Table of Contents
Cricket fan from passionately following the highs and heartbreaks of international cricket. I love diving deep into South Africa vs Pakistan clashes—epic chases, fiery spells, and unforgettable moments. From classic Test battles to modern T20 thrillers, I enjoy analyzing stats, rivalries, and the legends who light up the game.”
Latest Matches
| Tournament | Venue | Date | Toss | SA Score | PAK Score | Result | Series | Player of the Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilateral ODI | Faisalabad | Nov 8, 2025 | N/A | 143 | 144/3 (25.1) | Pakistan won by 7 wickets (with 149 balls remaining) | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Faisalabad | Nov 6, 2025 | N/A | 270/2 (40.1) | 269/9 | South Africa won by 8 wickets (with 59 balls remaining) | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Lahore | Nov 4, 2025 | N/A | 263 | 264/8 (49.4) | Pakistan won by 2 wickets (with 2 balls remaining) | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Lahore | Nov 1, 2025 | N/A | 139/9 | 140/6 (19) | Pakistan won by 4 wickets (with 6 balls remaining) | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Lahore | Oct 31, 2025 | N/A | 110 | 112/1 (13.1) | Pakistan won by 9 wickets (with 41 balls remaining) | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Rawalpindi | Oct 28, 2025 | N/A | 194/9 | 139 (18.1) | South Africa won by 55 runs | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral Test | Rawalpindi | Oct 20-23, 2025 | N/A | 404 & 73/2 | 333 & 138 | South Africa won by 8 wickets | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral Test | Lahore | Oct 12-15, 2025 | N/A | 269 & 183 | 378 & 167 | Pakistan won by 93 runs | South Africa tour of Pakistan 2025/26 | N/A |
| Bilateral Test | Cape Town | Jan 3-6, 2025 | N/A | 615 & 58/0 | 194 & 478 | South Africa won by 10 wickets | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral Test | Centurion | Dec 26-29, 2024 | N/A | 301 & 150/8 | 211 & 237 | South Africa won by 2 wickets | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Johannesburg | Dec 22, 2024 | N/A | 271 (42) | 308/9 (47) | Pakistan won by 36 runs (DLS method) | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Cape Town | Dec 19, 2024 | N/A | 248 (43.1) | 329 | Pakistan won by 81 runs | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral ODI | Paarl | Dec 17, 2024 | N/A | 239/9 | 242/7 (49.3) | Pakistan won by 3 wickets (with 3 balls remaining) | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Johannesburg | Dec 14, 2024 | N/A | – | – | Match abandoned without a ball bowled | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
| Bilateral T20I | Centurion | Dec 13, 2024 | N/A | 210/3 (19.3) | 206/5 | South Africa won by 7 wickets (with 3 balls remaining) | Pakistan tour of South Africa 2024/25 | N/A |
Overview of South Africa National Cricket Team
The South Africa national cricket team, the Proteas, earned Test status in 1889 and dominated early international cricket against England and Australia. Banned from 1970 to 1991 due to apartheid, they returned strongly, topping ICC rankings across formats in 2012. Known for pace bowling prowess and semi-final heartbreaks, they remain a powerhouse in modern era.
Overview of Pakistan National Cricket Team
Pakistan gained Test status in 1952 post-independence, facing early hurdles but surging in the 1980s with flair and talent. Led by Imran Khan, they clinched the 1992 World Cup, followed by 2009 T20 WC and 2017 Champions Trophy. Unpredictable yet brilliant, they’ve produced legends like Wasim Akram and Babar Azam in the modern T20-dominated era
Key Perfomance
| Stat Category | Format | South Africa Performance | Pakistan Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Matches Played | Tests | 28 (15 wins) | 28 (6 wins, 7 draws) |
| Highest Team Total | Tests | 620/7d (135 overs, Cape Town, Jan 2003) | Not specified in records (typically lower, e.g., 450+ in some innings) |
| Lowest Team Total | Tests | Not the lowest (Pakistan holds the record low) | 49 all out (29.1 overs, Johannesburg, Feb 2013) |
| Highest Individual Batting Score | Tests | AB de Villiers 278* (418 balls, Abu Dhabi, Nov 2010) | Not top (e.g., Younis Khan 313 in 2009) |
| Best Bowling Figures (Innings) | Tests | Kyle Abbott 7/29 (11.4 overs, Centurion, Feb 2013) | Hasan Ali 5/38 or similar (not top in records) |
| Best Bowling Figures (Match) | Tests | Dale Steyn 11/60 (36.5 overs, Johannesburg, Feb 2013) | Saeed Ajmal 10/147 (match figures in 2013) |
| Leading Run Scorer | Tests | Jacques Kallis (1,564 runs in 19 Tests, avg 52.13) | Younis Khan (1,077 runs in 14 Tests, avg 44.87)—top Pakistani |
| Leading Wicket Taker | Tests | Dale Steyn (59 wickets in 13 Tests, avg 24.33) | Yasir Shah (41 wickets in 8 Tests, avg 28.41)—top Pakistani |
| Best Chase / Biggest Win | Tests | Biggest win by innings: innings & 142 runs (Cape Town, 2003); 10 wickets (Durban, 2002) | Chased 373/9 for historic win (Centurion, 2021)—rare Test chase success |
| Top Fielding Highlight | Tests | Graeme Smith (23 catches in 16 Tests); Mark Boucher (55 dismissals in 15 Tests) | Kamran Akmal (multiple stumpings/catches, but SA dominates) |
| Total Matches Played | ODIs | 82 (51 wins) | 82 (30 wins, 1 NR) |
| Highest Team Total | ODIs | 392/6 (50 overs, Centurion, 2007) | 351/4 (50 overs, Durban, 2007) |
| Lowest Team Total | ODIs | 101 (26.5 overs, Sharjah, 2000) | 89 (25 overs, Mohali, 2006) |
| Highest Individual Batting Score | ODIs | AB de Villiers 128 (108 balls, Johannesburg, 2013) | Fakhar Zaman 193 (155 balls, Johannesburg, 2021) |
| Best Bowling Figures | ODIs | Dale Steyn 6/39 (9 overs, Gqeberha, 2013)—wait, updated to 6/29 in some records | Wasim Akram 5/16 (6.1 overs, East London, 1993) |
| Leading Run Scorer | ODIs | AB de Villiers (1,423 runs, avg 59.29) | Mohammad Yousuf (1,116 runs, avg 34.87) |
| Leading Wicket Taker | ODIs | Makhaya Ntini (49 wickets, avg 20.24) / Shaun Pollock (49, avg 25.14) | Waqar Younis (58 wickets, avg 24.89) |
| Best Chase | ODIs | Chased 329 (for 81-run win, but not highest); narrow wins like 1 run (Cape Town, 2013) | Highest chase: 274/6 (for 1-wicket win, Chennai, 2023 WC); epic 193 by Fakhar in chase |
| Top Fielding Highlight | ODIs | Jacques Kallis (multiple catches; all-round impact) | Inzamam-ul-Haq (run-outs and catches in key games) |
| Total Matches Played | T20Is | 25 (13 wins) | 25 (12 wins) |
| Highest Team Total | T20Is | 205/1 (20 overs, Centurion, 2021) | 210/3 (20 overs, Lahore, 2021) |
| Lowest Team Total | T20Is | 98/9 (20 overs, Dubai, 2013) | 60/9 (19.3 overs, Johannesburg, 2007) |
| Highest Individual Batting Score | T20Is | Rilee Rossouw 100* (55 balls, Sydney, 2022) | Babar Azam 122 (59 balls, Lahore, 2021) |
| Best Bowling Figures | T20Is | Tabraiz Shamsi 4/25 (4 overs, Lahore, 2021) | Umar Gul 5/6 (2.2 overs, Johannesburg, 2007) |
| Leading Run Scorer | T20Is | David Miller (359 runs, avg 29.91) / Reeza Hendricks (330 runs) | Mohammad Rizwan (462 runs, avg 51.33) / Babar Azam (447 runs, avg 37.25) |
| Leading Wicket Taker | T20Is | George Linde (12 wickets in 7 matches, avg 16.08) | Shaheen Afridi (20 wickets in 14 matches, avg 18.25) |
| Best Chase | T20Is | Chased 189/4 (for 6-wicket win, Lahore, 2021) | Chased 210/3 (for 7-wicket win, Centurion, 2021)—thrilling high-score pursuit |
| Top Fielding Highlight | T20Is | David Miller (multiple run-outs and catches in Super Overs) | Mohammad Rizwan (stumpings and catches as keeper) |
Pace, Fear, and Fire in the 1990s
As the south africa national cricket team vs pakistan national cricket team timeline moved through the mid and late 1990s, the rivalry found its true identity in fast bowling. This was an era when helmets felt optional and survival mattered more than strike rates. Pakistan’s attack, led by Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, brought late swing and hostile intent. South Africa countered with Allan Donald and Shaun Pollock, bowlers who hit the pitch hard and never backed down.
Scorecards from this period read like battle reports. Top orders rarely dominated for long. One spell could flip a match inside ten overs. Batters such as Inzamam ul Haq and Gary Kirsten became symbols of resistance, not just run scorers. Every run carried pressure, and every wicket triggered roars from opposing fans.
These contests hardened both sides. Pakistan learned to grind against discipline. South Africa learned to absorb chaos. The rivalry was no longer new. It was personal, shaped by fear, respect, and the constant threat of collapse that lived inside every scorecard of the decade.
| Year | Format | Series | Venue | Match Result | Margin | Top Run Scorer | Runs | Best Bowler | Figures | Player of Match |
| 1993 | Test | Pakistan tour of SA | Durban | Drawn | Match drawn | Javed Miandad | 93 | Allan Donald | 5 for 64 | Allan Donald |
| 1994 | ODI | Singer Cup | Sharjah | Pakistan won | 7 wickets | Inzamam ul Haq | 89 | Wasim Akram | 3 for 41 | Inzamam ul Haq |
| 1995 | Test | SA tour of Pak | Lahore | South Africa won | 8 wickets | Gary Kirsten | 118 | Shaun Pollock | 4 for 71 | Gary Kirsten |
| 1996 | ODI | World Cup | Rawalpindi | South Africa won | 6 wickets | Herschelle Gibbs | 89 | Lance Klusener | 3 for 35 | Lance Klusener |
| 1997 | Test | SA tour of Pak | Faisalabad | Drawn | Match drawn | Inzamam ul Haq | 104 | Waqar Younis | 5 for 91 | Inzamam ul Haq |
| 1998 | ODI | Tri Series | Sharjah | Pakistan won | 12 runs | Saeed Anwar | 109 | Wasim Akram | 4 for 38 | Saeed Anwar |
| 1999 | Test | Pak tour of SA | Cape Town | South Africa won | Innings win | Jacques Kallis | 112 | Allan Donald | 6 for 75 | Allan Donald |
| 1999 | ODI | World Cup | Nottingham | Pakistan won | 5 wickets | Mohammad Yousuf | 68 | Waqar Younis | 3 for 33 | Waqar Younis |
Controversies, On Field Aggression, and Mind Games
The south africa national cricket team vs pakistan national cricket team timeline is not built on runs and wickets alone. It is layered with flashpoints where tempers flared, words were exchanged, and psychological battles became as important as tactics. These moments rarely changed scorecards directly, but they altered momentum and mindset.
Fast bowlers led the aggression. Bouncers were followed by stares. Appeals lingered a second too long. South African sides were known for their relentless verbal pressure, while Pakistan responded with defiance and sudden bursts of brilliance. Batters like Inzamam ul Haq and later Babar Azam often faced fields set to intimidate, not just contain.
There were controversial umpiring calls, heated send offs, and matches where one incident shifted the tone of an entire series. Fans reacted fiercely. Social media debates followed long after the final ball. These mind games created scars and stories that players carried into the next contest. When these teams met again, memory played a role. Every short ball felt personal. Every appeal carried history.
| Year | Format | Series | Venue | Incident Type | Key Players Involved | Match Result | Impact on Series |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | Test | Pak tour of SA | Durban | Heated sledging | Allan Donald, Miandad | Drawn | Rivalry intensified |
| 1996 | ODI | World Cup | Rawalpindi | Crowd pressure | Gibbs, Akram | SA won | Pakistan morale hit |
| 1998 | ODI | Tri Series | Sharjah | Aggressive bowling | Wasim, Gibbs | Pak won | Momentum shift |
| 2003 | ODI | World Cup | Centurion | Umpiring debate | Inzamam | Pak won | Fan outrage |
| 2007 | Test | Pak tour of SA | Centurion | Short ball tactics | Shoaib, Smith | Drawn | Tactical rethink |
| 2013 | Test | SA tour of Pak | Dubai | Spin intimidation | Ajmal, Amla | Pak won | SA batting exposed |
| 2018 | Test | Pak tour of SA | Cape Town | Verbal exchanges | Rabada, Sarfaraz | SA won | Series dominance |
| 2021 | Test | Pak tour of SA | Johannesburg | Final session tension | Hasan Ali | Pak won | Historic Pak win |
Record Breaking Performances That Rewrote the Rivalry
Every long rivalry needs moments that rise above context, and in the south africa national cricket team vs pakistan national cricket team timeline, record breaking performances have repeatedly reset expectations. These were not just big scores or five wicket hauls. They were statements made under pressure, often against the grain of the match.
Pakistan’s batters produced innings that combined flair with survival. Saeed Anwar’s fluency, Inzamam ul Haq’s calm dominance, and later Babar Azam’s modern consistency forced South Africa to rethink bowling plans. On the other side, South African batters answered with control and power. Jacques Kallis built innings brick by brick. AB de Villiers shattered tempo norms. Aiden Markram carried that tradition forward.
Bowling records mattered just as much. From Allan Donald’s hostile spells to Dale Steyn’s reverse swing masterclasses, wickets arrived in clusters. These performances changed series narratives and left permanent marks on scorecards. Fans remember where they were when these records happened. That is how rivalries mature, through moments that refuse to fade.
| Year | Format | Venue | Player | Team | Record Type | Achievement | Opponent Score | Match Result | Lasting Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995 | Test | Lahore | Gary Kirsten | SA | Highest Test score | 118 | 219 all out | SA won | Series turning point |
| 1998 | ODI | Sharjah | Saeed Anwar | Pak | Highest ODI score | 109 | 235 for 7 | Pak won | Dominant final |
| 1999 | Test | Cape Town | Allan Donald | SA | Best bowling | 6 for 75 | 197 all out | SA won | Pace benchmark |
| 2003 | ODI | Centurion | Inzamam ul Haq | Pak | WC match best | 91 | 253 for 6 | Pak won | Pressure masterclass |
| 2009 | Test | Dubai | Younis Khan | Pak | Career best | 148 | 379 for 4 | Drawn | Batting authority |
| 2015 | ODI | Auckland | Faf du Plessis | SA | WC century | 106 | 411 for 4 | SA won | Tournament dominance |
| 2021 | Test | Johannesburg | Fawad Alam | Pak | Comeback century | 109 | 298 all out | Pak won | Historic chase |
| 2022 | T20I | Lahore | Babar Azam | Pak | Highest T20 score | 122 | 199 for 5 | Pak won | Modern era peak |
| 2023 | ODI | Chennai | Aiden Markram | SA | Fastest WC fifty | 91 | 297 for 8 | SA won | New generation mark |
2006-2013: The Golden Era of Proteas Dominance
This period belonged entirely to South Africa. Dale Steyn emerged as the most lethal fast bowler on the planet. His ability to swing the ball both ways at fierce pace, combined with pinpoint accuracy, made him unplayable. Alongside Morne Morkel and Vernon Philander, South Africa built a pace attack that demolished batting lineups worldwide. Pakistan faced the brunt of this firepower. Hashim Amla and Jacques Kallis piled on runs with clinical precision. AB de Villiers redefined batting innovation with strokes that defied conventional technique.
The 2007 tour of Pakistan gave South Africa their first Test series win on Pakistani soil. Kallis scored twin centuries in Karachi, while Steyn announced his arrival in Asian conditions with crucial wickets. But nothing compared to what happened at the Wanderers in 2013. February 1st became a date etched in infamy for Pakistan cricket. Chasing a mammoth total after South Africa posted 253, Pakistan crumbled to 49 all out in just 29.1 overs. Steyn took six wickets for eight runs in one of the most devastating bowling performances in Test history. Nine batsmen fell caught behind. The pace, the swing, the bounce, everything overwhelmed Pakistan. It remains their lowest Test score ever. Steyn finished with match figures of eleven for sixty, sealing a 211 run victory that showcased South Africa’s utter dominance.
| Date | Venue | Format | Result | South Africa Score | Pakistan Score | Key Performer | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 1-5, 2007 | Karachi | Test | South Africa Won | 450 & 265/4d | 291 & 263 | Kallis (155 & 100) | 160 runs |
| Oct 10-13, 2007 | Lahore | Test | Match Drawn | 416/6d & 74/1 | 427 | Younis (173) | Draw |
| Nov 12-15, 2010 | Dubai | Test | Match Drawn | 341 & 227/2 | 349 & 139/5 | Morkel (5/72) | Draw |
| Nov 18-22, 2010 | Abu Dhabi | Test | Match Drawn | 278 & 242/5 | 359 | Misbah (161) | Draw |
| Feb 1-4, 2013 | Johannesburg | Test | South Africa Won | 253 & 275/3d | 49 & 268 | Steyn (11/60) | 211 runs |
| Feb 14-17, 2013 | Cape Town | Test | South Africa Won | 326 & 182/6 | 338 & 169 | de Villiers (103*) | 4 wickets |
| Feb 22-24, 2013 | Centurion | Test | South Africa Won | 409 | 156 & 235 (f/o) | Steyn (6 wkts) | Innings & 18 runs |
| Mar 10, 2013 | Bloemfontein | ODI | South Africa Won | 230/6 | 183 | du Plessis (53*) | 47 runs |
| Mar 15, 2013 | Durban | ODI | Pakistan Won | 209 | 212/4 | Hafeez (72*) | 6 wickets |
Head-to-Head: The Numbers That Tell the Story
Numbers never lie, and in this rivalry, they paint a fascinating portrait of dominance, resilience, and dramatic shifts in momentum. As of December 2024, South Africa and Pakistan have clashed 145 times across all formats. The Proteas hold the overall advantage with 82 wins compared to Pakistan’s 52 victories. Yet these raw statistics hide the incredible swings that define this contest. South Africa dominated Tests with 17 wins against Pakistan’s 6, along with 7 draws in 30 encounters. Their pace battery, led by Dale Steyn’s 64 wickets against Pakistan, proved almost unstoppable on home soil.
The ODI battlefield tells a similar story with South Africa winning 53 of 90 matches while Pakistan claimed 36 victories. But recent history shows shifting tides. Pakistan’s historic 3-0 whitewash in December 2024 marked the first time any team swept South Africa at home in an ODI series, a statement victory that echoed loudly. In T20Is, the contest remains perfectly balanced with both teams winning 12 matches each from 26 encounters. This format showcases Pakistan’s unpredictability against South Africa’s tactical discipline. Hashim Amla leads all South African batsmen against Pakistan with over 1400 runs across formats, while Jacques Kallis contributed both with bat and ball throughout his career. For Pakistan, Inzamam ul Haq tortured South African bowlers with elegant strokeplay, while Babar Azam has emerged as the modern torchbearer with multiple centuries across formats.
| Format | Matches Played | South Africa Wins | Pakistan Wins | Draws/No Result | SA Win % | PAK Win % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 30 | 17 | 6 | 7 | 56.7% | 20.0% |
| ODIs | 90 | 53 | 36 | 1 | 58.9% | 40.0% |
| T20Is | 26 | 12 | 12 | 2 | 46.2% | 46.2% |
| Total | 146 | 82 | 54 | 10 | 56.2% | 37.0% |
| Player | Country | Format | Runs | Average | Centuries | Fifties | Highest Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hashim Amla | South Africa | All | 1423 | 47.43 | 3 | 8 | 159* |
| Jacques Kallis | South Africa | All | 1389 | 38.58 | 4 | 7 | 155 |
| Inzamam-ul-Haq | Pakistan | All | 1156 | 44.46 | 2 | 8 | 142 |
| Babar Azam | Pakistan | All | 987 | 49.35 | 5 | 4 | 122 |
| AB de Villiers | South Africa | All | 956 | 36.76 | 2 | 6 | 103* |
| Graeme Smith | South Africa | Tests | 876 | 40.72 | 3 | 4 | 151 |
| Mohammad Rizwan | Pakistan | All | 745 | 37.25 | 1 | 5 | 115* |
| Younis Khan | Pakistan | All | 723 | 32.86 | 1 | 5 | 117 |
| Player | Country | Format | Wickets | Average | Best Figures | 5-Wicket Hauls | Economy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dale Steyn | South Africa | All | 64 | 22.45 | 6/8 | 5 | 3.12 |
| Shaheen Afridi | Pakistan | All | 41 | 24.63 | 5/51 | 3 | 4.95 |
| Wasim Akram | Pakistan | All | 40 | 26.85 | 5/25 | 2 | 3.87 |
| Kagiso Rabada | South Africa | All | 39 | 23.17 | 5/59 | 2 | 4.32 |
| Morne Morkel | South Africa | All | 38 | 28.94 | 5/21 | 1 | 3.54 |
| Waqar Younis | Pakistan | All | 37 | 24.21 | 7/87 | 3 | 3.45 |
| Imran Tahir | South Africa | ODI | 22 | 19.36 | 4/21 | 0 | 4.28 |
| Hasan Ali | Pakistan | All | 21 | 27.42 | 5/34 | 1 | 5.12 |
Conclusion
Looking back at the south africa national cricket team vs pakistan national cricket team timeline, one truth stands clear. This rivalry has never stood still. Power has shifted, styles have evolved, and generations have changed, yet intensity has remained constant. From five day Test marathons to sudden T20 chaos, these teams have pushed each other to adapt and improve. Scorecards reveal close margins, while memories reveal lasting impact. As new players step in and tactics continue to evolve, this rivalry remains one of cricket’s most compelling narratives, still capable of producing drama, brilliance, and defining moments.
FAQs
When did South Africa and Pakistan first play international cricket against each other
They first met in the early 1990s after South Africa’s return to international cricket, marking the beginning of a competitive rivalry.
Which format has produced the most intense South Africa vs Pakistan matches
Test cricket has delivered the deepest battles, while T20 matches have added chaos and unpredictability.
Who are the most influential players in this rivalry
Players like Wasim Akram, Allan Donald, Inzamam ul Haq, Jacques Kallis, AB de Villiers, and Babar Azam have shaped key moments.
Have World Cups played a major role in this rivalry
Yes, World Cup encounters added pressure and global attention, often producing defining moments and upsets.
What makes this rivalry unique compared to others
The clash of discipline versus unpredictability, combined with shifting power balance and emotional intensity, makes it distinct.
