PSL 11: Multan Sultans secure comfortable six-wicket win over Quetta
- By Web Desk -
- Apr 05, 2026

Multan Sultans delivered a confident, all-round performance to secure a six-wicket win over Quetta Gladiators in the 13th match of PSL 11 at the Gaddafi Stadium on Sunday, chasing down a target that never really looked out of reach.
Set 167, the Multan Sultans paced their innings with a sense of control that stood out in this phase of PSL 11. They reached the target with 15 balls to spare, losing just four wickets along the way, and never allowing the required rate to spiral into pressure.
The tone was set early in PSL 11 when the opening pair came out firing. Sahibzada Farhan and Colin Smith put together a rapid 71-run stand in just five overs, a burst of intent that immediately put Quetta Gladiators on the back foot. Farhan looked particularly aggressive, striking a quick 32 off 14 balls before Alzarri Joseph broke the stand, just as the innings threatened to run away.
Quetta briefly clawed back into the contest — another wicket followed soon after, this time Josh Philippe falling to Saud Shakeel. But by then, the damage had already been done in this PSL 11 encounter, with Multan Sultans comfortably ahead in the chase.
Smith anchored the innings with a fluent 53 off 35 balls, while Shan Masood joined him to steady things further. The pair stitched together a useful partnership that took the game deeper into Multan’s favour, a key phase in this PSL 11 match where composure mattered as much as strike rate.
Even when wickets fell — and they did, at a few crucial moments — the Sultans never truly lost control. Arafat Minhas chipped in before Masood took charge, guiding the side home with an unbeaten 46, ensuring Multan Sultans crossed the line in the 18th over of this PSL 11 fixture.
Earlier, Quetta Gladiators had posted 166/7, a total that always felt slightly below par in the context of PSL 11 conditions. Their innings began on a shaky note, with both openers dismissed cheaply, and although skipper Saud Shakeel tried to steady things, the early losses left them chasing the game.
Shakeel’s 56 was the backbone of Quetta’s effort, built with patience rather than power, while Jacob provided late resistance with an unbeaten 49. But it never felt quite enough against a Multan side that kept picking up wickets at regular intervals throughout this PSL 11 contest.
Hasan Nawaz was the standout performer with the ball, finishing with three wickets, while Arafat Minhas supported well with two. Their efforts ensured Quetta never really got the chance to accelerate late on, which in a tournament like PSL 11, often makes all the difference.
In the end, it was a polished performance from Multan Sultans — disciplined, aggressive when needed, and measured throughout — the kind of win that can quietly build momentum as PSL 11 moves deeper into its early stages.