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#1 Muhammad Farrukh

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 12:50

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The sunny disposition of Saeed Ajmal and the stiff-limbed tenacity of Abdur Rehman have tormented England throughout this Test series and there was the slimmest likelihood of escape at tea on the fourth day of the final Test in Dubai as Pakistan sought to inflict a whitewash upon England for the first time.
There was plentiful spin for Pakistan's spinners, leaping spin at times when the ball struck the rough, and England, still 151 runs short of victory with only four wickets remaining, looked bound for a 3-0 defeat in the series.
Ajmal, spinning the ball both ways, not extravagantly but often, dismissed Kevin Pietersen and Alastair Cook in the afternoon session, to add to Jonathan Trott before lunch. Rehman counted Andrew Strauss as his sole success as he bowled unchanged for two sessions, 30 overs sent down with unerring accuracy. He is the sort of spin bowler who looks slightly weary from the outset, but never noticeably tires after that.
Pietersen was bent upon playing enterprisingly. The first ball of the afternoon provided a reminder of his vulnerability when a bat-pad against Rehman flew high past short leg, but he had the fleeting satisfaction of striking him straight for six before Ajmal, from around the wicket, spun one through the gate and beamed at further bounty.
Cook put up statuesque resistance. Along the way he became the second youngest person, at 27 years and 43 days, to reach 6,000 Test runs. Only Sachin Tendulkar has reached the landmark at a younger age. His most attacking shot of the morning, a loft into the leg side against Rehman, caused the bowler to taunt him with applause. He lived on scraps, combating the turning ball with thoughtful defence and numerous works to the leg side and that proved his undoing as a leading edge was brilliantly held by Younis Khan, diving to his left at first slip.
The emphasis has been upon spin, but Umar Gul reminded England that the quicker bowlers should not be entirely discounted as he got the old ball to reverse swing as much as at any time in the series. Ian Bell's state of mind is such that a long hop is quite enough. He averaged more than 100 last summer, less than 10 in this series, and when Gul offered up a gift he mistimed it wide of point. The ball that dismissed Eoin Morgan, caught by the wicketkeeper Adnan Akmal, who embarked upon a merry dance, was of higher quality.
England, 36 runs banked the previous evening, needed a further 288 at the start of play. Strauss fell in the sixth over of the morning, lbw on the back foot to Rehman. That was lbw No. 42 in this three-Test series, one short of the all-time record for a series of any length. Strauss reviewed it, although it smacked of a captain's review and he would have been better to head smartly for the dressing room. But when it comes to captain's reviews Strauss cannot match Misbah-ul-Haq. Misbah has been lbw on five occasions in this series and he has taken a review every time. It must be a captain's prerogative.
Without lapses in the field, Pakistan could have been in a stronger position. They had dropped Cook the previous evening, a relatively simple chance to Taufeeq Umar at third slip and Gul's drop in the shadows of the stand at deep square gave him another reprieve as Pakistan lost the efficiency that has characterised their cricket throughout this series. Rehman made his frustration clear when he caught Trott at deep square as he flung the ball into the turf with feeling at the errors that had gone before.
Adnan's fumble behind the stumps to reprieve Strauss, although not costly as the England captain was out in the next over, was the worst miss of all. Adnan has had a good series behind the stumps and has the opportunity to be Pakistan's first-choice keeper for many years to come but his excitable chatter had reached a peak. As Pakistan press for victory, it is in danger of becoming counterproductive. Strauss' edge flew to him at comfortable height but he put it down. For a few minutes he was quiet and you could hear your ears ringing.
Adnan's cacophony of cries often rent the air for inexplicable reasons. As do parrots, Adnan vocalises for many reasons. He may be excitedly greeting the day or summoning his family at sunset. He may be screeching when he is excited or when he is merely trying it on. He may screech when he thinks things have got too quiet or when he thinks it is his duty to scream. He just likes screeching. At one point he burst out coughing as if in sore need of a lozenge and Trott looked at him in deadpan fashion.
Adnan is also incorrigibly optimistic about reviewing umpiring decisions. "Do it, do it, yes, yes, all good," you can sense him saying. Misbah has learned not to take his evidence into consideration and looks askance at him. But Pakistan challenged umpire Steve Davis' not-out ruling when Ajmal beat Cook on the sweep. Hawk-Eye showed that the ball pitched outside leg. There again, disturbingly, it seems that Hawk-Eye also cannot read Ajmal's doosra, probably because it is English.

Quote

End of match: So the No.1 syndrome bites England, after it hit India. After the highs of 4-0 in the summer, it's now 0-3. Clearly blown away by Pakistan's supremacy in their adopted home. Team Misbah is the one everyone would want to beat. After the Summer of Shame in 2010, Pakistan have performed remarkably under a captain, who all but wrote off his career a couple of years ago. He even talked about burning his kit. It's never too late, even if you're on the wrong side of 30.
Ian Botham was mentioning that England needn't panic about their Test side. They failed collectively and even if you sack this lot, is there a capable enough reserve bunch to turn things around? I don't think so. Just needs patience and skill.
This is the second time in the last 100 years that a team has won a Test after being bowled out for less than 100.
Feels like the 90s again. India are lambs abroad, and England can't play spin in Asia.

Cricinfo


#2 monkey13

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 12:54

Booo. Boooo.

Although well done to Pakistan. We deserved to lose. Maybe not by a white wash but we spent too much time talking up how great it was to be the number one test team and not enough time playing cricket. Should have had more warm up matches.

Nice to see Monty back though.

#3 FMH

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 12:56

In second quote; why did the captain want to burn his kit?

#4 Muhammad Farrukh

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 12:57

View PostFMH, on 06 February 2012 - 12:56, said:

In second quote; why did the captain want to burn his kit?

Problems with the PCB

#5 monkey13

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 13:00

Pakistan were at a real low and he wanted to walk away from cricket.

#6 ZAnwar

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Posted 06 February 2012 - 22:06

Wow. The cheaters won legitimately. ;)

#7 Muhammad Farrukh

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 05:32

What cheaters?

#8 monkey13

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 08:54

View PostMuhammad Farrukh, on 07 February 2012 - 05:32, said:

What cheaters?

Sorry but they were at it all the time with various things (ball tampering, spot fixing etc...) but every time anyone made any accusations the PCB would cry racism.

Tried the same thing when the 3 guys were caught in the sting by the NoTW recently. I forget his name but the PCB chief at the time tried the racism angle again, didn't work. Then he moved on to saying that England were cheats as well and he had evidence. Never seemed to materialise. Eventually it was revealed to be such a stonewall case that the PCB had to accept it.

I'm just glad the series ended without any controversy. I've never understood why the Pakistan team needs/wants to cheat so much.

#9 red.

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:07

I find it slightly amusing how England were talking about being the Man Utd of cricket and staying number one for a while and now they could lose it after just one series (SA would need to beat NZ 3-0). All those things that were said about India regarding not being a proper number one team until they win in seaming conditions (and rightfully so), well we can say the same about England and spinning wickets.

England have a tough year coming up touring Sri Lanka and then India.

View PostMuhammad Farrukh, on 07 February 2012 - 05:32, said:

What cheaters?

I'm not taking anything away from him - i've thought he's been a very good bowler for a while, but Ajmal does chuck his doosra.

#10 Shane Ekanayake

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:28

View Postred., on 07 February 2012 - 09:07, said:

I find it slightly amusing how England were talking about being the Man Utd of cricket and staying number one for a while and now they could lose it after just one series (SA would need to beat NZ 3-0). All those things that were said about India regarding not being a proper number one team until they win in seaming conditions (and rightfully so), well we can say the same about England and spinning wickets.

England have a tough year coming up touring Sri Lanka and then India.



I'm not taking anything away from him - i've thought he's been a very good bowler for a while, but Ajmal does chuck his doosra.

i don't know about india but our team sucks big time man :(

#11 FMH

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:38

View PostShane Ekanayake, on 07 February 2012 - 09:28, said:

i don't know about india but our team sucks big time man :(

And which team would that be? :)

#12 Shane Ekanayake

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:47

View PostFMH, on 07 February 2012 - 09:38, said:

And which team would that be? :)


Sri Lanka

#13 Muhammad Farrukh

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:51

Sri Lankan team has some of the best players in the entire history

#14 FMH

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:53

View PostShane Ekanayake, on 07 February 2012 - 09:47, said:

Sri Lanka

Seriously? Didn't they come second in the last world cup?

#15 fornaks86

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Posted 07 February 2012 - 09:58

View PostFMH, on 07 February 2012 - 09:53, said:

Seriously? Didn't they come second in the last world cup?

That was ODIs..i think Shane is talking of test cricket.






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