Saturday, March 19, 2011

Pakistan shine to remove Australia for 176


Australia v Pakistan, World Cup 2011, Group A, Colombo

Pakistan shine to remove Australia for 176

shane watson
Pakistan produced an outstanding bowling and fielding display as Australia were hustled out for 176, their lowest completed World Cup total since 1992, on a tricky pitch in Colombo. Brad Haddin top-scored with 42 in a brittle performance from the current champions who have not been beaten in a World Cup match since May 1999. The wickets were shared around with Umar Gul taking three and Abdul Razzaq a crucial brace.
Whoever wins this match will finish top of Group A, which has a bearing on who they play in the quarter-finals and in which country. The first half couldn't have gone much better for Pakistan as all the bowlers played their part in keeping Australia under wraps while their fielding display reached rarely seen levels of excellence. Kamran Akmal had a good day behind the stumps with three catches, while the variety in the attack meant a host of wicket-taking options.
Australia have been saying how they wanted a test after easing through most of the group stage but the batting wasn't up to it on a difficult surface that offered spin and a touch of uneven bounce. Two batsmen desperate for a substantial innings, Ricky Ponting (19) and Cameron White (8), both struggled leaving the lower order exposed to spin and reverse swing.
Pakistan had an early scare when Gul pulled up at the start of his second over with a knee problem and needed attention from the physio. Whatever treatment was provided worked wonders because he produced a lovely nip-backer to beat Shane Watson's ambitious drive.
It was hard work for Australia to find momentum as Gul maintained a testing line and Abdur Rehman, the left-arm spinner, varied his pace nicely after being given the new ball. Haddin briefly broke free when he used his feet against Rehman to loft him straight for six, but it wasn't until the ninth over that the innings got a kick as Gul sprayed five wides before being pulled through midwicket.
Ponting has been scratchy during the tournament and was again unconvincing although he didn't have a huge amount of strike when he arrived. His first boundary came from a fortunate top edge after he was comprehensively beaten by a Wahab Riaz bouncer, but three balls later he produced a sweet cover drive.
Not for the first time, though, spin brought his downfall when he tried to cut Mohammad Hafeez, who produced a superb 10-over spell for 26, and got a thick edge that Kamran did well to take in the webbing of his right glove. However, it was originally given not out and the DRS was needed to overturn the decision in Pakistan's favour. Meanwhile, as the players waited for the TV umpire, there was an altercation between Haddin and the Pakistanis.
Haddin has been consistent during the tournament without reaching the three-figure score the top order needs and he couldn't convert here when he pushed at a delivery from Wahab to give Kamran his second catch. Misbah-ul-Haq missed an opportunity to run out Michael Clarke but made no mistake when his next chance came around when his throw to Kamran found White short after a laboured stay.
In Clarke and Michael Hussey, Australia had two of their in-form players together but even they found scoring tough as Shahid Afridi mixed up his bowling options. Razzaq was held back until the 35th over and made an immediate impression when Clarke missed an ugly heave against a well-disguised off-cutter which trimmed the off bail.
Hussey couldn't perform a rescue-act, either, when he chipped a simple catch to midwicket and the innings was coming off the rails as Razzaq produced a nippy delivery to find Mitchell Johnson's outside edge. Jason Krejza was defeated by Gul's lethal reverse swing and Steve Smith, having tried to see out the overs, chopped into his stumps against Afridi before Brett Lee carved to cover with 20 balls unused.

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