Overall, this will be the sixth time that the two sides will be facing each other in the final of a tournament consisting of more than five teams, and the first one since the final of the 2017 Champions Trophy. Pakistan lead the head-to-head in these matches 3-2.Story continues below this adLet’s take a brief look at how each of those matches went:1. 1985 Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket: India win by eight wicketsOne of the most memorable victories in the history of Indian cricket, a number of players involved in that win rate it higher than the seminal 1983 World Cup win. There were quite a few players in the Indian team who had also faced the might of the West Indies in 1983 and the likes of Ravi Shastri, who was player of the tournament, says that this was the year when that team hit its peak. The Javed Miandad-led Pakistan batted first and were undone by Kapil Dev and Laxman Sivaramakrishnan. The pacer and spinner took three wickets each and limited Pakistan to a score of 176/9. India chased it down with ease, with Shastri remaining unbeaten on 63 off 148 balls and sharing a 10-run opening stand with Krishnamachari Srikkanth.2. 1986 Austral-Asia Cup: Pakistan beat India by one wicketA thriller for the ages, India’s top three put up 216 runs on the board but the team ended up finishing their 50 overs with a score of 245/7. Pakistan’s chase was then all about Miandad, who finished unbeaten on 116 off 114 balls. Chetan Sharma with three wickets was India’s highest wicket-taker but it is his and Miandad’s last act that has ended up in India-Pakistan cricket lore.Miandad was on strike with Pakistan needing four runs to win off the last ball and Sharma was the bowler. The latter missed a yorker and sent in a full toss, which Miandad sent flying over midwicket for an astonishing last-ball six. The shot is widely regarded to have started an era of dominance for Pakistan which culminated in them winning the World Cup in 1992.Story continues below this ad3. 1994 Austral-Asia Cup: Pakistan beat India by 39 runsUnlike the 1986 final, the 1994 edition was a far more straightforward affair. Saeed Anwar and Aamir Sohail put up an entertaining stand of 96 runs but Pakistan finished with just a score of 250/6. India, however, could not break free against the Pakistan attack led by Wasim Akram, who finished with figures of 2/39 in 8.4 overs. Vinod Kambli was their highest scorer with 56 runs and India lost by 39 runs.4. 2007 T20 World Cup: India beat Pakistan by five runsA new format and for India, the start of a new era under the captaincy of MS Dhoni. Both sides had been dumped out of the 2007 World Cup just months earlier but that memory seemed to have faded farther into the distance the closer they got to that final in Johannesburg. Gautam Gambhir’s 75 off 54 balls, and a whirlwhind 30 not out off 16 balls by a young Rohit Sharma, helped India get to a score of 157/5. Notably, Pakistan managed to keep the seemingly unstoppable Yuvraj Singh quiet with pacer Umar Gul dismissing him and finishing with impressive figueres of 3/28. India seemed to be on top and even in the clear when Irfan Pathan dismissed captain Shoaib Malik and the dangerous Shahid Afridi in the 12th over. But Mishah-ul-Haq powered a rearguard action and almost single-handedly brought Pakistan within 13 runs of victory at the start of the last over, bowled, quite incredibly, by Joginder Sharma, who started with a wide. Misbah then hit a six of the second legitimate ball, bringing it down to six needed off four. And then, quite inexplicably, Misbah went for a scoop shot with short fine-leg in place to a full delivery on the stumps. Sreesanth was the man there and he gobbled up the easy chance.5. 2017 ICC Champions Trophy final: Pakistan beat India by 180 runs
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