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Saturday, 31 August 2013

3rd ODI Pakistan v Zimbabwe

Pakistan 260 for 6 (Misbah 67, Shehzad 54, Chatara 3-48) beat Zimbabwe 152 (Waller 48, Ajmal 2-15, Rehman 2-23) by 108 runs 
A lot of expectations were heaped on Zimbabwe as they sat on the threshold of a rare series win against a top side, but they couldn't summon the temperament to beat Pakistan, who came from behind to win the series 2-1. While Zimbabwe's bowlers did well to restrict Pakistan to a par score of 260, the batsmen failed to put up a fight. Pakistan, in the process got a bogey off their backs by winning their first bilateral series in ten years after the series was leveled (either 1-1 or 2-2) going in to the decider.

The match took place on the backdrop of a payments dispute that threatened a Zimbabwe boycott. The players put the distraction aside to take the field, but the batsmen were nowhere close to competitive despite encouraging signs even in Thursday's defeat.
 
Brendan Taylor stuck by his faith that his side was better at chasing by putting Pakistan in to bat. The Pakistan openers, Nasir Jamshed and Ahmed Shehzad, put on their best stand of the series - 66 - to set the platform for another big score. Pakistan suffered a blow when their in-form batsman, Mohammad Hafeez, hobbled off with a hamstring pull on 12. Hafeez had been Pakistan's attacking option at the top, but with him unavailable, it was down to Misbah-ul-Haq to shoulder the responsibility.
 
Shehzad couldn't replicate the fluency from the two T20s but rather than hit his way into form, chose to play a steady knock. Jamshed's dismissal impacted the run-rate as Pakistan struggled to find momentum in the middle overs. The boundaries had dried up and in the 32nd over, Shehzad broke a drought that lasted close to ten overs when he cut Sean Williams past the keeper. Shehzad consumed 81 balls for his fifty, showing the control the bowlers had over him. He perished trying to push on, lofting the part-timer Hamilton Masakadza straight to long-off.
 
Umar Amin batted positively in the batting Powerplay, taken after 35 overs, cutting and flicking Tendai Chatara for two boundaries in an over. He used his feet to Prosper Utseya, flicking him stylishly against the turn to deep midwicket and then over extra cover before the bowler struck back with a sharp return catch. Amin's 25-ball 33 infused some life into the innings that was craving for acceleration.
 
Misbah had plodded to 8 off 35 balls when he finally opened up, slogging Williams to deep midwicket to pick up his first boundary. He started to find the boundary regularly after the 43rd over, shuffling across his crease and punishing the length deliveries. With Sarfraz Ahmed showing some urgency, Pakistan scored their last fifty in just 28 balls. Misbah fell to a skier to deep midwicket after scoring his 11th half-century of the year. Hafeez returned in the penultimate over to salvage as many runs as possible and, fortunately for Pakistan, was swift between the wickets after resting his hamstring.
 
A total of 261 was competitive but Pakistan couldn't afford to relax, having failed to defend 245 in the first ODI. They introduced spin as early as the second over and Hafeez struck when Vusi Sibanda slogged him to deep midwicket where Amin took a running catch. Masakadza, like he did in the second ODI, showed a lot of promise with a couple of jaw-dropping boundaries off the seamers. Using the crease, he effortlessly lofted Junaid Khan over his head and the following ball pulled a six over deep square leg.
 
Seeing Mazakadza's confidence against pace, Misbah brought on Abdur Rehman's spin the next over and he had immediate success, beating Masakadza in both flight and turn, and having him stumped. Zimbabwe struggled to get back the momentum gained via the Masakadza-Taylor stand. Taylor had his moments where he swept the spinners and found the gaps, and had it not been for the calling, Zimbabwe would have had a mainstay at the crease to put up a fight.
   
Sikandar Raza dropped the ball towards cover and set off, hesitated on seeing Misbah attack the ball but carried on. Taylor was struggling amid the confusion and was dismissed via a direct hit. Misbah was in action once again when he underarmed the ball to the keeper Sarfraz who broke the bails before Williams - who was ball-watching - could make his ground.
 
 It was a close call but nevertheless, a single that should never have been attempted. It was a period in which Zimbabwe lost four wickets for 21 runs and by the halfway mark, lost six. Malcolm Waller, the only specialist batsman around, played the lone hand with 48 as Pakistan wrapped it up with ten overs to spare.

2nd T20 England v Australia

England 195-5 (20 overs) beat Australia 168-9 (20 overs) by 27 runs

Alex Hales scored a blistering 94 as England beat Australia by 27 runs to draw their Twenty20 series 1-1.

Hales and his Nottinghamshire team-mate Michael Lumb (43) put on 111 for the first wicket to help propel England to 195-5, with Fawad Ahmed taking 3-25.

Opener David Warner's 52 off 43 balls kept Australia in contention well into their run chase.

But Jade Dernbach took three wickets as the tourists collapsed from 111-3 to finish well short on 168-9.

Dernbach finished with figures of 3-23 to back up his impressive return of 3-34 in the first match on Thursday, when Aaron Finch's record 156 catapulted Australia to a 39-run victory.

This time, though, the firepower of England's openers proved decisive as the hosts made light of losing the toss by posting an imposing total.

England's best Twenty20 innigns

Luke Wright
99* - L Wright v Afghanistan (2012)
99 - A Hales v West Indies (2012)
94 - A Hales v Australia (2013)
90* - J Root v Australia (2013)
85* - E Morgan v South Africa (2009)
80* - A Hales v New Zealand (2013)

Hales and Lumb, under pressure for their places from Hampshire's in-form Michael Carberry, peppered the boundary and found the gaps in the large Chester-le-Street outfield to keep the scoreboard moving apace.

After Lumb's dismissal, Luke Wright (30) and Eoin Morgan (20) ensured England remained on course for a big score, only for three wickets in the last seven balls to keep the hosts in range for Australia.

Hales, who scored 99 against West Indies last year, fell six short of that elusive century when he slapped James Faulkner to long-on.

Ahmed then removed Jos Buttler and Morgan in the last over of the innings, which yielded only eight runs.

England captain Stuart Broad removed Finch in Australia's second over and Morgan's direct hit ran out Shane Watson in the third to leave the tourists in difficulty on 15-2.

Warner countered with three sixes and five fours before slicing Dernbach to Hales at deep cover to initiate a dramatic slump.

First Hampshire left-arm spinner Briggs removed George Bailey and Matthew Wade, and when Dernbach dismissed Glenn Maxwell (27) and James Faulkner from successive balls, the game was up.

England play a one-day international against Ireland in Dublin on Tuesday, while the Australians take on Scotland in Edinburgh.

The Ashes rivals will then contest a five-match one-day series, starting at Headingley on Friday.

Thursday, 29 August 2013

1st T20 Eng v Aus

Australia 248 for 6 (Finch 156) beat England 209 for 6 (Root 90*) by 39 runs

Whether Australia can produce young batsmen who are able to occupy the crease in Test cricket remains up for debate. That they can produce batsmen who give it an almighty thump there is no doubt. Aaron Finch, the 26-year-old Victorian, ransacked England's bowling with an eye-popping world record 156 as Australia secured their first victory in any format for 200 days.

It was a ferocious display of hitting from Finch, who had six previous T20 caps, as he tore England's attack to shreds with a brutal display, in the process going well past Brendon McCullum's 123 as the highest score in an international Twenty20. Australia's eventual 248 for 6 was the second-highest total in a T20 international - and the highest in a match involving two Test nations - only Sri Lanka's 260 against Kenya was out of reach and for a while it appeared they may cross that landmark too.
 
A couple of weeks ago in the Friends Life t20 quarter-final there was 200-plays-200 match and the consistency of the one-day pitches at the Ageas Bowl deserves much praise - 457 runs in 40 overs is value for money, even if to watch such a boundary-fest all the time would dull the senses. But to chase 249 would have bordered on miracle territory. England, not surprisingly, could not get close - although did pass 200 for only the fourth time in a T20 - despite Joe Root's entertaining 90 off 49 balls. Tellingly, perhaps, England could only manage five sixes to Australia's 18.
 
Fourteen of those came off Finch's bat, another of the records that he broke during the onslaught. He began with a six first ball, picked up effortlessly off Steven Finn, and it was a theme that would continue throughout. Each of Finch's landmarks came up with a six; his half-century, from 26 balls; his hundred, off 47, beating McCullum's record, and his 150.

He was on track to beat Richard Levi's 45-ball hundred against New Zealand, in Hamilton, as the fastest on the international stage but after reducing himself to a couple of singles had to settle for second spot when he launched his 47th delivery, from Stuart Broad, for another six. He was the first Australian to make a Twenty20 international hundred and it took him just 13 more deliveries to power past 150. By then, it had long since stopped begin an even contest.

The bowlers had no answers, although not for the first time there was an absence of yorkers - anything fractionally off target was dispatched over the boundaries with strength, timing and, occasionally, some finesse; although this was not an innings of deft touch and placement. Finch's sixes over the off side, one struck as he slid outside leg stump, were perhaps the most breathtaking.

Picking through the wreckage of England's figures may seem a rather pointless task, but there are a couple of overs that stand out. Root's only over cost 27 - he made the mistake of conceding a single to Shaun Marsh first ball - and Danny Briggs, on his home ground, was taken for 23 in his last, all by Finch. Following on from Martin Guptill's huge innings in the one-day international here earlier in the season, this is not a favourite ground for England at the moment.

The only England bowler to have an economy rate in single figures was Jade Dernbach, which itself will bring surprise from many. He finally removed Finch and also dumbfounded Shane Watson with a back-of-the-hand slower ball after his 37 off 16 balls, in a stand of 99 in seven overs, had gone almost unnoticed.

Finch and Marsh had added 114 in nine overs for the second wicket having come together early following David Warner's bizarre dismissal. Swinging with all his power, he top edged Broad's second ball and, in the process, lost his bat which flew towards short fine-leg while Jos Buttler settled under the catch. Warner then had to walk back to collect his bat from an obliging England player who had picked it up. It was the high point of the innings for England.
 
But the crowd had another moment to savour. The opening over of the chase, bowled by the much-missed (at least by the England supporters) Mitchell Johnson, cost 17 and included two wides and three boundaries. Johnson, though, recovered from those early problems by trapping Michael Lumb lbw and then having Eoin Morgan caught at point while he touched 93mph on the speed gun.
 
But Josh Hazlewood created the most physical damage. Root needed treatment for a cut lip after a short ball from Hazlewood squeezed between his peak and grille. Warner, who had come close to inflicting something similar earlier in the tour, was the first Australian to go up to Root who, after a few minutes, did not seem overly troubled by the blow as he notched a 29-ball fifty and he later took 16 off Johnson's last over much to the joy of the fans who stayed on to the bitter end.

In the seventh over there was also a significant moment. Fawad Ahmed, the legspinner, delivered his first international over. It went for 10 and his four overs ended up costing 43. It was not really an evening to be a spinner. His story remains a remarkable one but, for one night at least, it was trumped.

2nd ODI Zim v Pak

Pakistan 299 for 4 (Hafeez 136*, Amin 59) beat Zimbabwe 209 (Taylor 79, Williams 40, Junaid 4-15) by 90 runs


With the series at stake, Pakistan hit back strongly by posting a total well beyond Zimbabwe's reach, thereby giving the final match greater context. Mohammad Hafeez led the way with an attacking, unbeaten 136 to lift Pakistan to 299, and although Zimbabwe had their moments in the chase, they failed to stretch Pakistan over a sustained period. A clump of wickets towards the end widened the gap between the two sides, as the margin of victory suggested.

Both sides, while batting, were removed from their comfort zones. Pakistan didn't have the safety net of a steady Misbah-ul-Haq innings for the other batsmen to bat around. A rare failure from Misbah gave Hafeez the chance to step up and guide the innings. Zimbabwe, for a change didn't have the luxury of a solid opening stand in the face of a daunting total, and the middle order couldn't cover the slack. Pakistan, though, responded better to the challenge.

Put in to bat, Pakistan had a better idea of the kind the score needed to intimidate a confident Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe were guilty of dropping catches in the first ODI but those let-offs, fortunately, didn't cost them in the end. While they were relatively better today, one lapse cost them plenty of runs. When on 30, Hafeez went for the slog sweep but as the ball dipped towards deep square leg, Brian Vitori was a touch too late on the dive. He couldn't hang on and Zimbabwe were made to rue the missed chance.
 
Hafeez's driving, flicking and defense against the seamers was solid and he used his feet against Prosper Utseya, lofting two sixes over long-on. He launched Elton Chigumbura over the same region as he progressed to his fifty off 65 balls. Following Misbah's departure - he limped to 3 off 23 balls - Pakistan had lost all their experienced batsmen, but Umar Amin stepped up to give Hafeez the support he needed. Amin looked busy at the crease, looking to push the singles and attempting the odd slog, looking on nervously at his senior partner who urged him to play straighter.
 
Amin opened up at the start of the batting Powerplay, taken in the 36th over, clipping Utseya wide of midwicket and then launching him over cover the next ball. He found the gaps with ease through the off side and reached his maiden fifty in ODIs off just 61 balls. Pakistan smashed 43 in the Powerplay without losing a wicket, setting the platform for their late-innings acceleration.
 
Amin was eventually run-out from a direct hit by Tendai Chatara, but not before adding a valuable 129 with Hafeez. Hafeez made sure his side didn't lose the initiative, like they did on Tuesday with a collapse, batting positively and finding the gaps. He had all but bettered his highest ODI score (139*), made on the same ground two years ago. A blazing cameo from Shahid Afridi took Pakistan to the doorstep of 300.
 
Hamilton Masakadza and Vusi Sibanda had, until this game, produced opening stands of 53, 50 and 107 so it was a relief for Pakistan that the openers disbanded early as the third over. Masakadza found early momentum with some powerful boundaries off Mohammad Irfan before he was beaten for pace by Junaid Khan, losing his off stump. Much depended on Brendan Taylor to lead the way. He and Sean Williams weren't afraid to take on the spinners, reverse sweeping them regularly. They targeted Pakistan's main bowler, Saeed Ajmal, in his first over, playing the conventional and reverse sweeps to give the chase some momentum.
 
Taylor kept Zimbabwe's hopes alive with a positive fifty - his first in 13 innings - and it got to the stage where Pakistan were in need of a breakthrough. Ajmal provided that when he beat an advancing Williams, getting him stumped. Taylor had added 70 with Williams and 65 with Malcolm Waller, but all along they failed to keep with the rising asking rate.
 
The slide started towards the end of the batting Powerplay - taken after 35 overs - when Taylor top-edged a sweep off Ajmal, only to be caught one-handed by the 7ft 1" Irfan. Any other fielder, it would have been a boundary. Pakistan lost three wickets for one run, as Junaid ran through the lower order. Zimbabwe were rolled over with more than seven overs to spare. The lack of a match-turning partnership hurt them in the end.


25 overs Zimbabwe 121 for 3 (Taylor 56*, Williams 30*) need a further 179 runs to beat Pakistan 299 for 4 (Hafeez 136*, Amin 59) 


Zimbabwe didn't get the solid start they would have hoped for to set the platform for their tall chase of 300, losing three wickets by the halfway mark. However, Brendan Taylor kept their hopes alive with a positive fifty - his first in 13 innings - and a fifty-plus stand with Sean Williams kept them in the hunt. The challenge was keeping with the increasing asking rate, which had crossed seven.
 
Vusi Sibanda fell top edging a pull off Mohammad Irfan that landed safely in Sarfraz Ahmed's gloves. Hamilton Masakadza and Sibanda had, until this game, produced opening stands of 53, 50 and 107 so it was a relief for Pakistan that the openers disbanded early as the third over. Masakadza found early momentum with some powerful boundaries off Irfan. He looked uncomfortable with the rising delivery, but when Irfan adjusted to fuller lengths, Masakadza made room and smashed it past cover for consecutive boundaries.
 
A promising knock turned out to be just a cameo as Masakadza lost his off stump to Junaid Khan, beaten for pace and lower bounce. Timycen Maruma's indifferent form in the series extended with a run out, sent back after setting off for a risky single to cover.
 
Much depended on Taylor to lead the way. He wasn't afraid of reverse sweeping the spinners, finding the boundary on two occasions and also using his feet to them, chipping over the off side. Williams and Taylor targeted Pakistan's main bowler, Saeed Ajmal, in his first over, playing the conventional and reverse sweeps to give the chase some momentum.

50 overs Pakistan 299 for 4 (Hafeez 136*, Amin 59) v Zimbabwe


Having gotten used to seeing Misbah-ul-Haq steer Pakistan in recent matches with slow, yet steady fifties, the question was whether Pakistan could manage just as well without him. Misbah failed, but another of their seniors, Mohammad Hafeez, ensured Pakistan didn't suffer a meltdown. With an idea of the kind of score Pakistan would need to stretch a Zimbabwe batting line-up high on confidence after Tuesday, Hafeez chose to be aggressive from the outset. He also ensured he batted right through, giving Pakistan the safety net needed as they raced towards 300.

Zimbabwe were guilty of dropping catches in the first ODI but those let-offs, fortunately, didn't cost them in the end. While they were relatively better today, one lapse cost them plenty of runs. When on 30, Hafeez went for the slog sweep but as the ball dipped towards deep square leg, Brian Vitori was a touch too late on the dive. He couldn't hang on and Zimbabwe were made to rue the missed chance. 
 
Hafeez's driving, flicking and defense against the seamers was solid and he used his feet against Prosper Utseya, lofting two sixes over long-on. He launched Elton Chigumbura over the same region as he progressed to his fifty off 65 balls.
 
 Following Misbah's departure, Pakistan had lost all their experienced batsmen, but Umar Amin stepped up to give Hafeez the support he needed. Amin looked busy at the crease, looking to push the singles and attempting the odd slog, though he wasn't always successful in connecting. Zimbabwe had a chance to send Amin back on 11, when he was sent back attempting a single, but the throw missed the stumps at the bowler's end.
 
Amin opened up at the start of the batting Powerplay, taken in the 36th over, clipping Utseya wide of midwicket and then launching him over cover the next ball. Three overs later, he lofted Tendai Chatara over the sightscreen and followed it up with a slash past point. He found the gaps with ease through the off side and reached his maiden fifty in ODIs off just 61 balls. Pakistan smashed 43 in the Powerplay without losing a wicket, setting the platform for their late-innings acceleration.
 
Amin was eventually run-out from a direct hit by Chatara, but not before adding a valuable 129 with Hafeez. Hafeez made sure his side didn't lose the initiative, like they did on Tuesday with a collapse, batting positively and finding the gaps. He had all but bettered his highest ODI score (139*), made on the same ground two years ago. A blazing cameo from Shahid Afridi took Pakistan to the doorstep of 300.
 
It was a good recovery from the morning when Pakistan had lost three wickets within the first 25 overs and scored at a rate not greater than four an over. Nasir Jamshed was under pressure to keep his place, having looked rather edgy on Tuesday. He moved to a promising 32, before he was trapped in front by one from Utseya that straightened. Ahmed Shehzad failed to replicate his form from the T20s, falling for 5. He pushed at a ball moving away from him and spooned a catch to backward point, giving Vitori his first wicket.
 
Misbah was watchful, as is his signature style, but ended up putting too much pressure on himself by staying scoreless for 13 balls. The need to show some urgency prompted him to shuffle across his stumps to whip Vitori into the gaps on the on side, but he couldn't get it past short midwicket, where Sean Williams took a sharp catch. The relief was only temporary for Zimbabwe, as Hafeez took the advantage away.
 
Zimbabwe are a win away from registering a rare series win against a major side. Their batsmen may find the conditions easier in the afternoon, but 300 will require them to go a few steps higher than they did on Tuesday.

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

1st ODI Zimbabwe v Pakistan

Zimbabwe 246 for 3 (Masakadza 85, Sibanda 54, Taylor 43*) beat Pakistan 244 for 7 (Misbah 83*, Hafeez 70) by 7 wickets


The last time Zimbabwe beat Pakistan in any format was 15 years ago. Back then, Pakistan lost to arguably the most formidable Zimbabwe side in history - one that was capable of standing up to the best international sides. With the cricketing climate in the country having undergone a drastic change since then, any victory by current setup against a top side will be remembered for long. Coming off a disappointing T20 series, where Zimbabwe failed to figure out how to close out a chase, they held their composure and applied themselves better despite the short turnaround time.

A strong opening stand of 107 between Vusi Sibanda and Hamilton Masakadza was the bedrock in their chase of 245. Having dealt with the seamers with ease during the T20s, Zimbabwe's chances of victory hung on how they would perform outside their comfort zone. They looked ill at ease against the spin trio in the T20s but crucially, this time, they didn't let the spinners run away with the advantage. Saeed Ajmal managed to strike, but the long interval between breakthroughs meant that Pakistan were always playing catch-up. In the closing stages, Pakistan had created enough pressure to bring the equation down to a run-a-ball, but a combination of poor fielding and freakish luck meant that it was Zimbabwe's day.

Before this match, Masakadza spoke about the importance of his duty, as an opener, to set the base and not allow pressure to build on the lower order. Back at the top, a position he is comfortable with, and with an opening partner from school days, Masakadza took the initiative by hammering Junaid Khan for three boundaries in an over. The openers were strong through the off side against the left-armers and the boundary barrage prompted captain Misbah-ul-Haq to bring in spin from both ends from the eighth over.

The spinners managed to keep the runs down but wickets eluded them. Misbah used all five bowlers by the end of 12 overs and the breakthrough finally came in the 24th, when Sibanda stayed back to an Ajmal ball that spun back in. Masakadza reached his fifty the following over and continued to take on the spinners, sweeping Ajmal and reading Shahid Afridi's variations in pace. He chipped down the track and lofted Afridi over extra cover for six and in an over that produced 13. The frustration showed in Pakistan's fielding, when in that over, a drive back to the bowler should have been stopped, but the resultant misfield produced two runs.
 
Masakadza fell during the batting Powerplay, smashing Ajmal straight to cover. It was only temporary relief for Pakistan because by then Taylor was set, having already scored four boundaries. Pakistan didn't do themselves any favours in the field, though. A struggling Timycen Maruma tried to loft over long-on but Ahmed Shehzad was in two minds whether to catch or stop the ball and the ball bounced over his head for four. Taylor himself was let off, on 37, when a reverse sweep went straight to point where Junaid dropped it.
 
Luck was firmly in Zimbabwe's favour. Maruma's wobbly knock suggested that Zimbabwe were starting to panic, but Sean Williams, aided by some good fortune, ensured his side held the edge with a spicy cameo. An inside edge off Junaid hit the base of the stumps but miraculously, didn't dislodge the bails. Worse still for Pakistan, it went for four. Williams sealed the win in style, smashing a six over midwicket to give Zimbabwe their first ODI win against a top team since October 2011.
 
Pakistan, winning the toss, found runs hard to come by at the start due to steady seam bowling, recovered in the middle thanks to Mohammad Hafeez's brisk half-century, and stumbled towards the end, failing to accelerate due to the pressure caused by the sudden fall of wickets. What prevented them from suffering a complete meltdown was Misbah-ul-Haq, who carried on his good form from the West Indies with his fourth consecutive fifty.
 
It was a mixed day for Zimbabwe in the field. A series of drops at the start showed that the team had hardly made any progress on that front since the India tour. Mohammad Hafeez was a beneficiary of one of those drops, when on 10. He went on to score 70, but the pace of his innings was crucial, with Misbah not deviating from his tried and tested conservative approach in the middle overs.
 
Hafeez found early momentum with three sixes off Prosper Utseya, down the ground, though he was lucky the second one wasn't pouched at the boundary's edge. Hafeez was strong through the off side, punishing the offspinners in particular. He picked 48 of his 70 runs off Utseya and Malcolm Waller, picking the large gaps square of the wicket on the off side.
 
Pakistan struggled to maintain a healthy run-rate following that wicket. Umar Amin was run-out trying to complete a second run. Afridi played a typical blink-and-you-missed-it cameo before edging a slog. Haris Sohail was caught brilliantly by Utseya, who plucked a one-handed blinder at short cover - a catch good enough to forget the sitters put down earlier by Zimbabwe.
 
Misbah's innings had a high percentage of singles - he had scored only two fours till the 46th over, and yet had managed a decent strike-rate of 81.69. Yet, he saved his big hitting only for the final over, mowing Tinashe Panyangara for massive blows over the on side to take Pakistan to 244. It was well short of stretching the hosts, who are a win away from sealing the series.

25 overs Zimbabwe 112 for 1 (Masakadza 50*, Taylor 2*) need a further 133 runs to beat Pakistan 244 for 7 (Misbah 83*, Hafeez 70)


Before this match, Hamilton Masakadza spoke about the importance of his duty, as an opener, to set the base and not allow pressure to build on the lower order. Masakadza and his partner Vusi Sibanda made promising starts in the two T20s before giving it away, but in the longer format settled in well with a positive stand chasing 245. The pair put on an encouraging stand of 107, before Sibanda fell shortly after making his fifty.
 
Pakistan brought in Junaid Khan, who missed the T20s, but he came in for some stick. His third over went for 12, which included three boundaries by Masakadza. The openers were strong through the off side against the left-armers and the boundary barrage prompted captain Misbah-ul-Haq to bring in spin from both ends from the eighth over.
 
The spinners managed to keep the runs down but wickets eluded them. Misbah used all five bowlers by the end of 12 overs and the breakthrough finally came in the 24th, when Sibanda stayed back to a Saeed Ajmal ball that spun back in. Sibanda had, in the previous over, smashed Mohammad Irfan over midwicket to bring up his fifty, but the bowling change produced a wicket. Masakadza reached his fifty the following over and at the halfway stage, having got the required start and a well-set batsman, all Zimbabwe needed was the composure to close out the chase.

50 overs Pakistan 244 for 7 (Misbah 83*, Hafeez 70) v Zimbabwe


Pakistan's innings was a story of three parts. They found runs hard to come by at the start due to steady seam bowling, recovered in the middle thanks to Mohammad Hafeez's brisk half-century, and stumbled towards the end, failing to accelerate due to the pressure caused by the sudden fall of wickets. What prevented them from suffering a complete meltdown was Misbah-ul-Haq, who carried on his good form from the West Indies with his fourth consecutive fifty.

It was a mixed day for Zimbabwe in the field. A series of drops at the start showed that the team had hardly made any progress on that front since the India tour. While the Pakistan openers failed to capitalise on those let-offs, the drop that really cost Zimbabwe was Mohammad Hafeez's, when on 10. He went on to score 70, putting Pakistan on course for a competitive total. The pace of his innings was crucial, with Misbah not deviating from his tried and tested conservative approach in the middle overs.
 
With play beginning half an hour later than the scheduled start time for the India ODIs that preceded this tour, the conditions were expected to favour the batsmen more. Instead, the seamers dictated terms, beating the bat on several occasions, especially against Nasir Jamshed. Having gone six innings without a fifty - including the T20s - Jamshed was under pressure to score, and his innings could have ended on 5 had Vusi Sibanda held a sitter at second slip.
 
Shehzad's was the wicket Zimbabwe needed more desperately, having conceded two half-centuries to him - including a 98 - in the T20s. Tinashe Panyangara was the unlucky bowler yet again when Shehzad, on 15, spooned a drive straight to extra cover, where Sean Williams dropped a straightforward chance. Ironically, Panyangara later went from playing victim to culprit when he palmed a six over long-off, having come forward a few yards to catch Hafeez on the boundary.
 
Prosper Utseya gave Zimbabwe their first breakthrough when Shehzad was beaten and stumped. Jamshed's wicket was reward for some probing seam bowling by Tendai Chatara, who drew the left-hander forward for the drive and induced a thin edge to the keeper. Hafeez found early momentum with three sixes off Utseya, down the ground, though he was lucky the second one wasn't pouched at the boundary's edge.
 
Hafeez was strong through the off side, punishing the offspinners in particular. He picked 48 of his 70 runs off Utseya and Malcolm Waller, picking the large gaps square of the wicket on the off side. Brendan Taylor, perhaps sensing a big partnership, kept rotating his bowlers, using as many as eight bowlers by 31 overs. The part-timer, Hamilton Masakadza, should have had Hafeez on 55, but Taylor, who stood up to the stumps, failed to gather the ball. That lapse cost Zimbabwe 15 runs before Hafeez tamely cut Chatara straight to short third man.
 
Pakistan struggled to maintain a healthy run-rate following that wicket. Umar Amin was run-out trying to complete a second run. Shahid Afridi played a typical blink-and-you-missed-it cameo before edging a slog. Haris Sohail was caught brilliantly by Utseya, who plucked a one-handed blinder at short cover - a catch good enough to forget the sitters put down earlier by Zimbabwe.
 
Misbah's innings had a high percentage of singles - he had scored only two fours till the 46th over, and yet had managed a decent strike-rate of 81.69. Yet, he saved his big hitting only for the final over, mowing Panyangara for massive blows over the on side to take Pakistan to 244. Zimbabwe will be pleased they restricted Pakistan to this score after the Hafeez-Misbah partnership, but their chances of chasing it down would depend on how they tackle Pakistan's spin-heavy attack, that had caused them much discomfort in the T20 series that concluded before.

Sunday, 25 August 2013

5th Test Day 5 Match Drawn Eng win 3-0

England 377 (Root 68, Pietersen 50, Faulkner 4-51) and 206 for 5 (Pietersen 62, Trott 59) drew with Australia 111 for 6 dec (Broad 4-43) and 492 for 9 dec (Watson 176, Smith 138, Anderson 4-95)


Let's have a game of cricket, said Michael Clarke. And so, as the Ashes series moved to an enthralling climax that few imagined possible, England and Australia did just that. Then, with England needing 21 runs from four overs with six wickets in hand, a capacity crowd in a state of high excitement and Clarke no longer fancying a game of cricket quite as much anymore, the umpires took out their light meters and they all walked off.

Others can debate the whys and wherefores of ICC regulations. After the torpor of Friday and the washout of Saturday, this was a memorable day's cricket. The umpires had no choice but to walk off under those regulations and Clarke, having manufactured a wonderful day's cricket, had a right to expect that the regulations were respected.
 
Jonathan Trott gave the immediate reaction to Clarke's attempts to get off the field. "We'd be doing the same thing," he said. "Australia declared to set up a game and all credit to them."
 
Kevin Pietersen, registering the fastest Ashes fifty along the way to 62 from 55 balls, will rightly gain the plaudits as England attempted to chase of 227 in 44 overs. He took England to within 64 runs of victory, with eight wickets and 10 overs remaining. In the end, they only faced six of them, but judging by the jubilation of England's players at completing a victorious series they did not seem to care.
 
Pietersen received a miniature silver bat on the third day to mark his achievement of becoming England's highest run-scorer in all formats. But this was the sort of cricket he lives for. His shots were falling into gaps and the crowd was rapt with attention on a beautiful sunlit evening. Then he swung Ryan Harris to David Warner at long-on, perhaps his first, fatal slog. 
 
Trott fell in the next over but England's chase continued in composed fashion in the hands of the Warwickshire pair Ian Bell and Chris Woakes. But it was not to be.
 
With the series already decided, Clarke, an Australia captain who doubtless had his coach egging him on in the background, deserved immense credit for fashioning such an engrossing climax. No Australia captain had ever lost an Ashes series 4-0. Clarke risked just that. Statisticians be damned, was Clarke's response: 3-0 or 4-0, who cares?
 
Only two captains had ever declared twice in a game and lost a Test - Garry Sobers for West Indies and Graeme Smith for South Africa. Hansie Cronje once declared and forfeited to lose against England but that one was corrupt.
 
There were deeper reasons, of course, for Clarke's declaration. Australia's sense of feelgood after a 3-0 Ashes defeat is based upon their conviction that they are playing a more enterprising brand of cricket that will fully explore their potential and ultimately turn the tide in their favour, preferably in the return Ashes series this winter.
 
Presented with a first-innings lead of 115 in early afternoon, and only 67 overs left in the game, they had only one option: attack. By tea, they had declared with a lead of 226. They made 111 at nearly five an over with six batsmen perishing. Clarke delivered news of the declaration to the England dressing room at a jaunty trot.
 
Alastair Cook, his opposite number, approached the run chase as dutifully as he approach a trip to a maiden aunt. It was an obligation he knew he must fulfil, whether deep down he wanted to or not, and he did so uncomfortably until he edged across his crease to James Faulkner and was lbw.
 
It was a timely departure. Pietersen came out to throaty cheers - the One Who Could. England still needed less than run a ball. Pietersen imposed himself against Faulkner. Recognising that the mood had changed, he switched into one-day mode.
 
Trott also progressed nonchalantly, keeping the target within range. On 41, he survived the most idiotic review of the series - it was quite a feat, so credit where it is due - when Nathan Lyon turned one out of the footholds and Steve Smith held a short leg catch off the thigh. He fell for 59, lbw to Faulkner, the sort of player who makes a match attacking by his very presence.
 
Those arriving at The Oval ahead of time on the final day had discovered groundstaff staring morbidly at covers and suggesting the match would not start much ahead of lunchtime. Read the experts and the emphasis was on England's unremittingly conservative approach and a debate, in the context of a seemingly dead Test, about how they had won respect rather than admiration.
 
What happened was a remarkable transformation. The Ashes series was suddenly full of jollity, so much so that even Faulkner would not have demanded his money back. Faulkner's jibe that refunds had been in order after England's defensive approach on an interminable Friday had been well aimed, judging by the outcry it caused among England supporters on social media sites.
 
He took four of the last five wickets to fall to finish with slightly flattering figures of 4 for 51.
Haddin, Australia's wicketkeeper, also broke the world record for dismissals in a Test series when he claimed three more victims on the final day, the best of them a sparkling leg-side catch to dismiss Bell, England's man of the series. Harris picked up the Australia award.
 
Haddin's 29 dismissals took him past Rod Marsh, who set the standard against England in 1982-83 and was on hand at The Oval to watch in his guise as an Australia selector.
 
England passed the follow-on figure, and must have assumed that they had removed Australia's last, faint chance of victory, in the process, within 12 overs. Then Graeme Swann took 18 off an over of offspin from Lyon and the crowd began to sense that Sunday might turn out to be rather different from the two days that had passed before.
 
Australia batted for 23 overs to reach 111 for 6. Their batting order - likened to a snow globe on ESPNcricinfo's ball-by-ball service - was shaken once more: Warner and Shane Watson opening, the debutant Faulkner at No. 3, Chris Rogers held in reserve.
 
Warner was brilliantly caught in his follow-through by James Anderson; Watson, who briefly laid into Anderson, succumbed at long-on and there was a first-baller for Haddin, courtesy of a waft at Stuart Broad.
 
It all seemed an Ashes fantasy, as if we had died of boredom on Friday and gone to Ashes heaven. Still Australia drove forward. Faulkner produced a brief one-day melody until Matt Prior caught him down the leg side at full stretch off Broad; Smith toe-ended one to long-on and Broad, loving every minute of the challenge, spread-eagled Harris' stumps for his fourth wicket.
 
Of Simon Kerrigan, protected after his stage fright on the opening day, there was no sighting. But just to be there must have been something.

Tea Australia 111 for 6 dec (Clarke 28*, Starc 13*) and 492 for 9 dec lead England 377 (Root 68, Pietersen 50) by 226 runs

Australia's sense of feelgood after a 3-0 Ashes defeat is based upon their conviction that they are playing a more enterprising brand of cricket that will fully explore their potential and ultimately turn the tide in their favour, so presented with a first-innings lead of 115 on the final day of the Investec Test series, and only 67 overs left in the game they had only one option: attack.

By tea, they had declared with a lead of 226 and 44 overs left in the game. They made 111 at nearly five an over with six batsmen perishing. England were invited to score at 5.16. The news of the declaration was delivered to the England dressing room at a jaunty trot, and with a big smile, by Australia's captain, Michael Clarke.

A stirring statement had been delivered and even if their collapse was enough to suggest that they had got several pages in the wrong order, the intention was that the essential message might embarrass England in the final session. Australia were prepared to risk defeat, and promote the brand in the process, but England, 3-0 up in the series and with no desire to be munificent, were likely to be deeply suspicious of too much tomfoolery.

Australia's batting order - likened to a snow globe on ESPNcricinfo's ball-by-ball service - was shaken once more: David Warner and Shane Watson opening, the debutant James Faulkner at No. 3, Chris Rogers held in reserve in case of disaster.

Warner was brilliantly caught in his follow-through by James Anderson; Watson, who briefly laid into Anderson as if he thought he was Simon Kerrigan trying the fast stuff, succumbed at long-on and there was a first-baller for Brad Haddin, courtesy of a waft at Stuart Broad.

Still Australia drove forward. Faulkner produced a brief one-day melody until Matt Prior caught him down the leg side at full stretch off Broad; Steven Smith toe-ended one to long-on and Broad, loving every minute of the challenge, spread-eagled Ryan Harris' stumps for his fourth wicket. Of Kerrigan, seemingly being protected for another day, there was no sighting.

Australia's enterprise shook England into a committed bowling response and, if the prospects of a positive result seemed improbable to all but the most incurable romantic, the entertainment quota for the final-day crowd ensured that a series which had only occasionally rivalled the enthralling character of 2005 and 2009 did at least end on a high.
 
Haddin, Australia's wicketkeeper, had equalled the world record for dismissals in a Test series when he claimed two more victims on the final day. Haddin's 28 dismissals took him alongside Rod Marsh, who set the standard against England in 1982-83 and who was on hand at The Oval to watch him in his guise as an Australia selector.
 
Haddin, who achieved the distinction in the second over after lunch when he caught Anderson off Faulkner, did not overly celebrate. Nor should he have done with the series lost. For all that, the record was proof of the sturdiest of individual performances.
 
England were dismissed 40 minutes into the afternoon session, their innings drawing to a close when Faulkner bowled Graeme Swann. Faulkner took four of the last five wickets to fall to finish with slightly flattering figures of 4 for 51.
 
After the circumspect England batting of the third day and the washed out day that followed, the Ashes series was suddenly full of jollity. As England made merry with 103 runs in a morning session restricted to 90 minutes, at nearly five-an-over, Australia took three wickets and the crowd shared in the fun, even Faulkner would not have demanded his money back.
 
Faulkner's jibe that refunds had been in order after England's defensive approach on an interminable Friday had been well aimed, judging by the outcry it caused among England supporters on social media sites.
 
England passed the follow-on figure, and logically removed Australia's last, faint chance of victory, within 12 overs. They did not agonise over it, as those you witnessed their third-day plod might have anticipated, they scampered there, ticking off the additional 42 runs they needed within 12 overs, and then putting their minds to not just winning the series but winning a few hearts and minds.
 
The Test still held more significance for Chris Woakes than most, with the chance to convey the impression that he could hold down a spot batting at No. 6 for England (he could start by batting there for his county), but on 29 he drove hard at Harris and was caught at second slip.
 
There was time for a couple more duvet-contented cover drives from Ian Bell, at the end of the most successful series of his life, before he gave Faulkner a wicket when Haddin took a sparkling leg-side catch. Broad then lost his middle stump as Starc swung one back a shade to defeat non-existent footwork.
 
Swann, in frisky mood, drove Starc resoundingly through the off side and sounded the lunch gong prematurely as he took a ringing blow on the helmet from the same bowler, but showed no ill effects as he skipped down the pitch to Nathan Lyon's offspin and planted him in the crowd. Eighteen came off the over and, as the crowd cheered, they had been treated to more light entertainment in three minutes than Friday's gathering had witnessed in an entire day.
 
There was purpose in the morning session, too, for Prior, who has followed up his England player-of-the-year award with an unproductive batting summer. He has not been helped by the slow, dry pitches, he has struggled against Peter Siddle's slanted attack and, when Australia have fed his strength square of the off side and packed the area with fielders, he has obligingly holed out more than once.
 
Prior was determined to provide something gratifying to bring him sustenance ahead of the return series. He carved away with a mixture of luck and judgment before falling at mid-on for 47, pulling at Faulkner, attempting a third successive boundary.
 
Until the final day, an Ashes series which burst into life at Trent Bridge less than seven weeks ago had been meandering to a close. The river which began by rushing excitedly through sunlit mountains has reached the alluvial plains and public and commentators alike are picking through the sediment for clues to the return series.
 
England, supremely efficient under the coaching guidance of Andy Flower, have become more admired than loved; Australia, trying to rediscover themselves through adventure under a new coach, Darren Lehmann, are disguising deficiencies off the field by ever bolder statements on and off the field.

England 377 (Prior 47, Bell 45) trail Australia 492 for 9 dec by 115 runs


Australia's wicketkeeper Brad Haddin equalled the world record for dismissals in a Test series when he claimed two more victims on the final day of the Investec Ashes series. Haddin's 28 dismissals took him alongside Rod Marsh, who set the standard against England in 1982-83 and who was on hand at The Oval to watch him in his guise as an Australia selector.

Haddin, who achieved the distinction in the second over after lunch when he caught James Anderson off James Faulkner, did not overly celebrate. Nor should he have done with Australia hours away from a 3-0 series defeat becoming reality. For all that, the record was proof of the sturdiest of individual performances.
 
England trailed by 115 runs as they were dismissed 40 minutes into the afternoon session, their innings drawing to a close when James Faulkner bowled Graeme Swann. Faulkner took four of the last five wickets to fall to finish with slightly flattering figures on debut of 4 for 51.
 
After the circumspect England batting of the third day and the washed out day that followed, the Ashes series reached its final day in jollier fashion. As England made merry with 103 runs in a morning session restricted to 90 minutes, at nearly five-an-over, Australia took three wickets and the crowd shared in the fun, even Faulkner would not have demanded his money back.
 
Faulkner's jibe that refunds had been in order after England's defensive approach on an interminable Friday had been well aimed, judging by the outcry it caused among England supporters on social media sites.
 
Once England had passed the follow-on figure, and removed Australia's last, faint chance of winning the Oval Test, the match became the precursor to impending England celebrations. They did not agonise over it, as those you witnessed their third-day plod might have anticipated, they scampered there, ticking off the additional 42 runs they needed within 12 overs, and then putting their minds to not just winning the series but winning a few hearts and minds.
 
Not every England player had an entirely successful morning. The Test had more significance for Chris Woakes than most, with the chance to convey the impression that he could hold down a spot batting at No 6 for England (he could start by batting there for his county), but he had moved from 15 to 29 when he drove hard at Ryan Harris and was caught at second slip. Another boundary, off Mitchell Starc, had flown conveniently over gully.
 
There was time for a couple more duvet-contented cover drives from Ian Bell, at the end of the most successful series of his life, before he gave Faulkner a wicket when Haddin took a sparkling leg-side catch, a wicket which left Haddin one short of Marsh's record. His chances of equalling the record were not immediately enhanced by Stuart Broad, who lost his middle stump as Starc swung one back a shade to defeat non-existent footwork.
 
Swann, in frisky mood, drove Starc resoundingly through the off side and sounded the lunch gong prematurely as he took a ringing blow on the helmet from the same bowler, but showed no ill effects as he skipped down the pitch to Nathan Lyon's offspin and planted him in the crowd. Eighteen came off the over and, as the crowd cheered, they had been treated to more light entertainment in three minutes than Friday's gathering had witnessed in an entire day.
 
There was purpose in the morning session, too, for Matt Prior, who has followed up his England player-of-the-year award with an unproductive batting summer. He has not been helped by the slow, dry pitches, he has struggled against Peter Siddle's slanted attack and, when Australia have fed his strength square of the off side and packed the area with fielders, he has obligingly holed out more than once.
 
Prior was determined to provide something gratifying to bring him sustenance ahead of the return series and by lunch he was unbeaten on 35, cutting with a mixture of luck and judgment and calculating perhaps that he had already picked out quite enough fielders for one summer. He fell at mid-on, pulling at Faulkner, attempting a third successive boundary.
 
An Ashes series which burst into life at Trent Bridge less than seven weeks ago is now meandering to a close. The river which began by rushing excitedly through sunlit mountains has reached the alluvial plains and public and commentators alike are picking through the sediment for clues to the return series.
 
When the next series is analysed before the existing one is completed, it is a sign that by and large that the river has run its course. England retained the Ashes in the rain at Manchester, they won the series after Stuart Broad's adrenalin rush in Chester-le-Street and, as much as the Barmy Army might be staging an end-of-series party, enthusiasm for it has dwindled. England's more enterprising approach was welcome in stirring spirits.
 
England, supremely efficient under the coaching guidance of Andy Flower, have become more admired than loved; Australia, trying to rediscover themselves through adventure under a new coach, Darren Lehmann, are disguising deficiencies off the field by talking ever louder off it.
 
A series which began as a battle for supremacy, a battle won by England, has become a battle for public affection. England have looked a little weary and put-upon whereas Australia are full of smiles. The body language has been misleading because it is England who are about to win the series and as they hit about them, with the cares of the third day banished, they had begun to relish as much.

Lunch England 350 for 7 ( Prior 35*, Swann 24*) trail Australia 492 for 9 dec by 142 runs

After the circumspect England batting of the third day and the washed out day that followed, the Investec Ashes series reached its final day in jollier fashion. As England made merry with 103 runs in a morning session restricted to 90 minutes, at nearly five an over, Australia took three wickets and the crowd shared in the fun, even James Faulkner would not have demanded his money back.

Faulkner's jibe that refunds had been in order after England's defensive approach on an interminable Friday had been well aimed, judging by the outcry it caused in social media among England supporters.

Once England had passed the follow-on figure, and removed Australia's last, faint chance of winning the Oval Test, the match became the precursor to impending England celebrations. They did not agonise over it, as those who witnessed their third-day plod might have anticipated, they scampered there, ticking off the additional 42 runs they needed within 12 overs, and then putting their minds to not just winning the series but winning a few hearts and minds.

Not every England player had an entirely successful morning. The Test had more significance for Chris Woakes than most, with the chance to convey the impression that he could hold down a spot batting at No. 6 (he could start by batting there for his county), but he had moved from 15 to 25 when he drove hard at Ryan Harris and was caught at second slip. Another boundary, off Mitchell Starc, had flown conveniently over gully.

There was time for a couple more duvet-contented cover drives from Ian Bell, at the end of the most successful series of his life, before he gave Faulkner a wicket when Brad Haddin took a sparkling leg-side catch, a wicket which left Haddin only one victim short of Rod Marsh's record 28 dismissals in a Test series.

His chances of equalling the record were not enhanced by Stuart Broad, who lost his middle stump as Starc swung one back a shade to defeat non-existent footwork.

Graeme Swann, in frisky mood, drove Starc resoundingly through the off side, sounded the lunch gong prematurely as he took a ringing blow on the helmet from the same bowler, but showed no ill effects as he skipped down the pitch to Nathan Lyon's offspin and planted him in the crowd. Eighteen came off the over and, as the crowd cheered, they had been treated to more light entertainment in three minutes than Friday's gathering had witnessed in an entire day.
 
There was purpose in the morning session, too, for Matt Prior, who has followed up his England player-of-the-year award with an unproductive batting summer. He has not been helped by the slow, dry pitches, he has struggled against Peter Siddle's slanted attack and, when Australia have fed his strength square of the off side and packed the area with fielders, he has obligingly holed out more than once.

Prior was determined to provide something gratifying to bring him sustenance ahead of the return series and by lunch he was unbeaten on 35, cutting with a mixture of luck and judgement and calculating perhaps that he had already picked out quite enough fielders for one summer.

An Ashes series which burst into life at Trent Bridge less than seven weeks ago is now meandering to a close. The river which began by rushing excitedly through sunlit mountains has reached the alluvial plains and public and commentators alike are picking through the sediment for clues to the return series.

When the next series is analysed before the existing one is completed, it is a sign that by and large that the river has run its course. England retained the Ashes in the rain at Manchester, they won the series after Broad's adrenalin rush at Chester-le-Street and, as much as the Barmy Army might be staging an end-of-series party, enthusiasm for it has dwindled. England's more enterprising approach was welcome in stirring spirits.

England, supremely efficient under the coaching guidance of Andy Flower, have become more admired than loved; Australia, trying to rediscover themselves through adventure under a new coach, Darren Lehmann, are disguising deficiencies off the field by talking ever louder off it.

A series which began as a battle for supremacy, a battle won by England, has become a battle for public affection. England have looked a little weary and put-upon whereas Australia are full of smiles. The body language has been misleading because it is England who are about to win the series 3-0 and as they hit about them, with the cares of the third day banished, they had begun to remember as much.

Saturday, 24 August 2013

2nd T20 Pak v Zim

Pakistan 179 for 1 (Shehzad 98*, Hafeez 54*) beat Zimbabwe 160 for 6 (H Masakadza 41, Hafeez 3-30, Babar 2-21) by 19 runs

Ahmed Shehzad established several records on way to plundering Zimbabwe for an unbeaten 98, which sealed a 2-0 sweep of the Twenty20 series for Pakistan. Shehzad bettered his best T20 international innings of 70, achieved in the previous game, to make the highest score in the format by a Pakistan batsman, going past Misbah-ul-Haq's 87* against Bangladesh in Karachi in 2008.

Heaving the ball repeatedly over the leg-side boundary to become the first from his country to hit six sixes in a T20 innings, Shehzad added 143 for the second wicket with Mohammad Hafeez, making it the highest T20 partnership by a Pakistan pair. The previous best was 142 for the first wicket between Kamran Akmal and Salman Butt against Bangladesh at Gros Islet in the 2010 World Twenty20.

Shehzad's innings was yet another example of how much damage top-order batsmen can cause in T20s, if they take a bit of time instead of throwing their bats at everything from the first ball. The first five that Shehzad played were all dots, from the offspinner Prosper Utseya. To the sixth, Shehzad charged out and lofted over long-on for six. This ability to come up with the big hit would define Shehzad's innings. More than a third of the 64 deliveries he faced were dots, and he was on 11 off 18 at one stage, but the heave over midwicket was always around the corner.
 
After Brendan Taylor again decided to chase, it was Nasir Jamshed who got Pakistan going with 23 off 17. He was put down at slip on 7 but soon mishit Shingi Masakadza for mid-off to take a running catch in the sixth over. That was to be it for Zimbabwe for the innings.
 
Barring a couple of leading edges off Hafeez that did not carry, they didn't really come close to taking another wicket. In Zimbabwe's defence, whenever Shehzad and Hafeez mishit the ball, it never came close to carrying to the deep fielders.And their fast bowlers never got the yorkers right, sending down length deliveries and full tosses instead, which Pakistan put away with ease.
 
Shehzad favoured the leg side overwhelmingly, 73 of his 98 coming in that region, including 10 of his 12 boundaries. Considering most of them were full-blooded swings across the line, the timing and placement he managed on the shots was commendable.
 
Shehzad needed just 22 deliveries after reaching his fifty to come within two runs of a century. Three of those were dots off Brian Vitori in the 16th over. The other three were swung for boundaries down the ground. He entered the last over on 86 and powered Vitori over long-on first ball. The hundred within sight, a determined but tiring Shehzad laboured back for successive twos next. He wanted two off the fourth ball as well, but Hafeez was in no mood for gifting a run-out chance to Zimbabwe. Sensitive to his opener's palpable desire, Hafeez pushed a single off the penultimate ball, but for once, Shehzad failed to pick a gap off the final one, trotting a single to deep midwicket. 
 
With Shehzad in such flow, Hafeez didn't have to do much more than turn the strike over for most of the partnership, before finding the boundary a few times at the death. The Pakistan captain would have a much larger role with the ball, after resting first-choice bowlers Saeed Ajmal and Mohammad Irfan. Anwar Ali was taken for three fours in his first over, and Zimbabwe were keeping up with the asking-rate at 44 for 0 after the first five. Then came the spinners, and Zimbabwe, again, had no answers.
 
Zulfiqar Babar began with a maiden, and Hafeez with a wicket-maiden, as Vusi Sibanda holed out after successive slow starts. In his next over, Hafeez had Taylor gloving an attempted reverse-sweep. Hamilton Masakadza fought to make 41, but Hafeez had him pulling to deep midwicket in the 14th. Babar's double-strike in the next over sent Zimbabwe plummeting further to 109 for 5. Elton Chigumbura and Malcolm Waller tried, but Shehzad had pulled so far in front that even an inexperienced attack wasn't really pushed.

5th Test Day 4 (No play due to rain)

England 247 for 4 (Bell 29*, Woakes 15*) trail Australia 492 for 9 dec by 245 runs
The weather forecast for London was not wrong as the fourth day of the final Investec Ashes Test was abandoned without a ball bowled.

There was never any real prospect of play as rain of varying strength shrouded the ground throughout the day and the umpires made their decision at 4pm. The spectators will get full refunds for the wiped out day - it did not take long for Twitter to be abuzz with suggestions they should have received refunds for the third day as well.
 
The forecast for Sunday is more promising, although it is hard to escape the feeling that it will be a rather low-key affair when Alastair Cook has handed the urn at some point in the afternoon. Stuart Broad issued a rally call when he tweeted: "Who is coming to The Oval 2moro to share the special moment of lifting The Ashes with us?! Lets make it a party!!!"
 
England will resume on 247 for 4, still 46 short of saving the follow-on. From their point of view there are personal milestones to aim for and, in Chris Woakes' case, Test match experience to gain. If Australia did manage to skittle the remaining batsmen inside the follow-on - which is not a completely implausible scenario given the pitch has been covered for a day - they could yet have an outside chance of applying some pressure.
 
The one element of intrigue remaining is that if England narrowly save the follow-on whether Clarke, ever the adventurous captain, would leave a run chase on the final afternoon.

Friday, 23 August 2013

1st T20 Zimbabwe v Pakistan

Pakistan 161 for 5 ( Shehzad 70, Afridi 23*) beat Zimbabwe 136 for 5 (Sibanda 31, Taylor 32*) by 25 runs

Zimbabwe had their moments where they stretched Pakistan with a confident start in their chase of 162, but tackling the spinners in the middle overs was always going to be the bigger proposition. Pakistan's spin trio - led by Shahid Afridi - put the stranglehold on the scoring with regular wickets and the hosts found the target rapidly slipping away from them. Once the required rate neared an improbable 12, the final passage of play turned tepid.

In both innings, Pakistan found the going tough in the first half of the innings but clawed back in the second. Ahmed Shehzad weathered a sluggish start with a solid half-century that set the base for Shahid Afridi to play his natural game and push Pakistan to a competitive score.

The Pakistan seamers struggled to contain the openers, but following a few quiet overs of spin, the momentum shifted. Brendan Taylor was looking to play himself into some form, after a poor series against India, and he didn't have the time or an attacking partner at the other end to help his side reclaim the edge.

After being put in to bat, Pakistan lost their first three wickets inside nine overs, all off questionable shots. Tendai Chatara accounted for the first two, and his second wicket to get rid of Mohammed Hafeez was made possible thanks to a brilliant reflex catch by Taylor. That catch was a good example of Zimbabwe's fielding in the early part of Pakistan's innings, but they couldn't put enough pressure on Pakistan in the second half.
 
Pakistan progressed to a less-than-satisfactory 57 for 3 after ten overs, but the turning point in the innings came in the 12th over. It was Elton Chigumbura's first and he leaked 17, which included a pulled six by the debutant Sohaib Maqsood and two swept boundaries by Shehzad past short fine leg. Pakistan ensured they maintained that momentum till the end of the innings, picking 75 runs off six beginning from the 12th.
 
Maqsood looked promising in a stand of 55 with Shehzad, pouncing on anything short from the seamers. After pulling Chigumbura over deep square leg, he tried to clear the straight boundary the following ball but was done in by an impressive running catch by Vusi Sibanda.
 
Shehzad's knock was vital in giving Pakistan a base to build on, which was crucial given the under par scores from the rest of the top order. He managed only one boundary in the first ten overs and began to open up in the company of the confident Maqsood. He was caught on the edge of the long-on boundary for 70, attempting a second six. Afridi, sent in at No.6, made a cameo 23 to give the bowlers a solid score to defend.
 
Sibanda and Hamilton Masakadza helped Zimbabwe race to 35 off five overs - at the same stage Pakistan had already lost two wickets. Taylor said at the toss that Zimbabwe were more comfortable chasing, and the openers certainly gave the impression. Sibanda didn't look too troubled by Mohammad Irfan's pace and lift, improvising by arching his back to steer the ball wide of the fielders on the off side.
 
Saeed Ajmal was brought on in the sixth over as damage control. Captain Hafeez reverted to his seamers and Anwar Ali struck in the first over of his second spell when he trapped Hamilton Masakadza lbw attempting to pull a ball that wasn't short enough. A set Sibanda lost his leg stump to Afridi, staying back to a flat, quicker delivery. Sean Williams was trapped lbw on the sweep, but didn't appear satisfied with the decision.
 
What Taylor needed was a form partner and the team management probably erred by not promoting Elton Chigumbura. Chigumbura performed better than some of the specialists in the one-dayers against India and when he walked in today Zimbabwe needed in excess of 17 an over. Timycen Maruma, who came in ahead of him, faced 13 balls for ten runs, at a time when Zimbabwe were desperate for a massive surge. The spinners held away and the margin of victory was a comfortable 25 runs.