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Shahid Hashmi

  • Wahab Riaz, Yasir Shah end their scuffle on a happy note

    Wahab Riaz, Yasir Shah end their scuffle on a happy note

    BRISBANE: A practice session of the Pakistani cricket team became unpleasant on Wednesday when pacer Wahab Riaz got into a scuffle with leg-spinner Yasir Shah in Woolloongabba, a day before Brisbane’s first ever day-night Test on Thursday.

    Sources revealed Riaz and Shah were sent off by Coach Mickey Arthur when both the players pushed each other during a practice football match.

    Riaz reportedly tried to snatch the football from Shah during which he hit one of his legs.

    In a fit of annoyance, Shah pushed Riaz following which other team members had to intervene and separate them.

    “It happened during a football game when players often lose their control. We have dealt with the matter and players are fine now,” Team manager Wasim Bari told ARY News terming the scuffle a minor incident.

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    As per the last reports, both the players apologised to each other and the team management after which, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) decided not to take any action again them, said a PCB spokesperson.

    The PCB spokesperson added that the players have been warned of serious consequences if any such indecent happened in the future again.

    Pakistan will face Australia in Brisbane from Thursday in a three-Test series.

    Yasir Shah later tweeted a picture in which he could be seen with pacer Wahab Riaz in a perfect mood.

  • EXCLUSIVE: Losing in New Zealand was disappointing, says Mickey Arthur

    EXCLUSIVE: Losing in New Zealand was disappointing, says Mickey Arthur

    Six months into his coaching assignment with an unpredictable team, Mickey Arthur is getting things into shape. Arthur, who lifted his native South Africa to the top of rankings between 2005-08, passed his first assignment in flying colours, drawing a tough Test series in England 2-2.

    His next tough assignment is five Tests matches across Trans-Tasman that is New Zealand and Australia. The first leg proved tough and resulted in a 2-0 thrashing. This has left Arthur disappointed but he is confident that the team will learn its lessons.

    The theme line from New Zealand is: adjust and adapt to different conditions quickly and find ways to do well in foreign conditions.

    After the Hamilton Test, Mickey gave a detailed interview to ARY News, describing in length various reasons for team’s defeat and multiple problems which need to be addressed. Here are excerpts of the interview:

    Q: Mickey, your analysis of the two Test Pakistan lost in New Zealand?

    Mickey: I will talk about both the losses in one answer. We didn’t adapt quick enough to the conditions which was disappointing. The conditions were tough. The wickets that we played on were some of the greenest I have ever seen in Test cricket, but we needed to adapt quicker and we needed to find ways to play on them. We didn’t and so that was disappointing.

    There are no excuses but obviously not having a practice match having the only practice match washed out and then probably only two practice sessions as such (outdoors) meant that we went under prepared for the first Test in terms of getting used to the conditions. But we are a good team and we should adapt quicker so pretty disappointed the way we lost in New Zealand.

    Q: Would you have, in hindsight, played Yasir Shah in the second Test. More so, because New Zealand played left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner?

    Mickey: I think we were right in not playing Yasir in the second Test and going with four seamers. Playing Yasir in the first Test was right. I think that if we bowled better in the first innings, specially first morning, when we had ideal condition for bowling then it would had been the right decision.

    Q: Was dropping Rahat Ali in the second Test, after his four wickets in the first Test, a difficult decision?

    Mickey: That was very difficult. We are lucky that we have a very good bowling unit and I have explained that to the bowling unit. I think our bowling unit has bowlers who have different and specific roles.

    We have Amir who swings the ball at good pace, we have Rahat, who because he is taller, bounces and also swings the ball, and then we use Wahab as our strike bowler who is our enforcer who bowls with pace, bowl bouncers and reverse swing.

    He is particularly proficient when the ball reverse swings. Then we have got two right-arm bowlers Sohail Khan and Imran Khan. We have Sohail who swings at a decent pace and Imran is very good on pitches that seams around, hence we always pick our attack based on conditions so that was difficult to leave Rahat.

    We were a little bit worried about Rahat in the game at Christchruch that he probably went at a rate of two and half (per over) and we want him to control the run rate little bit. We need Wahab at Hamilton because we thought we could do with the pace. So we pick our attack on the horses for courses basis.

    Q: So you think allowing New Zealand 271 was the turning point, as bowlers did not utilise the conditions well?

    Mickey: Definitely, that was the turning point. I thought that 270 was the par score on that pitch. We should certainly have bowled well. We bowled well on the second day, but on day one they being 77-2 at the end of the day was too big we weren’t ruthless enough. I think the par score should have been 44-3.  There were certainly the best conditions for bowling. We didn’t utilisee and that pushed us behind the eighth ball in the game.

    Q: We have been making some make-shift arrangements in Tests since the tour to England, with Asad Shafiq tried at number three and Azhar Ali sent as opener. Has that affected the batting order?

    Mickey: No not at all, Asad Shafiq wants to bat at three and there is no issue with that. We thought that coming into the first Test we should get back to having our four, five and six with Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq, Asad and Sarfraz that we get our experience through the middle.

    Babar Azam batted very well at number three in one-day cricket so we thought that he could adapt and he adapted well.  Azhar is not a make-shift opener, in fact he started his international career as an opener, and he is an opener by trade and certainly nothing make-shift about Azhar.

    Q: Then what would attribute to batting failures. We batted well in England in conditions tough for our batsmen but came a cropper in New Zealand?

    Mickey: It was just a matter of adapting to conditions.The conditions in New Zealand were very different to England. The pitches had bit more pace, bounce and certainly seamed a lot more than England.

    I think not adapting to the conditions was the biggest drawback and we need to be able to adapt to those conditions quicker and make sure that we find ways to get the runs. The most important thing in conditions like that is getting your defense right and we didn’t get the balance between defense and attack right at all and that’s something we have been working hard on and we will continue to work hard for our preparations before Brsibane (First Test against Australia).

    Q: A lot of people believe that Asad looked frightened at the crease in the second innings at Hamilton. What was the matter?

    Mickey: Asad Shafiq is a fantastic player and technically very good. I have no issues with Asad. He is fine and I am sure he will come through well and will score a lot of runs for us. I am not overtly concerned about him at the moment.

    Q: Our tail is too long and is the worst among all the Test playing countries. Is that concerning?

    Mickey: It is worrying and something that we must continue working hard on. We must get our tail end batsmen in the nets all the time and we are working on their technique.  We have to get that right because once we lose Sarfraz our top seven, particularly against good bowling attack, then the rest aren’t getting us runs that we need. These tail-end batsmen need to give us runs and good results.

    Q: Was there a plan while chasing 368 on the last day of the Hamilton Test? At one point it looked Pakistan could have won. Azhar and Sami took 60 overs to score 131 and that was too slow, wasn’t it?

    Mickey: We sat down and discussed. The plan was very specific and was written on a board and everybody knew what was needed, because we want to play the brand of cricket where we go on and attack and win the game and not the brand where we settle for a draw.

    Had that plan got successful it would have given us massive confidence going forward. We want to be aggressive and be positive. The plan was very simple and it was to get to lunch at 95 with no more than one wicket down, and then we need to accelerate in the second session and score about 3.5 an over which would have let us to get 160 in the last session, and we thought that if we had wickets in hand then we could have given it a go.

    We did well in the first session, but in the second session we were too slow and went with Sami, Babar and Sarfraz. We needed big innings from one of them, but when they were out and when we went four wickets down then we need to play for a draw. This was the plan but we got skittled by the second new ball.

    Q: We saw two major issues hurting Pakistan, the slow over-rate and slip fielding. Aren’t these big issues?

    Mickey: These are two big issues and are very concerning. I have been talking about the slow over rate since I came into this job. I have been giving players updates on slow over rates after every session and ultimately that’s all I can do.

    I have been hard on it and players are paying the price through fines. We got our captain suspended and they are fined every game now and losing money. There is no more that we can do from a coach and support staff’s perspective and players need to make a conscious effort, get between the overs quickly and have just got to bowl the overs on time.

    The slip fielding had a contrast because we didn’t drop any catch behind the stump in the first Test and that was pleasing. That’s an aspect of the game where fielding coach Steve Rixon makes every effort to improve, but in the second Test we were poor.

    We have identified slip catching as an important area and work really hard daily, but at Hamilton it was the other way round. We let go two catches in the slip and we can’t afford lapses in concentration and execution of skills on the tour of Australia. We keep talking about both these issues and are working on them.

    Q: Are you satisfied with Mohammad Amir and Sohail Khan? Sohail has an issue as he has not got a single wicket in the second innings of the last four Tests?

    Mickey: Sohail Khan has that issue and had not been able to back up and we have spoken to him about it. We have to look at it going forward whether we can afford to take a bowler into a Test that doesn’t back up in the second innings.

    This is a big risk if we are playing with three quick bowlers and Yasir. We have to weigh that Sohail is aware of it, and to be fair with him he has worked harder at it. He is at his best fitness at the moment but that’s something which we need to weigh up when we sit down and select teams.

    Amir is getting better with every game. His line is good and we get feedback and look at areas where they bowl all the time. Amir’s grouping to left handers are exceptional but his line to right handers is not where it should be because primarily he is bringing the ball across and he hasn’t got to swing back much. We are working extremely hard on that.

    Q: Does the 2-0 result in New Zealand makes the Australia tour more hard. More so because Australia will pound on Pakistan like wounded tigers after losing to South Africa?

    Mickey:  Australia tour is always difficult. It is a tough place to come and tour and everyone knows that, irrespective of where Australia are at the moment, there are many young good talented players and as long as they are getting confidence they will be tough team to beat.

    We have to be at the top of our game. These are two tough periods for us – New Zealand and Australia – in tough conditions but we will be well prepared. We have to work very hard and we won’t leave any stone unturned in terms of our preparations, and we will get the guys well prepared and get the execution well.

    They will definitely come hard on Pakistan. I have coached South Africa and Australia, and when these teams come to your conditions, you try and rust them up. It is difficult for them to tour in your conditions so it is going to be a lot tough when we come to their conditions. We need to make sure that we are up to those challenges.

  • Amir issued no warning, says PCB

    Amir issued no warning, says PCB

    KARACHI: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Thursday denied news item in section of media which said fast bowler Mohammad Amir was issued a warning for criticizing team-mates on drop catches on his bowling during the two-match Test series in New Zealand.

    Section of media claimed Amir was issued a warning and was told to be cautious on his media talks. But Amir did not say any incriminating things during his media talk on the fourth day of the Hamilton Test on Monday.

    Asked if he gets discouraged by drop catches off his bowling, Amir replied: “Yes, it affects the bowler when you run from 22 yards and your catch is dropped – you’re disappointed and frustrated,” Amir said. “But it affects the team more than the individual. I’ve been very unlucky, but I try to be a team man.

    “It’s difficult to keep count, but I think at least 12-13 catches have gone down off my bowling in Tests and about six-seven catches have been dropped in the shorter formats as well.”

    Sami Aslam dropped New Zealand opener Jeet Raval off the third ball of the Test and then dropped Rod Latham in the second innings. Amir too dropped Kane Wialliamson off his own bowling which took the count to 13 dropped catches off his bowling since his return to Test cricket in July this year.

    PCB said Amir did not cross the line.

    “It is to clarify that the news circulating in the media regarding Mohammad Amir being issued a warning from the team management for showing displeasure over dropped catches on his bowling is baseless. It is to mention here that the news is devoid of facts. It is absolutely concocted as no such warning was issued.”

    Pakistan have now reached Canberra where they will play a three-day side game before the first of three Tests against Australia, starting in Brisbane from December 15.

  • Azhar Mahmood appointed Pakistan bowling coach

    Azhar Mahmood appointed Pakistan bowling coach

    DUBAI: Pakistan finally signed a two-year contract with former all-rounder Azhar Mahmood as their bowling coach, finalizing a financial deal which was the main hurdle in the negotiations.

    The 41-year-old briefly served as bowling coach during the one-day and Twenty30 matches on team’s tour of England but was reluctant to join because of the low contract fee.

    Pakistan Cricket Board said that Azhar will be bowling coach for two years.

    Mahmood played 21 Tests and 143 one-day internationals for Pakistan before moving to England where he played and coached for Surrey.

    Mahmmod helped Pakistan bowlers during another brief stint during the Asia Cup and World Twenty20 earlier this year and was praised by young bowlers for his astute knowledge of the limited overs cricket.

  • Sharjah Test: West Indies in driving seat

    Sharjah Test: West Indies in driving seat

    SHARJAH: Jason Holder carried on the good work of Kraigg Brathwaite as West Indies sensed a rare victory in a Test against a formidable opponent for over a year.

    After three days of domination West Indies will need some more aggression to dismiss Pakistan in their second innings and then wipe off the target for the consolation win after losing the first two Tests.

    At close Pakistan were struggling for survival as they lost four top order batsmen for 87, leading by 31 runs with two full days to play.

    Opener Azhar Ali held the innings with 45 and with him Sarfraz Ahmed on 19 as all four batsmen fell to injudicious shots. It could have been five down for Pakistan had Shannon Gabriel not overstepping after getting Ahmed caught in the slip for nine.

    Opener Sami Aslam started the downfall when he hooked Holder high in the deep, then Asad Shafiq fended a short ball to slip for a pair in the match, Younis Khan edging the ball from leg side and did not taking review. That gave Holder 3-10, all three in successive overs in the space of 17 balls and 11 runs.

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    Misbah-ul-Haq of all the people played a rash shot to throw his wicket to innocuous off-spinner Roston Chase for four, leaving Pakistan to 48-4, with still eight runs to wipe off West Indies lead of 56.

    It was Kraigg Brathwaite who set the tone for West Indies’s domination as he carried his bat through the innings with a resolute 142 not out. His knock carried West Indies to 337 which gave them a lead for the first time in the series.

    He became the fifth West Indian batsmen to carry his bat through the innings with Desmond Haynes doing the feat thrice. Sir Frank Worrell, Conrad Hune and Chris Gayle have also achieved the feat for West Indies.

    Brathwaite frustrated the Pakistan bowling as well as captain Misbah-ul-Haq who were left to search ways as to how to get rid of the West Indian opener. They didn’t find one till the end.

    Brathwaite added 60 for the eighth wicket with Devendra Bishoo which gave West Indies an important 56-run lead. This was after 13th time that West Indies had conceded a first-inns lead (when they batted second.

    It was left to Wahab Riaz to use his fiery pace to settled the case, taking the last three wickest to finish with 5-88 — his second five wicket haul in Tests. It took him 19 Tests to achieve the feat after his first came in his debut Test against England in 2010.

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    AFP Adds: Pakistan needed a big effort after conceding a 56-run lead but from 37-0 they lost four wickets in the space of 11 runs with Holder firing on all cylinders and their batsmen playing rash shots.

    Holder forced Sami Aslam (17) to hook straight into the hands of deep fine-leg, then in his next over had Asad Shafiq caught in slip fending a short ball for nought, his second in the match.

    An over later Holder had Younis Khan caught behind for zero and from the other end Misbah-ul-Haq holed out off spinner Roston Chase for four.

    West Indian paceman Shannon Gabriel had Ahmed caught in the slip for nine only to see the umpire calling a no-ball, allowing the stand to reach 39 by close.

    If West Indies pull off a win it will be their first in 13 Tests since beating England at home in May last year while Pakistan will spoil a good chance of a 3-0 whitewash after winning the first two Tests in Dubai (56 runs) and Abu Dhabi (133 runs).

    The highlight of the morning session was Brathwaite’s knock. He held the innings with 11 boundaries and for the first time in the series lifted West Indies into a rare lead.

    Brathwaite added an invaluable 60 runs for the eighth wicket with Devendra Bishoo who made a solid 27 to leave Pakistan spin-cum pace attack frustrated.

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    In the end it was left to the lively pace of Wahab Riaz to take the final three wickets for his second five-wicket haul in Tests, finishing with 5-88 in 26.4 overs of hard work.

    Riaz, whose first five-wicket haul came in his debut Test against England at The Oval in 2010, had Bishoo caught behind before dismissing Alzarri Joseph (six) and Shannon Gabriel (nought) to warp up the innings.

    Pace partner Mohammad Amir took 3-71 while the spinners Yasir Shah and Zulfiqar Babar took a wicket apiece.

    It was Brathwaite who defied the bowling, emulating illustrious West Indians Frank Worrell, Conrad Hunte, Desmond Haynes (thrice) and Chris Gayle in remaining not out throughout a Test innings.

    Brathwaite had a lucky escape when wicketkeeper Ahmed failed to hold a sharp, rising edge off spinner Mohammad Nawaz when he was on 121.

    In the same over, Bishoo was given out off a sweep shot but he successfully reviewed English umpire Michael Gough’s decision as the ball had hit fielder Ali’s helmet before he took the catch. Resuming at 244-6, the West Indies were looking for a good lead.

    Brathwaite hit Amir for his 11th boundary off the day’s first ball, and then on-drove him towards mid-wicket for two to reach his hundred off 211 balls.

    Pakistan took the second new ball with the total on 251 and Amir struck instantly, clean-bowling Holder with a sharp incoming delivery for 16.

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    Scoreboard

    Pakistan first innings 281 (Sami Aslam 74, Misbah-ul-Haq 53, Younis Khan 51, Sarfraz Ahmed 51; D. Bishoo 4-77)

    West Indies first innings (overnight 244-6)

    K. Brathwaite not out 142
    L. Johnson lbw b Riaz 1
    D. Bravo c Amir b Babar  11
    M. Samuels lbw b Shah  0
    J. Blackwood c Shafiq b Amir 23
    R. Chase c Younis b Amir 50
    S. Dowrich b Riaz 47
    J. Holder b Amir 16
    D. Bishoo c Ahmed b Riaz 27
    A. Joseph c Shah b Riaz 6
    S. Gabriel c Ahmed b Riaz 0

    Extras: (lb6, nb8) 14
    Total: (all out; 115.4 overs) 337

    Fall of wickets: 1-6 (Johnson), 2-32 (Bravo), 3-38 (Samuels), 4-68 (Blackwood), 5-151 (Chase), 6-234 (Dowrich), 7-263 (Holder), 8-323 (Bishoo), 9-333 (Joseph)

    Bowling: Amir 25-5-71-3 (5nb), Riaz 26.4-1-88-5 (3nb), Shah 26-2-80-1, Babar 21-3-56-1, Nawaz 11-2-20-0, Ali 6-0-16-0

    Pakistan 2nd innings

    Sami Aslam c Joseph b Holder 17
    Azhar Ali not out 45
    Asad Shafiq c Bravo b Holder 0
    Younis Khan c Dowrich b Holder 0
    Misbah-ul-Haq c Bishoo b Chase 4
    Sarfraz Ahmed not out 19

    Extras: (nb2) 2
    Total: (for four wkts; 39 overs) 87

    To bat: Mohammad Nawaz, Yasir Shah, Wahab Riaz, Mohammad Amir, Zulfiqar Babar

    Fall of wickets: 1-37 (Aslam), 2-41 (Shafiq), 3-41 (Younis), 4-48 (Misbah)

    Bowling: Gabriel 8-1-14-0 (2nb), Joseph 6-1-16-0, Holder 9-4-10-3, Brathwaite 1-0-5-0, Chase 13-1-39-1, Bishoo 2-0-3-0

    Toss: Pakistan

     

  • Brathwaite leads West Indies to near lead in Sharjah Test

    Brathwaite leads West Indies to near lead in Sharjah Test

    SHARJAH:  West Indian opener Kraigg Brathwaite will sleep without any butterflies in stomach as he admitted a good lead for his team will be more important than his personal milestone. (more…)

  • Pakistan spoil big total chance against West Indies

    Pakistan spoil big total chance against West Indies

    SHARJAH: It was a case of poor shot selection and not building on a good start as Pakistani batsmen spurned a good chance of posting another big total against West Indies on a batting-friendly Sharjah stadium pitch.

    Pakistan had won a very good toss, third by Misbah-ul-Haq in succession which interestingly left his counterpart Jason Holder in a fix as to how the coin falls in his opponents’ favour as he took a stroll after the match referee Jeff Crow declared Misbah as winner.

    But four Pakistani batsmen reached half centuries without going on to make a big hundred. By close West Indies had grabbed eight wickets with the total at 255 and for the first time in the series will dismiss Pakistan for under 300 in the first innings.

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    Opener Sami Aslam hit his fifth half century with 74, Sarfraz Ahmed his ninth during his 51, Misbah-ul-Haq 53 for his 36th and Younis Khan 51 for his 31st but all of them played reckless shots to bring their demise.

    Misbah should have played with responsibility as it is his 49th Test as captain, improving on Imran Khan’s 48 Test as a skipper, and should have gone on toe make this occasion memorable.

    Aslam had once again batted with patience but threw his wicket by foolishly attempting a reverse sweep against leg-spinner Devendra Bishoo, Misbah too doing the same and was caught off the glove, again attempting a reverse sweep.

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    Younis had added 106 for the third wicket with Aslam after Pakistan lost Azhar Ali and Asad Shafiq as early as in the first over. But Younis himself spoiled a chance of scoring a big hundred by playing a rash shot and was caught at mid-wicket.

    Sarfraz Ahmed tried valiantly to stop the wicket slide but played on to a Shannon Gabriel delivery to give the initiative to West Indies.

    Holder had under bowl leg spinner Bishoo but when he did bowl him after tea the leg spinner responded with three wuick wickets to finish the day on 4-74 while Gabriel had 3-58.

  • Pakistan build commanding lead over West Indies

    Pakistan build commanding lead over West Indies

    ABU DHABI: Pakistan were in the driving seat after day three of the second Test, and with the Sheikh Zayed Stadium pitch giving signs of wear and tear they are in a commanding position to not only win this match but also the series.

    Pakistan were 114-1 at close with Azhar Ali (52), Sami Aslam out for 50 and Asad Shafiq on five and with a lead of 342 and two days to play it leaves the West Indies with an uphill task to save this match.

    Both Azhar and Sami survived leg-before decisions with part-timer Kraig Brahwaite off umpire Michael Gough. This has been an embarrassing match for the two England umpires. Seven decisions overturned in the match so far — four off Michael Gough and three from Richard Illingworth.

     

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    Although DRS is good for the players it has made lives of umpires miserable. Gough was seen giving a sheepish smile after Sami took a review and television replays showed he had played the ball.

    It was Yasir Shah who once again took full advantage of West Indies batsmen’s frailties against spin, taking 4-96 to bundle West Indies out for 224.

    Pakistan had gained a lead of 228 but Misbah did not enfore the follow-on, fifth time in 48 Tests as captain that he did not enfocre it and made the team bat again.

     

     

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    In fact the culture of enforcing follow-on is fast changing in modern day cricket. We have to back to 2002 to remember when Pakistan enforced follow-on. It was current chief selector Inzamam-ul-Haq who was the last Pakistan captain to enforce it against New Zealand at Lahore in 2002.

    It seemed West Indies had little interest of scoring runs as only 118 runs were added in the two sessions. Devendra Bishoo made 20, Roston Chase 22, and Jason Holder 31 not out.

    West Indies have been abysmal in Tests as they have been conceding average first inngs lead of 257 in the last six Tests. When they have batted second in their last 6 Tests the deficits have been 228, 222, 128, 323, 280 and 360.

    It is tough for the West Indies to save a Test match with such a huge lead and the suggestion that they should only play ODIs and Twenty20s seems to be rather justified.

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    Scoreboard

    Pakistan first innings 452 (Younis Khan 127, Misbah-ul-Haq 96; S. Gabriel 5-96)

    West Indies first innings (overnight 106-4)

    L. Johnson lbw b Rahat 12
    D. Bravo lbw b Shah 43
    K. Brathwaite run out 21
    M. Samuels c Aslam b Rahat 30
    D. Bishoo b Sohail 20
    J. Blackwood c Ahmed b Rahat 8
    R. Chase c Shafiq b Shah 22
    S. Hope b Shah 11
    J. Holder not out 31
    M. Cummins b Sohail 3
    S. Gabriel c Sohail b Shah 13

    Extras: (b2, lb7, nb1) 10
    Total: (all out; 94.4 overs) 224 

    Fall of wickets: 1-27 (Johnson), 2-65 (Bravo), 3-106 (Samuels), 4-106 (Brathwaite), 5-121 (Blackwood), 6-144 (Bishoo), 7-169 (Chase), 8-178 (Hope), 9-197 (Cummins)

    Bowling: Rahat 21-8-45-3, Sohail 19-8-35-2, Babar 21-6-39-0, Shafiq 1-0-2-0, Shah 28.4-6-86-4, Nawaz 4-1-8-0 (1nb)


    Pakistan second innings

    Sami Aslam c Hope b Gabriel 50
    Azhar Ali not out 52
    Asad Shafiq not out 5

    Extras: (b4, lb1, nb2)                 7
    Total: (for one wkt; 39 overs)       114

    To bat: Younis Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq, Sarfraz Ahmed, Mohammad Nawaz, Yasir Shah, Sohail Khan, Zulfiqar Babar, Rahat Ali

    Fall of wicket: 1-93 (Aslam)
    Bowling: Gabriel 8-1-21-1 (2nb), Cummins 3-0-5-0, Brathwaite 13-2-27-0, Bishoo 12-0-45-0, Holder 3-0-11-0

    Toss: Pakistan

  • Pakistan holds advantage in second Test

    Pakistan holds advantage in second Test

    Pakistan can make it 2-nil as they accumulated a colossal 452 run total in the Abu Dhabi Test and before closing on the second day had West Indian batsman Darren Bravo back in the dressing room.

    West Indies were 106-4 at close, still trailing by 346 runs, and with the pitch starting to taking spin it is highly likely that Pakistan will get a handsome lead through spinners Yasir Shah and Zulfiqar Babar.

    The highlight of the day though was Misbah-ul-haq once again failing to reach a hundred. He looked shaky after coming to the crease and fell for 96.

    Misbah’s jinx of not scoring runs after being not out overnight continued.  Previously, he has had four scoreless starts the following day, once he scored four and once he managed 51. Maybe if there had been one more over on day one he would have reached the three-figure mark.

    However, it was not so ad Misbah missed an incoming delivery and was adjudged leg-before. He was not willing to take a review but took it reluctantly on Yasir’s insistence. But to his bad luck it went to the umpire’s call and Misbah had to trudge back to the pavilion.

    Unlike Younis Khan, who hit his 31st consecutive hundred without being dismissed on nervous 90s, this was Misbah’s third nervous 90s and if you add his six 80plus and as many 70plus scores, he has missed on at least 15 hundreds.

    Sarfraz batted in his usual aggressive style and his 59-ball 56 gave the real impetus to the innings, taking Pakistan beyond the 450-mark. He could have gone on to score a hundred but was bowled after he missed a full length low delivery from Gabriel.

    Mohammad Nawaz hit 25 and Sohail Khan made 26 and for the first time it looked Pakistan’s tail was worthy of making some useful runs.

    It was Darren Bravo who opened the innings after an unwell Kraig Brathwaite spent more time away from the field when Pakistan was batting.

    Bravo once again looked in good touch and completed his 1,000 runs against spinners in Tests in Asia. He is one of the only seven overseas batsmen to score 1000-plus runs against them since 2000.

    Bravo once again fell to Yasir Shah whose short pitched ball saw him trying to pull but missed and was trapped leg-before.

    Pakistan had to take a review as English umpire Michael Gough had ruled it not out. Gough had to once again change his decision very next ball as he gave Marlon Samuels out leg-before only to see television replays showing Samuels had an inside edge.

    Samuels and Brathwaite fell in the space of three balls to leave West Indies fight in tatters. Overall it was an exciting day and West Indies once again put up a good fight.

  • Younis Khan’s comeback shows ‘class is permanent’

    Younis Khan’s comeback shows ‘class is permanent’

    Maybe the mosquito which bit Younis Khan to cause dengue fever infused some new blood in him as the senior batsman gave no signs of weakness from the near-fatal disease as his hundred put Pakistan in another commanding position in the series. (more…)