Pakistan fast bowler Haris Rauf did this big thing for his side in the second ODI against Australia, at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. Australia were pushing, trying to get to something competitive, and then Rauf came in with a delivery that totally undid Matt Renshaw, and he walked back to the pavilion, kind of quietly. Renshaw was one of the better batters for Australia that day. He looked pretty relaxed at the crease, and his run-rate kept ticking along better than the rest of the line. The left-handed batter had got to 43 from 43 balls, and honestly it looked like he was on track for a half-century. Watch Video here: Haris Rauf steaming in and rattling the stumps. 😮‍💨🔥- Fast bowling at its absolute best.pic.twitter.com/UiX0vggHAW — Sheri. (@CallMeSheri1_) June 2, 2026 Then Rauf shifted gears. Bowling from around the wicket, the Pakistan pacer fired a back-of-a-length ball, pace clocked at over 141 kmph. After it pitched, the ball skidded , then it also moved back into the batter. Renshaw tried to steer it towards third-man, but there was this small space between bat and pad, just enough. That small space is what Rauf banked on. The ball went straight through, it crashed into the off stump, and the Pakistan fielders jumped up right away. Rauf looked relieved, because that wicket wasn’t easy, it was one of those deliveries that has both speed and movement, so it’s nasty to handle. The wicket also landed at a key moment, so Australia couldn’t really gather momentum in the last part of the innings. Also Read | Watch: Arafat Minhas Produces Unplayable Delivery to Castle Josh Inglis in PAK vs AUS 2nd ODI Australia Keep Struggling With The Bat Still, Australia’s batting never quite got proper control of the game. Alex Carey was dismissed for a duck by Shaheen Afridi in the first over. Matthew Short made 15, but then he fell, becoming Abrar Ahmed’s first wicket of the day. Captain Josh Inglis tried to steady everything with a calm 51 off 74 balls. Cameron Green ended up top-scoring with 53 from 92 deliveries. Both of them looked in rhythm at times, but they couldn’t turn those starts into bigger scores and that hurt them. Pakistan’s bowlers stayed on the pressure, throughout. Arafat Minhas grabbed two important wickets, getting rid of Inglis and Marnus Labuschagne. Abrar Ahmed followed that up with two more wickets, including the big one—Green. Shaheen Afridi struck twice, and Rauf’s dismissal of Renshaw, only made Pakistan’s hold even stronger. With Australia sitting at 202 for 7 after 46.5 overs, they were still hunting for late runs. Oliver Peake was still there, unbeaten on 16, and Nathan Ellis hadn’t really got going yet. Pakistan kept everything tight, and in the end Australia never managed to break free.