{{GOOGLE_AD_1}}At Gabba, in the 1st T20I in between Australia and Pakistan, the match was reduced to 7 over a side and Pakistan asked the hosts to bat first. Australia started well by scoring 16 runs in the first over. However, Naseem Shah dismissed Jake Fraser-McGurk on the first ball of the second over. Glenn Maxwell came in and smashed a stunning reverse sweep for a four off the first ball he faced. He did not stop himself over there as he went on to smash three more fours off the last three balls and racking up 17 runs in just one over. Watch this Amazing shot by Glenn Maxwell off Naseem Shah 'This is why people pay a lot of money to watch this guy bat' #AUSvPAK pic.twitter.com/Zwab5Pnw3j — cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) November 14, 2024 Also Read | Mohammed Shami is Back, Takes 4-wicket Against MP in his Comeback Ranji Trophy Match Shaheen Shah Afridi also became the victim of Maxwell's reverse sweep as the all-rounder smashed him for a six over third man. Afridi bowled a short delivery which angled across with the pace. Maxwell reverse-swept to send the ball over the rope for a flat six. Watch the video here: சாதா மழை நின்னதும் Sixer மழை ஆரம்பிச்சுருச்சு! 🥳⛈📺 தொடர்ந்து காணுங்கள் | Australia vs Pakistan | 1st T20I | Star Sports தமிழில்#AUSvPAKOnStar #GlennMaxwell pic.twitter.com/hq9QC7FYdG — Star Sports Tamil (@StarSportsTamil) November 14, 2024 Maxwell Joins Elite 10,000-Run Club Australian all-rounder Glenn Maxwell produced spectacular display of batting against Pakistan in the first T20I match on November 14 at Brisbane. He reached 43 off 19 deliveries, including five fours and three sixes, in a seven-over match for Australia to get off to a flyer. In doing so, Maxwell marked a milestone as he became the third Australian player to score 10,000 runs in T20 cricket. It came in the wake of his 421 T20 matches since he made his T20 debut in 2010. He needed 12 runs to reach the 10,000 run-mark and he achieved it by hitting four fours in an over off Pakistan's Naseem Shah. Coming on to the game, rain and lightning shortened the match into seven overs apiece at the Gabba. However, due to the great drainage here, play was able to resume immediately when the rain stopped. Once Australia lost the toss, they came out in there like any other guns blazing with some aggressive batting. With Glenn Maxwell's blistering knock and 21 off 7 balls by Marcus Stoinis, Australia scored 93 in their seven overs.