeed Ahmed’s 150. But West Indies sealed 3-1 with another innings thrashing in the finale.

The tables turned in 1958-59 when West Indies visited Pakistan. In Karachi, Fazal Mahmood’s 6/34 skittled them for 146, leading to Pakistan’s 10-wicket win. West Indies hit back in Dacca with an innings triumph, but Lahore saw Pakistan chase 365 with Hanif’s unbeaten 161, clinching a 2-1 series upset. Fans in packed stadiums erupted; aggression flared with bouncers from Wes Hall testing Pakistani grit.

The Reverse Swing Revolution: 1990s – Wasim and Waqar Turn the Tide

The 1990s marked Pakistan’s resurgence, fueled by Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis’ lethal reverse swing that dismantled West Indies’ vaunted batsmen. The era kicked off with the 1990-91 home series, where Pakistan swept the ODIs 3-0 and drew Tests 1-1. In the first ODI at Karachi, Pakistan posted 211/5 before Waqar’s 5/52 sealed a six-run win amid tense chases and verbal spars. Tests saw aggression peak in Lahore’s decider, Pakistan chasing 98/2 after Wasim’s 5/101. But West Indies struck back in 1992 World Cup at Melbourne, chasing Pakistan’s 220/2 with 221/0, Haynes’ 88* humiliating the bowlers.

The 1992-93 tour to Caribbean was brutal; West Indies won Tests 2-0, including a 204-run thrashing in Trinidad where Walsh’s 9/86 crushed Pakistan. ODIs drew 2-2, with Lara’s brilliance clashing Pakistan’s fight. Tensions boiled in on-field confrontations. By 1997-98, Pakistan dominated home Tests 3-0, Wasim’s 18 wickets and Inzamam’s 177 in Rawalpindi exemplifying reverse swing mastery. The 1999 World Cup clash at Bristol saw Pakistan defend 229/8 with Wasim’s 3/28, winning by 27 runs. Fans in Lahore and Bridgetown roared; pressure moments like collapses under swing defined the shift.

Modern Classics and World Cup Drama: 2000s – Lara’s Magic vs Pakistan’s Fightbacks

The 2000s saw Brian Lara’s batting genius clash with Pakistan’s resilient comebacks, turning series into classics amid World Cup heartbreaks. The decade opened with the 2000 Caribbean tour, where West Indies edged Tests 1-0 after a thrilling one-wicket win in Antigua, chasing 216/9 thanks to Walsh’s defiant last-ball single. ODIs flipped as Pakistan clinched the finals 2-1, defending low totals fiercely. In 2003 World Cup at Cape Town, Lara’s 111 powered West Indies to a three-run victory, Pakistan agonizingly short at 243/8. The 2004 Champions Trophy saw West Indies chase 132/3 easily.

Pakistan roared back in 2005, sweeping ODIs 3-0 in the Caribbean with Inzamam’s tons, then splitting Tests 1-1—losing badly in Bridgetown but crushing Kingston by 136 runs via Kaneria’s spin. Home dominance peaked in 2006: ODIs 3-1 to Pakistan, Tests 2-0 with a Multan draw where Lara’s 216 shone, but Umar Gul’s 8/106 in Lahore sealed aggression. The 2007 World Cup opener stung—West Indies’ 241/9 led to Pakistan’s 187 collapse. By 2008-09, Pakistan swept Abu Dhabi ODIs and won Champions Trophy clash defending 134/5. Fans rioted in joy or fury; sledging intensified, like Akhtar vs Lara duels.

T20 Era Takeover: 2010s – Pakistan’s White-Ball Mastery Begins

The 2010s ushered in Pakistan’s T20 dominance over West Indies, transforming the rivalry into a one-sided white-ball masterclass. Their first clash came in 2011 at Gros Islet, where West Indies edged a thriller by 7 runs—150/7 defended against Pakistan’s 143/9 amid tense late collapse. But that was West Indies’ last gasp; Pakistan stormed ahead relentlessly.

In 2013 at Arnos Vale, Pakistan swept 2-0: chasing 153 and 125 with composure, Shahid Afridi’s fireworks and Umar Akmal’s finishing shining. The 2016-17 UAE series saw a 3-0 clean sweep—Pakistan’s spin and death bowling suffocated West Indies’ power hitters. Hasan Ali emerged in 2017 Caribbean tour, Pakistan winning 3-1 despite Pollard heroics in one game. The pinnacle hit in 2018 Karachi home series: 3-0 rout, including a record 143-run thrashing (Pakistan 203/5, West Indies 60 all out) and Babar Azam’s elegant tons. Shoaib Malik and Shadab Khan orchestrated collapses; crowds in Karachi erupted wildly, chanting as West Indies wilted under pressure.

Aggression peaked with sledging and bouncer wars, but Pakistan’s tactical edge—yorkers, variations, calm chases—defined the era. Fans felt the shift: from Caribbean hope to Pakistani inevitability.

Recent Fireworks and Shifting Balances: 2020s to 2025 – Series Wins, Comebacks, and Fresh Rivalry Heat

The 2020s to 2025 reignited the Pakistan national cricket team vs West Indies cricket team rivalry with fresh heat, comebacks, and shifting balances. Pakistan maintained T20I supremacy but faced stern challenges in longer formats and ODIs. The 2021 West Indies tour saw Pakistan draw Tests 1-1 (Shaheen Afridi’s heroics in Jamaica) and win T20Is 1-0 (one washed out), with Babar Azam’s calm anchoring chases. In 2021-22 UAE, Pakistan swept T20Is 3-0, including record chases like 209 in Karachi’s thriller.

The 2022 home ODIs crushed West Indies 3-0, Imam-ul-Haq’s tons powering comfortable wins. Tests in 2021 drew, but 2024-25 home series against West Indies ended 1-1 (Pakistan’s Multan win by 127 runs, West Indies’ 120-run triumph in the second). The 2025 tour to West Indies/USA delivered fireworks: Pakistan took T20Is 2-1 (close finishes, Saim Ayub’s fifties), but West Indies claimed ODIs 2-1, ending a 34-year drought with massive margins like 202-run thrashing (Hope’s 120*), Seales’ pace devastating Pakistan.

Conclusion

In the end, this epic saga shows balance shifting yet passion enduring. West Indies ruled the early decades with unbeatable pace and strokeplay, Pakistan flipped the script through swing mastery and T20 dominance, while recent years hint at West Indies’ stirring comeback. The fire still burns bright – two proud nations, endless stories, one unforgettable rivalry.

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