Melbourne: England's golden generation of white-ball cricketers overcame a spirited Pakistan to win the T20 World Cup with a five-wicket victory in the title clash, here on Sunday.
The Pakistani fans had hoped for an encore of 1992, when Imran Khan's team created history at this very venue, but Pakistan's batting resembled more like their 1999 World Cup final effort at the Lord's.
Their batting had imploded in that final as they couldn't negotiate Shane Warne in that contest and today it was Rashid Khan, who had a stranglehold over Pakistan as his loopy flighted leg breaks flummoxed the batters.
The total of 137 for 8 that Pakistan managed after being asked to bat was never going to be good enough.
The seasoned Ben Stokes (52 not out off 49 balls) just like the 2019 ODI World Cup, anchored the chase despite occasional scratchiness and had a calm Moeen Ali (19) as an ideal foil.
They chased down the target in 19 overs to regain the title they had won in 2010 in the West Indies.
Experienced Haris Rauf and young Nasim Shah bowled their hearts out to prevent it from becoming a one-sided game but Stokes soaked the pressure along with Ali as the duo put on a 48-run stand for the fifth wicket to nail the win that avenged England's loss to the same rivals in the '92 World Cup final.
Pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi also could not bowl his full quota of overs after suffering a hamstring injury while fielding and that too helped England.
The Player of the evening was certainly left-arm seamer Sam Curran, whose couple of spells heavily tilted the game in the favour England.
Stokes took 30 balls to measure the Pakistani attack but with no scoreboard pressure, the southpaw pressed the accelerator just when needed to finish the match.
The MCG rooted for Pakistan but no one grudged when Stokes pumped his fists after what had been an incredibly difficult few years, battling depression and mental health issues.
In front of an audience of 80,462, two highly-rated but not enough celebrated T20 bowlers Curran and Rashid scripted the win.
The duo put relentless pressure on the Pakistan batting line-up to restrict the opposition to a below-par 137 for eight.
Curran, who made comeback from an injury earlier this year, has been England's go to' bowler in the competition and he proved that on the big stage with brilliant figures of 4-0-12-3. The wily Rashid (4-1-22-2) wasn't going to be left far behind as he choked the run-flow in the middle overs with as many as 25 dot balls between him and Curran.
The MCG track had enough bounce and pace but Buttler's best-performing bowling duo (Curran and Rashid) did exactly the opposite — taking the pace off their deliveries.
Rashid flighted and lowered his pace to 75 kmph while Curran bowled between 126 kmph to 130 kmph which made run scoring difficult for the Pakistani batters.
Both Babar (32 off 28 balls) and Mohammed Rizwan (15 off 14) started on a cautious note as they had been doing for the past one year.
Curran, England's most consistent bowler in the tournament, angled one across at fuller length and Rizwan didn't have enough width to drive as he dragged that back to the stumps.
Babar hit a couple of boundaries but as it has been for him generally, it was more of a struggle to keep the scoreboard alive.
At the start of the back-10, when Jos Buttler introduced Liam Livingstone to bowl his off-breaks, Shan got 14 runs with a down-the-ground boundary and a six.
But Babar at the other end was foxed by Rashid as he shaped to play the cut and found a googly cramping him for room to give a return catch to the English leg-spinner of Pakistani descent.
Iftikhar Ahmed (0) would like to forget the evening as he was kept under a tight leash by Rashid and then Stokes bowled one in the channel to get a nick as Pakistan slumped to 85 for 4 in the 13th over.
Shan built a launchpad for himself and threw it all away as Curran tested his patience with variations of cross-seam deliveries and cutters.