Showing posts with label wahab riaz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wahab riaz. Show all posts
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Friday, April 1, 2011
Ajmal still baffled by Tendulkar lbw reversal
India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011
Ajmal still baffled by Tendulkar lbw reversal
ESPNcricinfo staff
Pakistan offspinner Saeed Ajmal has said that he is still not sure how the Decision Review System (DRS) overturned on-field umpire Ian Gould's lbw ruling against Sachin Tendulkar during the World Cup semi-final against India in Mohali. Gould ruled Tendulkar lbw off Ajmal in the 11th over, but the batsman reviewed the decision. Replays showed that the ball pitched in line but according to Hawk Eye the ball was missing leg stump and the decision was overturned.
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Wahab Riaz |
"I don't know how the television replays showed my delivery turning towards the leg side because I had bowled an arm ball and it went straight," Ajmal toldAFP on the team's arrival in Lahore. "I was 110% confident when the referral was made that the batsman was out." Tendulkar was on 23 at that point, and survived four dropped chances before he was dismissed after making a crucial 85 that earned him the Man of the Match award.
Ajmal picked up two wickets and said that he was happy with his bowling performance but disappointed that Pakistan lost the high-voltage clash to India by 29 runs. "All of us were very disappointed at losing the match because there was so much interest and hype attached to it. But in cricket one team has to lose and one has to win," he said.
The pick of the Pakistan bowlers in that game was left-arm seamer Wahab Riaz who picked up his first five-wicket haul in ODIs and had India in trouble at 205 for 6 before Suresh Raina's cameo. "The wickets of [Virender] Sehwag and Yuvraj [Singh] were most memorable for me as they are very dangerous players of pace and spin," Riaz said. Riaz had Sehwag lbw for 38 and accounted for Yuvraj Singh for a duck with a swinging, dipping full toss.
Pakistan were warmly welcomed by their fans when they arrived in Lahore and captain Shahid Afridi, who landed in Karachi, was mobbed by joyous fans on the way to his house. Opening batsman Mohammad Hafeez, who made a quick-fire 43, urged the Pakistan fans to have faith in the team. "This team has a lot of capability and will get better results in the future," he said.
Pakistan manager Intikhab Alam praised the team spirit and said the way the team had gelled together and played as a unit through the tournament was the most satisfying aspect of the campaign. "My main task was to unite the team and make it perform collectively and I think we achieved that to a great extent and that is satisfying for me."
Pakistan next travel to West Indies to play Twenty20, five one-dayers and two Tests. That tour begins on April 18.
© ESPN EMEA Ltd
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Sachin Tendulkar celebrates India's win with an ecstatic leap
Sachin Tendulkar celebrates India's win with an ecstatic leap, India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali, March 30, 2011
©Associated Press
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Sachin Tendulkar celebrates India's win with an ecstatic leap, India v Pakistan, 2nd semi-final, World Cup 2011, Mohali, March 30, 2011©Associated Press |
Match Analysis | The experts review the action

Match Analysis | The experts review the action
'India strong favourites for title'
Sanjay Manjrekar, speaking to Siddhartha Talya, says Pakistan made far too many mistakes, and India seem strong contenders for the title(07:43)
March 30, 2011
Related Links » Players/Officials: MS Dhoni | Sanjay Manjrekar | Misbah-ul-Haq | Ashish Nehra | Munaf Patel | Shahid Afridi | Wahab Riaz Matches: India v Pakistan at Mohali Series/Tournaments: ICC Cricket World Cup Teams: India | Pakistan
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
pakistan 28/0 in 5 overs
Pakistan openers make positive start
It was difficult to imagine that this semi-final could live up to the extreme pre-match hype but at the halfway point, India and Pakistan had justified the build-up. Sachin Tendulkar played one of the luckiest innings of his career, dropped four times in his 85, while a wonderful bowling effort from Wahab Riaz helped restrict India to 260, which on a good batting pitch and fast outfield was a reasonable result for Pakistan.
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz takes five as India reach 260

But while the first 50 overs were captivating, Sri Lanka would have enjoyed what they saw from the two teams fighting for the chance to meet them in Saturday's final. Apart from Riaz and the Pakistan spinners, the standard of cricket from both sides was rather poor; Pakistan's fielding was atrocious, Umar Gul (0 for 69) had his worst day in a long while, and India's batsmen seemed to wilt under the pressure of a World Cup semi-final.
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Wahab Riaz |
Suresh Raina (36 not out) added some late runs, and 43 in the batting Powerplay in the dying stages could yet prove invaluable. India must now rely on their bowlers, and judging by the turn found by Saeed Ajmal and his colleagues, India's decision to leave out R Ashwin to make room for Ashish Nehra could prove a mistake.
That said, it was the seam movement of Riaz that caused the biggest problems for India, and he finished with 5 for 46, finding wickets just when Pakistan needed them. His much-deserved five-for arrived with a tickle behind from Zaheer Khan in the 50th over, and Pakistan must be relieved that they didn't succumb to temptation and drop him for Shoaib Akhtar.
And by picking up two lbw decisions and bowling Yuvraj Singh first ball, Riaz took the Pakistan fielders out of the equation. Tendulkar was put down on 27, 45, 70 and 81, and it seemed as though he was going to bring up his 100th international century with one of his least convincing innings of recent times.
Misbah-ul-Haq at midwicket was the first to drop Tendulkar, before Younis Khan spilled a regulation chance at cover, both off the bowling of Shahid Afridi. The third chance came when Kamran Akmal didn't move his hands quickly enough to a thick edge, again off Afridi, and while that was a tough opportunity, a pull to Umar Akmal at mid-on from the offspin of Mohammad Hafeez should have been taken.
And before he had any of those lives, Tendulkar had survived two very tight calls on 23: an lbw decision that was given out by Ian Gould but on review proved to be spinning down leg, and the next delivery a near-stumping when he just got his back foot down in time after losing his balance reaching outside off. When Tendulkar was finally taken at cover by Afridi off the bowling of Ajmal, Pakistan's relief was evident.
Soon after, a scratchy MS Dhoni, who was also dropped by Kamran, made the mistake of challenging Simon Taufel on an lbw decision. Dhoni had 25 when he missed a Riaz delivery that pitched just in line and was hitting the stumps, and it was the second outstanding call by Taufel, who had given Virender Sehwag lbw in a similar fashion earlier, even though the left-armer's angle meant pitching outside leg was a possibility.
Riaz was the man who Afridi had to thank for keeping Pakistan in the contest after India made a strong start and reached 114 for 1 off their first 18 overs. After Gautam Gambhir was stumped wandering down the pitch against Hafeez, Riaz grabbed two wickets in two balls - Virat Kohli caught at backward point and Yuvraj Singh bowled by a low full toss for a golden duck.
Nobody looked as fluent as the crease as Sehwag, who took 21 off Gul from the third over of the innings. There were boundaries from a flick over midwicket, a clip through the same region, a cut from a slower ball, a nudge behind square leg and a cover-drive off a no-ball, and the most remarkable thing about the over was that Sehwag didn't also dispatch the free hit.
The initial signs were worrying for Pakistan as Sehwag also drove Abdul Razzaq back over his head for a boundary. But what looked like a 300-plus total in those early overs became a much more gettable chase, and set up a fascinating second half in the battle to face Sri Lanka.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
Sachin Tendulkar walks back after a chancy 85
Great start by openers
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Great start by openers
Pakistan 15/0 in 2.2 oversIt was difficult to imagine that this semi-final could live up to the extreme pre-match hype but at the halfway point, India and Pakistan had justified the build-up. Sachin Tendulkar played one of the luckiest innings of his career, dropped four times in his 85, while a wonderful bowling effort from Wahab Riaz helped restrict India to 260, which on a good batting pitch and fast outfield was a reasonable result for Pakistan.
But while the first 50 overs were captivating, Sri Lanka would have enjoyed what they saw from the two teams fighting for the chance to meet them in Saturday's final. Apart from Riaz and the Pakistan spinners, the standard of cricket from both sides was rather poor; Pakistan's fielding was atrocious, Umar Gul (0 for 69) had his worst day in a long while, and India's batsmen seemed to wilt under the pressure of a World Cup semi-final.
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Wahab Riaz |
Suresh Raina (36 not out) added some late runs, and 43 in the batting Powerplay in the dying stages could yet prove invaluable. India must now rely on their bowlers, and judging by the turn found by Saeed Ajmal and his colleagues, India's decision to leave out R Ashwin to make room for Ashish Nehra could prove a mistake.
That said, it was the seam movement of Riaz that caused the biggest problems for India, and he finished with 5 for 46, finding wickets just when Pakistan needed them. His much-deserved five-for arrived with a tickle behind from Zaheer Khan in the 50th over, and Pakistan must be relieved that they didn't succumb to temptation and drop him for Shoaib Akhtar.
And by picking up two lbw decisions and bowling Yuvraj Singh first ball, Riaz took the Pakistan fielders out of the equation. Tendulkar was put down on 27, 45, 70 and 81, and it seemed as though he was going to bring up his 100th international century with one of his least convincing innings of recent times.
Misbah-ul-Haq at midwicket was the first to drop Tendulkar, before Younis Khan spilled a regulation chance at cover, both off the bowling of Shahid Afridi. The third chance came when Kamran Akmal didn't move his hands quickly enough to a thick edge, again off Afridi, and while that was a tough opportunity, a pull to Umar Akmal at mid-on from the offspin of Mohammad Hafeez should have been taken.
And before he had any of those lives, Tendulkar had survived two very tight calls on 23: an lbw decision that was given out by Ian Gould but on review proved to be spinning down leg, and the next delivery a near-stumping when he just got his back foot down in time after losing his balance reaching outside off. When Tendulkar was finally taken at cover by Afridi off the bowling of Ajmal, Pakistan's relief was evident.
Soon after, a scratchy MS Dhoni, who was also dropped by Kamran, made the mistake of challenging Simon Taufel on an lbw decision. Dhoni had 25 when he missed a Riaz delivery that pitched just in line and was hitting the stumps, and it was the second outstanding call by Taufel, who had given Virender Sehwag lbw in a similar fashion earlier, even though the left-armer's angle meant pitching outside leg was a possibility.
Riaz was the man who Afridi had to thank for keeping Pakistan in the contest after India made a strong start and reached 114 for 1 off their first 18 overs. After Gautam Gambhir was stumped wandering down the pitch against Hafeez, Riaz grabbed two wickets in two balls - Virat Kohli caught at backward point and Yuvraj Singh bowled by a low full toss for a golden duck.
Nobody looked as fluent as the crease as Sehwag, who took 21 off Gul from the third over of the innings. There were boundaries from a flick over midwicket, a clip through the same region, a cut from a slower ball, a nudge behind square leg and a cover-drive off a no-ball, and the most remarkable thing about the over was that Sehwag didn't also dispatch the free hit.
The initial signs were worrying for Pakistan as Sehwag also drove Abdul Razzaq back over his head for a boundary. But what looked like a 300-plus total in those early overs became a much more gettable chase, and set up a fascinating second half in the battle to face Sri Lanka.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
Wahab Riaz's five keeps India to 260
Wahab Riaz's five wickets
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz takes five as India reach 260
It was difficult to imagine that this semi-final could live up to the extreme pre-match hype but at the halfway point, India and Pakistan had justified the build-up. Sachin Tendulkar played one of the luckiest innings of his career, dropped four times in his 85, while a wonderful bowling effort from Wahab Riaz helped restrict India to 260, which on a good batting pitch and fast outfield was a reasonable result for Pakistan.
But while the first 50 overs were captivating, Sri Lanka would have enjoyed what they saw from the two teams fighting for the chance to meet them in Saturday's final. Apart from Riaz and the Pakistan spinners, the standard of cricket from both sides was rather poor; Pakistan's fielding was atrocious, Umar Gul (0 for 69) had his worst day in a long while, and India's batsmen seemed to wilt under the pressure of a World Cup semi-final.
![]() |
Wahab Riaz |
Suresh Raina (36 not out) added some late runs, and 43 in the batting Powerplay in the dying stages could yet prove invaluable. India must now rely on their bowlers, and judging by the turn found by Saeed Ajmal and his colleagues, India's decision to leave out R Ashwin to make room for Ashish Nehra could prove a mistake.
That said, it was the seam movement of Riaz that caused the biggest problems for India, and he finished with 5 for 46, finding wickets just when Pakistan needed them. His much-deserved five-for arrived with a tickle behind from Zaheer Khan in the 50th over, and Pakistan must be relieved that they didn't succumb to temptation and drop him for Shoaib Akhtar.
And by picking up two lbw decisions and bowling Yuvraj Singh first ball, Riaz took the Pakistan fielders out of the equation. Tendulkar was put down on 27, 45, 70 and 81, and it seemed as though he was going to bring up his 100th international century with one of his least convincing innings of recent times.
Misbah-ul-Haq at midwicket was the first to drop Tendulkar, before Younis Khan spilled a regulation chance at cover, both off the bowling of Shahid Afridi. The third chance came when Kamran Akmal didn't move his hands quickly enough to a thick edge, again off Afridi, and while that was a tough opportunity, a pull to Umar Akmal at mid-on from the offspin of Mohammad Hafeez should have been taken.
And before he had any of those lives, Tendulkar had survived two very tight calls on 23: an lbw decision that was given out by Ian Gould but on review proved to be spinning down leg, and the next delivery a near-stumping when he just got his back foot down in time after losing his balance reaching outside off. When Tendulkar was finally taken at cover by Afridi off the bowling of Ajmal, Pakistan's relief was evident.
Soon after, a scratchy MS Dhoni, who was also dropped by Kamran, made the mistake of challenging Simon Taufel on an lbw decision. Dhoni had 25 when he missed a Riaz delivery that pitched just in line and was hitting the stumps, and it was the second outstanding call by Taufel, who had given Virender Sehwag lbw in a similar fashion earlier, even though the left-armer's angle meant pitching outside leg was a possibility.
Riaz was the man who Afridi had to thank for keeping Pakistan in the contest after India made a strong start and reached 114 for 1 off their first 18 overs. After Gautam Gambhir was stumped wandering down the pitch against Hafeez, Riaz grabbed two wickets in two balls - Virat Kohli caught at backward point and Yuvraj Singh bowled by a low full toss for a golden duck.
Nobody looked as fluent as the crease as Sehwag, who took 21 off Gul from the third over of the innings. There were boundaries from a flick over midwicket, a clip through the same region, a cut from a slower ball, a nudge behind square leg and a cover-drive off a no-ball, and the most remarkable thing about the over was that Sehwag didn't also dispatch the free hit.
The initial signs were worrying for Pakistan as Sehwag also drove Abdul Razzaq back over his head for a boundary. But what looked like a 300-plus total in those early overs became a much more gettable chase, and set up a fascinating second half in the battle to face Sri Lanka.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
india 185/5 in 36 overs
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz inspires Pakistan fightback
Jittery India lose Gambhir
Pakistan fight after Sehwag blitz
By the end of today, either India or Pakistan will have earned a place in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka, and MS Dhoni did his team a favour by winning the toss and choosing to bat in perfect conditions in Mohali. After all the hype, the time for talking is almost over, but Dhoni still needed to explain India's strange decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra.
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wahab riaz |
"Pakistan are very good players of spin bowling," Dhoni said by way of explanation. The pitch was expected to offer more for the seamers than the slow men, but the inclusion of Nehra, who has taken just one wicket from two matches in the tournament and hasn't played in two and a half weeks, is a major gamble.
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Wahab Riaz |
![]() |
wahab riaz |
Pakistan, though, preferred to trust the same line-up that accounted for West Indies so easily in their quarter-final, meaning there was no room for Shoaib Akhtar. "It will not be easy against the spinners," the Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi said. "The ball will definitely take some grip." At least his bowlers won't have to contend with the dew that could play a part later in the evening.
India 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 Zaheer Khan, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.
Pakistan 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Saeed Ajmal.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
Tendulkar out
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz inspires Pakistan fightback
Jittery India lose Gambhir
Pakistan fight after Sehwag blitz
By the end of today, either India or Pakistan will have earned a place in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka, and MS Dhoni did his team a favour by winning the toss and choosing to bat in perfect conditions in Mohali. After all the hype, the time for talking is almost over, but Dhoni still needed to explain India's strange decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra.
![]() |
wahab riaz |
"Pakistan are very good players of spin bowling," Dhoni said by way of explanation. The pitch was expected to offer more for the seamers than the slow men, but the inclusion of Nehra, who has taken just one wicket from two matches in the tournament and hasn't played in two and a half weeks, is a major gamble.
![]() |
Wahab Riaz |
![]() |
wahab riaz |
Pakistan, though, preferred to trust the same line-up that accounted for West Indies so easily in their quarter-final, meaning there was no room for Shoaib Akhtar. "It will not be easy against the spinners," the Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi said. "The ball will definitely take some grip." At least his bowlers won't have to contend with the dew that could play a part later in the evening.
India 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 Zaheer Khan, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.
Pakistan 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Saeed Ajmal.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
Tendulkar dropped 4 times
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz inspires Pakistan fightback
Jittery India lose Gambhir
Pakistan fight after Sehwag blitz
![]() |
wahab riaz |
By the end of today, either India or Pakistan will have earned a place in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka, and MS Dhoni did his team a favour by winning the toss and choosing to bat in perfect conditions in Mohali. After all the hype, the time for talking is almost over, but Dhoni still needed to explain India's strange decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra.
![]() |
wahab riaz |
"Pakistan are very good players of spin bowling," Dhoni said by way of explanation. The pitch was expected to offer more for the seamers than the slow men, but the inclusion of Nehra, who has taken just one wicket from two matches in the tournament and hasn't played in two and a half weeks, is a major gamble.
![]() |
Wahab Riaz |
Pakistan, though, preferred to trust the same line-up that accounted for West Indies so easily in their quarter-final, meaning there was no room for Shoaib Akhtar. "It will not be easy against the spinners," the Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi said. "The ball will definitely take some grip." At least his bowlers won't have to contend with the dew that could play a part later in the evening.
India 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 Zaheer Khan, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.
Pakistan 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Saeed Ajmal.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
india 182/4 in 35 overs
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz inspires Pakistan fightback
Jittery India lose Gambhir
Pakistan fight after Sehwag blitz
![]() |
wahab riaz |
By the end of today, either India or Pakistan will have earned a place in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka, and MS Dhoni did his team a favour by winning the toss and choosing to bat in perfect conditions in Mohali. After all the hype, the time for talking is almost over, but Dhoni still needed to explain India's strange decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra.
![]() |
wahab riaz |
"Pakistan are very good players of spin bowling," Dhoni said by way of explanation. The pitch was expected to offer more for the seamers than the slow men, but the inclusion of Nehra, who has taken just one wicket from two matches in the tournament and hasn't played in two and a half weeks, is a major gamble.
![]() |
Wahab Riaz |
Pakistan, though, preferred to trust the same line-up that accounted for West Indies so easily in their quarter-final, meaning there was no room for Shoaib Akhtar. "It will not be easy against the spinners," the Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi said. "The ball will definitely take some grip." At least his bowlers won't have to contend with the dew that could play a part later in the evening.
India 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 Zaheer Khan, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.
Pakistan 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Saeed Ajmal.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
India 168/4 in 30 overs
India v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, semi-final, Mohali
Riaz inspires Pakistan fightback
Jittery India lose Gambhir
Pakistan fight after Sehwag blitz
By the end of today, either India or Pakistan will have earned a place in the World Cup final against Sri Lanka, and MS Dhoni did his team a favour by winning the toss and choosing to bat in perfect conditions in Mohali. After all the hype, the time for talking is almost over, but Dhoni still needed to explain India's strange decision to leave R Ashwin out to make room for Ashish Nehra.
![]() |
wahab riaz |
"Pakistan are very good players of spin bowling," Dhoni said by way of explanation. The pitch was expected to offer more for the seamers than the slow men, but the inclusion of Nehra, who has taken just one wicket from two matches in the tournament and hasn't played in two and a half weeks, is a major gamble.
![]() |
Wahab Riaz |
Pakistan, though, preferred to trust the same line-up that accounted for West Indies so easily in their quarter-final, meaning there was no room for Shoaib Akhtar. "It will not be easy against the spinners," the Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi said. "The ball will definitely take some grip." At least his bowlers won't have to contend with the dew that could play a part later in the evening.
India 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Gautam Gambhir, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Yuvraj Singh, 6 MS Dhoni (capt, wk), 7 Suresh Raina, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 Zaheer Khan, 10 Ashish Nehra, 11 Munaf Patel.
Pakistan 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Mohammad Hafeez, 3 Asad Shafiq, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq, 6 Umar Akmal, 7 Shahid Afridi (capt), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Wahab Riaz, 11 Saeed Ajmal.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinf
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