It is a historic win for the West Indies in the ODI series, as they beat Pakistan by 202 runs.
The Caribbean cricket team beats the Green Shirts in an ODI series for the first time since 1991, ending a 34-year run.
Pakistan was out for 92 in 29.2 overs while trying to score 295 runs.
Hope and Greaves scored 110 runs together to change the flow of the game.
Lewis and Carty keep things stable early on before a middle-order surge.

Pakistan was bowled out for 92 runs, falling short by 202 runs, resulting in a West Indies victory of 2-1 in the third ODI.
At the Brian Lara Cricket Academy in Trinidad and Tobago on Tuesday, the West Indies easily won the third One-Day International (ODI) by 202 runs thanks to an unbeaten century by Roston Chase and a maiden six-for by Jayden Seales.
Pakistan’s top order was blown away by Seales, who got 6–18. The Windies bowled out the visitors for just 92 runs, despite needing to win by 295 runs.
While playing first, the Windies got to 294-6 in their 50 overs, thanks in large part to captain Shai Hope’s brilliant, unbeaten hundred.
The Caribbean team won their first ODI series against Pakistan since 1991. This came after Australia beat them 3-0 in the Test series and 5-0 in the T20 series earlier in the summer.
“We tend to focus on the bad things about the West Indies,” Hope said. “So many good things to shout about!” It’s motivating to see the team make history. Seales is a talented bowler.

He is something special. He puts up his hands for everything you ask him to do.
In the first three overs, Seales got rid of Saim Ayub, Abdullah Shafique, and Mohammad Rizwan, which made Pakistan’s reply very difficult and brought them down to 8-3.
Seales’s trapping of Babar Azam for just nine runs ended Pakistan’s hopes of a 2-1 series win.
Seas made things hard for us. This trend stayed the same throughout the series. “But we lost three early wickets, and that cost us,” Rizwan, the captain of Pakistan, said.
Gudakesh Motie, a left-arm spinner, got two wickets in the middle overs.
Then Seales came back and got Hasan Ali and Naseem Shah, two tailenders, to finish a six-fer.
Roston Chase ran out Pakistan’s number 11 player, Abrar Ahmed, to secure victory for the hosts. They had already lost the first game of the series.
Pakistan won the toss and chose to field. They made a strong start with the ball, making it difficult for the West Indies to reach the boundary.
Keacy Carty was out lbw for 17 runs off 45 balls, leaving the home team with a score of 68-3.
Sherfane Rutherford, who is known for hitting hard, had a hard time scoring. He got only 15 runs off 40 balls before Ayub got rid of him.
But Chase quickly scored 36 runs to save the game and give Hope much-needed help.
Mohammad Nawaz caught and bowled Motie, while Naseem bowled Chase. The West Indies’ batting was on the verge of exhaustion.
But Hope and Justin Greaves scored 110 runs in the last 8.1 overs, a rapid attack that brought their team close to 300.
Hope scored 120 runs without being out, with 10 fours and 5 sixes. It was his 18th one-day international century.
For the Windies, he is now third all-time, after Brian Lara and Chris Gayle, in terms of most decades scored.
Greaves did an impressive job, hitting 43 runs off of just 24 balls without being out.