Health Message

(Smoking, Alcohol & Drugs is injurious to Health)

Monday, 3 October 2016

Pakistan cricket team win's one by one with wonderful games, is Pakistan ready to be no 1 in ODI & T20 too?

en.dailypakistan.com.pk


Pakistan cricket team win's one by one with wonderful games, is Pakistan ready to be no 1 in ODI & T20 too?

Source: Google


 Pak clinch series 2-0:

Another clinical performance from the hosts. Some brilliant batting by young Babar Azam, the experienced Shoaib Malik and Sarfraz Ahmed, followed by some disciplined bowling, shoddy dropped catches but three stunning run-outs. Azam (123) and Malik (90) laid the platform with a record third-wicket stand and Sarfraz (60 not out) added the fireworks towards the fag end to take the hosts to a mammoth 337 from their allotted overs.

338 wasn't going to be easy for the team who had so far struggled to adopt to the spin-friendly conditions of the UAE. But this time the Caribbean side had their bowling to blame for all the extra runs they splurged.
Azam struck a chanceless century, his second successive one, and Malik blitzed 90 as the pair strung together 169, Pakistan's highest stand for the third wicket against West Indies. In reply, West Indies found the chase too steep and could only manage 278 for 7.

Openers Azhar Ali and Sharjeel Khan put West Indies under pressure from the outset after Pakistan opted to bat. Sharjeel used his bottom hand to clear the infield regularly, collecting three fours and a six in his 12-ball 24 before West Indies hit back, removing both batsmen in the space of three balls.

Thereafter, Azam and Malik stalled West Indies with sound technique and calculated risks. Azam pierced the field while Malik went over it, both equally effective in collecting frequent boundaries and keeping the score moving. Sulieman Benn's introduction was delayed, but Malik capitalised on the bowler's modus operandi of flight and loop from around the wicket.

Malik struck five sixes off Benn - three in succession in the 27th over - by shimmying down, getting underneath the ball and going over the arc between long-on and midwicket. The period between overs 21 and 35 yielded 107 in conditions not suited to effortless run-scoring.

In between, Azam unfurled classy drives through cover and found gaps in the outfield to accumulate runs. After Malik carved one to point, Azam utilised Pakistan's strong platform. His 126-ball 123 included nine fours and a six, which indicated his ability to maintain a high strike rate through ones and twos. Neither Malik nor Azam offered even a "half-chance" until their dismissals.
Given the potential of this West Indies side's batting unit, 338 was tough but not impossible. Samuels and Bravo however were the only ones who could convert their starts, even though it didn't prove enough. Holder chipped in with an unbeaten 31 towards the end but his team fell well short.

Having clinched the series though, in the end, Pakistan would probably not mind those extra runs leaked with their sub-par fielding but that's definitely an area that needs massive improvement, as Azhar Ali admitted in the post-match presentation.

Babar Azam picked up the second consecutive Man of the Match award.

So that's how things stand. Pakistan have 2-0 unassailable lead in the series and 5-0 on this tour overall, having also swept the prece
ding three-match T20I series. West Indies will have a lot of soul searching to do.
In response, Darren Bravo (61) and Kraigg Brathwaite (39) tried to give their side the momentum with a 89 run stand for the second wicket. But with Brathwaite’s dismissal, that continuity was lost.

Marlon Samuels tried to give some edge to the West Indies batting with a 57 but in the end, it was for a lost cause.

No comments:

Post a Comment