Babar Azam achieves huge feat during ongoing PAK vs RSA first Test

Pakistan’s Babar Azam becomes the first Asian batter to score 3,000 runs in World Test Championship history during the 1st Test against South Africa in Lahore.

Hemanth
Hemanth

3 mins read
Babar Azam becomes the first Asian batter to score 3,000 runs in World Test Championship

Pakistan’s premier batter Babar Azam marked his return to Test cricket with a historic achievement during the first Test against South Africa at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore on Sunday, October 12. Although he was dismissed for 23, the 30-year-old etched his name into the record books by becoming the first Asian cricketer to surpass 3,000 runs in the World Test Championship (WTC).

Babar needed just two runs to reach the milestone before the game and achieved it in style with a boundary off Senuran Muthusamy in the 49th over. With this feat, he joined an elite list of eight players who have crossed the 3,000-run mark in the history of the WTC.

Most Runs in World Test Championship History

Rank Player Team Runs Matches
1 Joe Root England 6,080 69
2 Steve Smith Australia 4,278 55
3 Marnus Labuschagne Australia 4,225 53
4 Ben Stokes England 3,616 57
5 Travis Head Australia 3,300 52
6 Usman Khawaja Australia 3,288 43
7 Zak Crawley England 3,041 52
8 Babar Azam Pakistan 3,003 37

Top Asian Run-Scorers in World Test Championship

Rank Player Team Runs Matches
1 Babar Azam Pakistan 3,003 37
2 Shubman Gill India 2,826 39
3 Rishabh Pant India 2,731 38
4 Rohit Sharma India 2,716 40
5 Dimuth Karunaratne Sri Lanka 2,642 35

ALSO SEE: ICC punishes Jayden Seales for throwing ball at Yashasvi Jaiswal during IND vs WI 2nd Test in Delhi

Match Summary – Pakistan vs South Africa, 1st Test, Lahore

Pakistan opted to bat first in their first home Test in nearly three years and got off to a mixed start. Opener Abdullah Shafique fell early for just two runs, but Imam-ul-Haq and captain Shan Masood steadied the innings with a brilliant 161-run stand for the second wicket.

However, the Proteas bounced back in the second session as spinners Senuran Muthusamy, Prenelan Subrayen, and Simon Harmer exploited the dry surface to restrict Pakistan from 163/1 to 199/5.

Salman Ali Agha and Mohammad Rizwan then took charge, ensuring Pakistan ended the day in a stable position heading into the final session.

Pakistan Playing XI

Imam-ul-Haq, Abdullah Shafique, Shan Masood (c), Babar Azam, Saud Shakeel, Mohammad Rizwan (wk), Salman Agha, Hasan Ali, Shaheen Afridi, Noman Ali, Sajid Khan

South Africa Playing XI

Tony de Zorzi, Ryan Rickelton, Wiaan Mulder, Aiden Markram (c), Tristan Stubbs, Dewald Brevis, Kyle Verreynne (wk), Senuran Muthusamy, Prenelan Subrayen, Kagiso Rabada, Simon Harmer

A Milestone to Remember

With this achievement, Babar Azam has reaffirmed his stature as one of modern cricket’s most consistent Test performers. The right-hander, who has already registered 8 centuries and 18 half-centuries in WTC cricket, now sits just 20 runs shy of overtaking England’s Zak Crawley on the all-time WTC run charts.

His return to form also comes as a major boost for Pakistan, who are starting a new WTC cycle under Shan Masood’s captaincy, looking to rebuild momentum in red-ball cricket.

Tags:

Follow us on

WATCH NOW

WATCH-Rohit-Sharma-saying-how-India-manage-to-win-T20-World-Cup-2024-after-consistent-close-disappointments-in-CEAT-Tyres-Award-2025.webp

4 days ago

Watch: Rohit Sharma's full speech at CEAT Cricket Awards in Mumbai after captaincy snub

IMG_20251007_140440.webp

5 days ago

Watch: Prabhsimran Singh's practice video with Yuvraj Singh after scoring century for India A

Yograj-Singh-training.webp

5 days ago

Watch: Emerging Australian batter training under Yuvraj Singh's father

It is not my job to announce the winner

Rohit Sharma on being asked if England were rightly awarded the World Cup title in 2019