Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Warner's brilliance powers Sunrisers to maiden IPL final

The weekend and the determination of the second finalist of the ninth edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) drew in thousands to the Feroz Shah Kotla on Friday (May 27). With orange flags being hurled in equal proportions, it was Sunrisers Hyderabad's Orange Army, led by a magnificent innings from captain David Warner, that pipped Gujarat Lions in a thriller to book their maiden spot in the final where they will contest for the silverware against Royal Challengers Bangalore.
 
After a rather poor start that once again saw Gujarats top order fail as they have in the latter half of the tournament they did well to recover on Friday (May 27) with 95 runs in the second half to reach 162 for 7 in the second qualifier. Taking into account that the next-best score to David Warner's 93 off 58 balls, was a brilliant 11-ball 27 from Bipul Sharma at No. 8, it was reflection of the magnitude of the skipper's innings and his fortitude to hold his bat throughout. Warner's excellent essay, laced with 11 fours and 3 sixes, ended Lions' maiden season. His unbeaten 46-run stand for the seventh wicket with Bipul, that saw as many as three sixes hit, helped Sunrisers to a four-wicket win.
 
The blip in Sunrisers' approach to their chase was indeterminacy of whether to accelerate in the powerplay or set the base. In the end, they ended up doing neither. Shikhar Dhawan was caught short of his crease in the second over after Brendon McCullum fired in a throw at the stumps from cover point. Yuvraj Singh and Moises Henriques couldn't replicate their outings from the other night, a result of which, Warner had to once again don his steadfast cap and keep his side in the chase. Wickets tumbled at the other end as Warner struggled to forge substantial stands while doing the dirty work himself.
 
Surpassing the 700-run mark this season, he cruised to another half-century off 35 balls, to become the batsman with the most fifty-plus scores in the IPL. Gujarat couldn't curb Warner's trademark offside play as he creamed the cover regions.
 
Shivil Kaushik, coming in for Shadab Jakati, made his presence felt as Sunrisers slipped to 84 for 5. Kaushik troubled Yuvraj Singh, who seemed scratchy in his 13-ball stay. With the chinaman bowler varying his pace and lengths, coupled with the slowing down of the pitch under lights, Yuvraj holed out in an attempt to break free. Cutting was unlucky to be adjudged caught-behind off Kaushik after the bat hit the front pad, but was mistaken for an edge.
 
With Sunrisers still 66 short with 36 balls remaining, Warner took on Dwayne Smith and squeezed 19 runs with the pressure building. It was a no-brainer that Sunrisers needed Warner until the end; was also little surprise that Gujarat tried to get under his skin. After a brilliant 16th over from Dwayne Bravo that yielded just two runs, Praveen Kumar walked towards Warner with the two indulging in an exchange that needed Dinesh Karthik to intervene to stop an advancing bowler.
 
Two overs and 24 runs, Warner hit Bravo for a boundary and Bipul ended the over with a six as 19 were scored that over. Warner wrapped up proceedings quickly in last over that needed five, hitting a boundary off Praveen and pumping his fists in joy. He ended the innings with a single to break into a trademark Warner celebration with a jump and the air-punch of his helmet.
 
If Sunrisers' fielding effort against Kolkata Knight Riders pleased Warner, the one against Gujarat would've left him delighted - albeit only until a point after opting to bowl. The first half of Gujarat's innings saw spectacular ground fielding where Sunrisers held onto catches, didn't concede easy singles and a direct hit from Trent Boult dismissed Dinesh Karthik just when it looked like he was upping the run rate. That effort helped Sunrisers curb Gujarat's implosive batting line-up as they had only 67 on the board for the loss of three wickets.
 
In perhaps a ploy to protect Aaron Finch and Smith against the new ball, Gujarat promoted Eklavya Dwivedi to open with Brendon McCullum. The move didn't pay dividends as Bhuvneshwar had the batsman caught after slogging a short and wide ball.
 
McCullum timed the ball beautifully, but Sunrisers' fielders kept the batsmen in check with 19 runs in the opening three overs with as many as 10 dots. McCullum's wrists came into use early as the bowlers got the ball to lean into his pads as opposed to finishing on the off stump. As the ball angled in, he got into position early to score most of his runs in the fine leg region.
 
Aaron Finch was handed a life on 13 by Barinder Sran in the 12th over, who dropped a sitter at short fine leg, which Sunrisers paid the price for. McCullum departed in the same over for 32 off 29, but Finch went on to score a half-century which helped Gujarat finish on a high after a poor start.
 
Gujarat were 83 for 5 after Dwayne Smith fell cheaply, but Finch and Ravindra Jadeja got together to put on 51 runs - a partnership that provided definition to their innings. Finch was flirting with danger, but his self-assurance was worthy of praise, given that Gujarat needed some lifting.

Ben Cutting's piece of brilliance at the boundary should've been enough to lift Sunrisers after Henriques was hammered for 17 runs by Finch. The burly Australian mistimed one off Sran which sailed to the deep midwicket fence, but found Cutting, who leapt into the air, clasped the ball, realised he was tipping over and chucked the ball in while in the air. That superman effort, however, didn't alter proceedings as Finch's sentience and power outdid Sunrisers bowlers in the final five overs as Gujarat took 53.

Mustafizur Rahman's last-minute hamstring strain made way for Boult to play his first match in three months. Having last played a practice match against England at Mumbai BKC on March 12, Boult's rustiness couldn't have been understated. The challenge in replacing Mustafizur wasn't so much how he started, but how he would fare at the death. Conceding 13 runs in his two overs upfront, and the wicket of Raina after trapping him leg before in his second over, Boult was taken to the cleaners in the death. First by Finch, and then taken apart by Dwayne Bravo, Boult leaked 26 runs as the momentum switched between the sides.
What didn't help Sunrisers in those final overs was also some shoddy fielding where they gave away one too many runs, but Warner's brilliant effort with the bat helped mask those blunders.

Source: cricbuzz.com
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Watson leads Australia to thumping win

All-rounder Shane Watson slammed a terrific unbeaten 161 to lead Australia to an impressive six-wicket win over touring England on Sunday at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

England, after opting to bat first, posted a challenging 294 in 49.4 overs. Australia led by Watson's terrific effort overhauled the target in 49.1 overs to end at 297 for four.

Watson and wicketkeeper Brad Haddin got Australia off to a flying start scoring 110 for the opening wicket in 19.4 overs. Thereafter handy contributions from skipper Michael Clarke (36), Mike Hussey (21) helped Watson build Australia's chase. Towards the tail end of the chase Cameron White stepped in with a 23-ball 25 which helped Australia romp home in fine style. For England Tim Bresnan (2-71) was the most sauccessful bowler.

Earlier, England capitalised on another hapless performance from Australia in the field to post an imposing total. Kevin Pietersen led the way for England with 78 from 75 balls, including three sixes. It was England's highest total in a One-Day International against Australia in Australia, and also their highest at the MCG.

Just over a month before its World Cup defence, Australia dropped catches, missed stumpings, botched run outs and wickets from no-balls, as well as more than a dozen wides. The rot set in early for the home side when Steven Smith and Brett Lee somehow got in each other's way at the non-striker's end to mess up an elementary run out to give opener Steve Davies (42) a life before he had scored.

With England captain Andrew Strauss on 17, Lee thought he had the left-hander caught on the boundary, only for a review called by umpire Bruce Oxenford to show it was a clear no-ball. To rub salt into the wounds, Strauss, who went on to make 63 from 65 balls, smashed the subsequent free hit for four.

Watson then grassed Davies, when he was on 18, at short cover, from the bowling of Lee before wicketkeeper Haddin squandered the first of three missed stumpings when Davies was on 24 from the bowling of David Hussey. The blunders enabled England to get off to a flyer, and the visitors were 90-0 after 12 overs.

Haddin later missed another simple stumping when Strauss was on 48 and facing Xavier Doherty. The New South Welshman made it a hat-trick of missed stumpings when he cost Hussey for a second time, with Pietersen the beneficiary when on 37.

The belligerent Englishman made the Aussies pay immediately, lofting the unlucky Hussey for successive sixes to bring up his half-century and his team's 200.

Source: http://icc-cricket.yahoo.net
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ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 schedule

ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 will be the 10th World Cup. Prior to the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011, 9 Cricket World Cups have been organized by ICC. Australia have emerged winner on the most occasions – 4. Closely following is West Indies, who won the inaugural and the very next World Cup. All the Indian Subcontinent teams – India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka have won 1 World Cup each. Australia won in 1987, 1999, 2003 and 2007. West Indies won on 1975 (the first World Cup) and 1979. India won the World Cup in 1983, Pakistan won the World Cup in 1992 and Sri Lanka won in 1996.

Cricket World Cup 2011 fixtures:

Match

Date

Teams

Venue

1

19 Feb

India vs Bangladesh

Dhaka

2

20 Feb

New Zealand vs Kenya

Chennai

3

20 Feb

Sri Lanka vs Canada

Hambantota

4

21 Feb

Australia vs Zimbabwe

Ahmedabad

5

22 Feb

England vs Netherlands

Nagpur

6

23 Feb

Pakistan vs Kenya

Hambantota

7

24 Feb

South Africa vs West Indies

New Delhi

8

25 Feb

Australia vs New Zealand

Nagpur

9

25 Feb

Bangladesh vs Ireland

Dhaka

10

26 Feb

Sri Lanka vs Pakistan

Colombo

11

27 Feb

India vs England

Kolkata

12

28 Feb

West Indies vs Netherlands

New Delhi

13

28 Feb

Zimbabwe vs Canada

Nagpur

14

1 Mar

Sri Lanka vs Kenya

Colombo

15

2 Mar

England vs Ireland

Bangalore

16

3 Mar

South Africa vs Netherlands

Mohali

17

3 Mar

Pakistan vs Canada

Colombo

18

4 Mar

New Zealand vs Zimbabwe

Ahmedabad

19

4 Mar

Bangladesh vs West Indies

Dhaka

20

5 Mar

Sri Lanka vs Australia

Colombo

21

6 Mar

India vs Ireland

Bangalore

22

6 Mar

England vs South Africa

Chennai

23

7 Mar

Kenya vs Canada

New Delhi

24

8 Mar

Pakistan vs New Zealand

Pallekelle

25

9 Mar

India vs Netherlands

New Delhi

26

10 Mar

Sri Lanka vs Zimbabwe

Pallekelle

27

11 Mar

West Indies vs Ireland

Mohali

28

11 Mar

Bangladesh vs England

Chittagong

29

12 Mar

India vs South Africa

Nagpur

30

13 Mar

New Zealand vs Canada

Mumbai

31

13 Mar

Australia vs Kenya

Bangalore

32

14 Mar

Pakistan vs Zimbabwe

Pallekelle

33

14 Mar

Bangladesh vs Netherlands

Chittagong

34

15 Mar

South Africa vs Ireland

Kolkata

35

16 Mar

Australia vs Canada

Bangalore

36

17 Mar

England vs West Indies

Chennai

37

18 Mar

Sri Lanka vs New Zealand

Mumbai

38

18 Mar

Ireland vs Netherlands

Kolkata

39

19 Mar

Australia vs Pakistan

Colombo

40

19 Mar

Bangladesh vs South Africa

Dhaka

41

20 Mar

Zimbabwe vs Kenya

Kolkata

42

20 Mar

India vs West Indies

Chennai

43

23 Mar

First Quarterfinal

Dhaka

44

24 Mar

Second Quarterfinal

Colombo

45

25 Mar

Third Quarterfinal

Dhaka

46

26 Mar

Fourth Quarterfinal

Ahmedabad

47

29 Mar

First Semifinal

Colombo

48

30 Mar

Second Semifinal

Mohali

49

02 Apr

FINAL

Mumbai


Once you bookmark this page you can view ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 schedule and Cricket World Cup 2011 fixtures anytime you like.

Cricket World Cup 2011 venue: Cricket World Cup 2011 venue includes stadiums of cities like Dhaka, Mumbai, Kolkata, Mohali, Colombo, Chennai, Nagpur, Ahmedabad, Chittagong and Bangalore. Cricket World Cup 2011 venue also includes new venues like Pallekelle and Hambantota – both being in Sri Lanka.

Cricket World Cup 2011 teams: Cricket World Cup 2011 teams include 4 times winner Australia, 2 times winners West Indies, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Netherlands, Canada, Ireland, England and Kenya. Groups in which Cricket World Cup 2011 teams are divided:

Group A – Australia, Pakistan, New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Canada and Kenya.

Group B – India, South Africa, England, Bangladesh, West Indies, Netherlands and Ireland.

Source: cricketworldcup2011.co.in
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England register eighth win in T20 Internationals

England got the better of Australia by one wicket off the last ball of the first Twenty20 international at the Adelaide Oval on Wednesday.

The win, England's eighth, set a new record for consecutive victories in Twenty20 internationals.

The match had its share of ebbs and flows as England chased down Australia's target of 157 for four with just one wicket to spare. Debutant Chris Woakes hit the winning run off all-rounder Shane Watson to seal the victory.

Watson's career-best figures of 4-15 triggered a middle-order collapse for England, but the tail, specially Woakes held his nerves.

Earlier England restricted Australia after Watson (59) and his partner David Warner (30) got off to an impressive start scoring 83 from 52 balls.

For the visitors left-arm spinner Michael Yardy was the best bowler on view with his spell of 2-27.

England's chase stuttered after left-handed Eoin Morgan fell for 43.

England needed four runs off the final over. Graeme Swann was out clean bowled trying to pull by Watson. Shahzad played out the next two balls without a run. Off the fourth he got a single giving Woakes the strike. The debutant just calmly cut the next ball for two to level scores.

Finally Woakes lofted the last ball to seal England's 1-0 lead in the two-match series. The final game of the series will be played in Melbourne on Friday.

Source: http://icc-cricket.yahoo.net
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Watson, Hussey set up emphatic win

Australia v Pakistan, Group A, St Lucia

The Bulletin by Osman Samiuddin
May 2, 2010

Australia began to right previous wrongs in this format with an emphatic dismantling of the defending champions at St Lucia, a 34-run win serving serious notice to one and all of their intentions in this tournament. They wear a fresh look about them in this tournament, under a new captain in Michael Clarke at a global event for the first time since 1999 and with some very handy specialists in the squad.

They went about their opening game in merciless fashion, echoing their dominance over Pakistan months earlier. Brutal half-centuries from Shane Watson and David Hussey set them up, before equally brutal pace shoved aside Pakistan's batsmen. That the loss was Pakistan's tenth international in a row to Australia is neither here nor there; more relevant, Australia were very hot and Pakistan very cold.

It was that way from the start. Watson feasted hungrily in the summer at Pakistan's expense and his love affair continued in more romantic surroundings. A little luck initially helped him, two tough chances put down. More help came from the bulldozing ways of David Warner, the pair giving Australia a brisk start.

Pakistan very rarely open the bowling with a spinner and very quickly, Shahid Afridi's experiment with Mohammad Hafeez looked an unquestioned failure. Warner lofted him for an effortless six over long-off to end the second over and in his next, the game was blown open as the pair took 17.

Warner fell soon after, as did Michael Clarke, but like a right-handed Matthew Hayden, Watson simply bullied his way forth. The brutality of his batting has grown but so has, slyly, his handling of spin. Hafeez was heaved for three sixes, the last of which brought up his fifty in the 10th over.

He was intelligent against Shahid Afridi and Saeed Ajmal, not always picking them, but picking away each bad ball. A couple of full tosses were driven and pulled and one cut was a cross-format shot. Then, Hussey interrupted.

Pakistan's fielding was slowly unraveling and Salman Butt's drop when Hussey was 18 was particularly unnecessary; the reprieve unleashed a violent celebration. To rub it in, he took it out on Mohammad Sami, the unlucky bowler. He had bowled well until the 16th over, when his length and head went, allowing Hussey to loft and pull his way to four sixes and a 28-run over. Amid the mess, Watson's innings briefly forgotten, Hussey's own fifty came up.

Pakistan were schizophrenic with the ball; Afridi was again poor and the decision to bowl Hafeez even poorer. Hafeez and Sami went for 101 runs between them. But Mohammad Aamer and Ajmal were exemplary, pulling back some respect at the very end as seven wickets fell in the last four overs, including a remarkable five-wicket maiden last over.

That was to matter little as Australia's intent carried on through in their bowling. Spin, spin, spin has been the chatter, but Australia believe in pace and with some justification. Shaun Tait, Dirk Nannes and Mitchell Johnson will trouble all but the very best on any surface. Tait and Nannes were too much for Pakistan's top order and the trio picked up a wicket each in their first spells; Tait in particular was sharp.

Any time the pacemen weren't on, in fact, Pakistan's batsmen looked good. Fourteen came off a Michael Clarke over, 17 off a Steve Smith one. Shahid Afridi and Misbah-ul-Haq - a little more 2007 than 2009 - kept hope with a 47-run stand but the return of pace extinguished it. Afridi was bowled by Tait, Misbah and Abdul Razzaq slogged out to Nannes and the pace trio ended with eight wickets between them.

Source: http://www.cricinfo.com/world-twenty20-2010/content/current/story/458189.html
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Brett Lee out of World Twenty20 with arm injury

ICC World Twenty20 2010

Cricinfo staff
April 28, 2010

Brett Lee's hopes of making an international comeback have been dashed by a muscle strain in his right forearm that will force him out of the ICC World Twenty20. Lee suffered the problem during Australia's one-run warm-up loss to Zimbabwe and the team has requested a replacement player, likely to be either Doug Bollinger or Ryan Harris.

The injury is a major blow for Lee, who has not played for his country since October and was making his return from elbow surgery. Lee felt pain after taking 1 for 13 in four overs and later had MRI scans, and a team spokesman said the strain was unrelated to his elbow trouble.

"It's a muscle strain," the team spokesman told AAP. "We have gone to the ICC Technical Committee to ask for a replacement player."

The latest problem will raise further questions over the future of Lee, 33, who retired from Tests in February but wanted to remain a key Twenty20 and one-day player. A broken thumb curtailed his IPL season and although he retained his Cricket Australia contract, his ongoing injury worries must be a concern for the team management.

Australia play their second warm-up game against the Windward Islands on Thursday before their opening match of the tournament proper against Pakistan on Sunday. Bollinger and Harris are the front-runners to replace Lee, having both had strong summers in the shorter formats

Source: http://www.cricinfo.com/world-twenty20-2010/content/current/story/457618.html
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Ponting rates his bowlers the world's best

Brydon Coverdale
February 6, 2010
Mitchell Johnson
Ricky Ponting believes Australia's pace attack is the best in the world and hasn't ruled out Shaun Tait being used in one-day internationals after breaking the 160kph barrier in Friday night's Twenty20 win. Tait's Man-of-the-Match performance in his first game for Australia in a year served as another reminder of the depth in the country's fast-bowling ranks, which has been tested over the past few months.

Brett Lee (elbow) hasn't played since the early stages of the India tour in October, Stuart Clark (back) knows his international career is all but over, Peter Siddle (back) is out for the season and Ben Hilfenhaus (knee) has not appeared for Australia since the first Test of the summer. Throw in Nathan Bracken's knee surgery and fringe player Brett Geeves being out with back stress fractures and Australia's attack at times has looked more like a state list than an international group.

It is the success of those new men that has thrilled Ponting. Since Clint McKay's debut in November no Australian has taken more than his 17 ODI wickets, Ryan Harris has played four one-dayers and already has a Player-of-the-Series title, Doug Bollinger continues to make himself a star and Shane Watson's bowling has improved dramatically.

"I think the depth that we've got now as far as our fast-bowling goes is outstanding," Ponting said ahead of the first ODI against West Indies. "It would have to be the best group of fast bowlers anywhere in the world right at the moment. We were most stretched in India in the one-day series we had over there a few months ago and we had probably five or six of our guys injured and back in Australia but ... the depth is terrific."

It's hard to argue with Ponting after Australia's Twenty20 win against Pakistan when Tait, Dirk Nannes and Mitchell Johnson were all regularly in the 150kph region. Having three men in one side capable of those speeds is almost unheard of and Tait and Nannes are not even part of the ODI side.

Tait has given up playing first-class cricket so he can keep fresh for the short formats and could be a key player at May's World Twenty20. However, Ponting has not ruled out bringing Tait in to the one-day squad with one eye looking ahead to next year's 50-over World Cup, after Tait starred at the 2007 tournament with 23 wickets at 20.30.

"We saw in our last World Cup campaign in the 50-over game just how valuable he can be there," Ponting said. "He was probably our best bowler through that tournament and we used him in different roles as a real strike bowler, as Michael [Clarke] did last night.

"He definitely is somebody that you have to manage particularly well, so I'm sure with the World T20 coming up that they'll be doing everything in their power to make sure he's right for that. But that doesn't necessarily mean that he won't play 50-over cricket for us."

Friday's game demonstrated that loads of sixes and massive totals aren't all that the fans want from the shorter formats. When Tait stumbled over from his third ball, straining with the extra effort to hit 160.7kph, the crowd roared as the speed was displayed on the big screen. It was a sight that pleased Ponting, who was a spectator having retired from Twenty20 cricket.

"There were three guys last night all pushing 150, or two guys pushing 150 and Taity pushing 160," Ponting said. "That's great to have around your group. You've got incredible strike-power then and all of those guys are a good chance of playing 50-over cricket for us as well and it adds a lot to the spectacle of the game, when you see bowlers bowling that sort of pace."

Source & Picture: http://www.cricinfo.com
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Dominant Australia cruise to 2-0 lead

Australia v Pakistan, 2nd ODI, Sydney

The Bulletin by Peter English
January 24, 2010
Cameron White
Australia produced a commanding all-round performance to take a 2-0 lead with a 140-run demolition of Pakistan at the SCG. After being led by Shane Watson and Cameron White in their 6 for 267, the hosts delivered a stinging bowling display to knock over the tourists for 127 in 37.3 overs.

Pakistan lost their first five wickets for 42 in an awful opening and the result added further to the troubles of the captain Mohammad Yousuf, who is being replaced after the series. Yousuf had mistakenly chosen to bowl first in the hope of getting an advantage from the overcast conditions in the afternoon, but all the support came for the fast men as the sun started to go down. The ball seamed and bounced dangerously for Doug Bollinger, Peter Siddle and Clint McKay and the tourists could not cope.

Salman Butt (2) went in the fifth over nicking a shorter one from Bollinger and was taken at second slip by White. Three balls later the combination repeated the dismissal, dropping Pakistan to 2 for 7, when White dived to his left to catch the edge of Younis Khan.

Kamran Akmal was soon run out for 16 after chasing a quick single, having been sent back eventually by Yousuf and then beaten by McKay's direct hit in his follow through. Akmal's brother Umar joined him in the dressing room two deliveries later after his off stump was clipped by Siddle.

The hosts would not allow a recovery and lost their fifth man when Ricky Ponting leaped to his left at point for the superb one-handed take of Shoaib Malik (2). Yousuf was watching all the damage from the other end but was ultimately helpless, although he struck a strong six to long-on off Watson and was committed in his 58 off 94.

Rana Naved-ul-Hasan kept him company for an explosive 27 before being stumped off Nathan Hauritz, who caught Yousuf at short fine leg. There were few highlights for Pakistan on a night dominated by the hosts. Bollinger had 2 for 19 off nine, Siddle and McKay (3 for 15) also gave up less than three runs an over, and Hauritz collected 2 for 45.

Australia were challenged in Brisbane on Friday but they controlled most of match from the moment Watson struck the opening ball for four through point. While Watson lit up the innings with 69 off 71 balls and dominated a 100-run stand in 19.5 overs with Shaun Marsh, the chances of a massive total were upset by the frugal Afridi. In the end it didn't matter.

Afridi removed both openers and it was difficult for the hosts to increase the pace until White led the final thrust. White followed his century at the Gabba with 55 off 58 and benefited from delaying the batting Powerplay until the last five overs.

White belted a six and a four in an over from Naved-ul-Hasan and scrambled to the finish, bringing up his fifty with a drive over point. He departed on the fourth-last ball - the wicket went to Mohammad Aamer, who returned 3 for 53 - and Brad Haddin helped out with an unbeaten 27 off 14.

Afridi was central in regaining control for Pakistan after the opening burst and gave up only 35 from 10, including a crucial eight-over spell of 2 for 25 after coming on in the bowling Powerplay. He picked up Watson and Marsh while Saeed Ajmal and Malik were also tight, going at slightly more than four an over.

Watson muscled nine boundaries and a six off Naved-ul-Hasan that landed not far from the dressing room at midwicket. After five overs he was 34 off 22 - Australia were soon speeding at 65 off 10 - and brought up his fifty from 42 deliveries before accepting a standing ovation.

Yousuf called for the bowling Powerplay as soon as possible and Watson was held back by the spin as Afridi arrived. Afridi struck when Watson tried for another clearance and was well taken by Malik at deep midwicket.

Marsh (41) also fell to Afridi when he attempted to hit to the leg side and got a leading edge to long-on in a troubling period for the home side. Ponting (13) lacked fluency for the second match in a row and Australia were 4 for 166 when Michael Clarke fell on 25. White rallied and the bowlers backed up his charge, giving Australia the chance to claim the five-match series in Adelaide on Tuesday. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Cameron White century secures Australian win

Australia v Pakistan, 1st ODI, Brisbane

The Bulletin by Peter English at the Gabba
January 22, 2010
Cameron White
Cameron White finally showed he could be a potent force at home as his muscular century pushed Australia to a five-wicket win in the opening ODI against Pakistan. Over the past six months White has starred in England and India to confirm himself as a key batting figure and he powered the hosts as they over-hauled the target of 275 with nine balls to spare.

It was the first time White, playing his 48th ODI, had passed fifty in Australia and he almost made it to the end before falling for 105 off 88 balls. Australia were uncomfortable after slipping to 3 for 84 with Ricky Ponting's exit, but White joined with Michael Clarke in settling the nerves and then took on the major responsibility with the vice-captain's departure.

White is a hulky figure and he peaked with three consecutive sixes off Shahid Afridi between long-on and midwicket in the 41st over that downgraded Australia's assignment from difficult to comfortable. Afridi is used to dishing out that sort of sequence and did his best to provide the memorable moment of the day with a 26-ball 48, but White made sure it was his fireworks that will be recalled first.

He picked up four sixes and eight fours, including an unorthodox cross-bat down the ground off Rana Naved-ul-Hasan followed by a textbook cover drive in the same over, and added his second century to follow the 105 against England in Southampton in September. He was bowled by Rana trying for another boundary and left to a standing ovation. Michael Hussey, who was unbeaten on 35, finished off the match to earn a 1-0 lead in the five-match series

The result continued Australia's successful summer and stopped Pakistan, who had been heavily reinforced after the 3-0 Test loss, from gaining any momentum ahead of Sunday's second game in Sydney. They had chances to contain Australia further in the field following their useful start, but a few run-outs or catches will always be missed by this outfit.

Both Australian openers departed by the ninth over to leave Ponting and Clarke trying to consolidate during a 47-run partnership, but that ended when the battling Ponting (27) drove at Afridi and was taken behind point. Clarke was in much better touch and accumulated cleverly, hitting 40 singles on the way to 58, and put on 102 with White. However, Clarke departed when attempting a quick single only to be beaten at the striker's end by Rana's underarm.

Mohammad Aamer was slippery in his opening spell and Shane Watson was so behind in a defensive push on 5 that the ball hit the end of his handle and flew to Saeed Ajmal at mid-on. Aamer followed up by hitting Ponting on the hip and in his second spell stung Clarke's ribs with a lifter. By the end of the match it was the only lasting pain inflicted on the hosts.

Salman Butt's 72 put Pakistan on track for a sizeable total and Afridi made sure it happened with a powerful late surge that took them to 274. After winning the toss, the visitors had a series of useful stands over most of the innings but none that dominated the game until Afridi arrived at No. 7.

Australia had fought back from Butt's display through Watson and Clint McKay, but after the visitors wobbled to 7 for 227 in the 44th over Afridi quickly steadied them. Afridi forced a six to long-off from Nathan Hauritz before pulling Peter Siddle into the stands at midwicket to provide a much-needed boost during the batting Powerplay. He also found three boundaries in a row off McKay before the final delivery of the over went for four legbyes.

After swatting Watson for six to long-on, he was caught at midwicket trying for another clearance and the innings soon ended with Mohammad Asif's run-out with two balls remaining. Watson finished with a career-best 4 for 36 off 10 while McKay returned 3 for 61 in a mixed bowling display for the Australians, who had less support than usual with the crowd of 19,758 the smallest for an ODI at the ground in 11 years.

Butt added 62 with the recalled Kamran Akmal (34) before joining forces with Younis Khan. He dominated the partnership with Younis, who scored 8 of the 55 for the second wicket, but fell to his 81st ball when he top edged a pull off Doug Bollinger to become one of Haddin's four catches. Yousuf (2) quickly followed when he played on to a steepling delivery from Bollinger and Pakistan were on the brink of trouble at 3 for 123.

Younis came in for his first match since giving up the captaincy and was struggling with the added intensity on the way to 46. He knew he would get better with time and hung in to be the support partner in stands with Butt, Umar Akmal (23) and Shoaib Malik (28). When he departed pulling McKay to deep square leg the tourists were in trouble. Afridi dug them out briefly before White came of age at home. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Bowlers hand Australia 3-0 clean-sweep

Australia v Pakistan, 3rd Test, Hobart, 5th day

The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale at Bellerive Oval
January 18, 2010

Australia wrapped up their 12th consecutive Test victory over Pakistan on the final afternoon in Hobart, where Khurram Manzoor's fighting half-century was not enough to salvage a draw for the visitors. Nathan Hauritz added to his growing reputation as Test bowler by picking up the key wicket of Manzoor and finished with three, while Peter Siddle also grabbed a trio of victims.

Despite showers being forecast, the only sprinkling of rain came during the lunch break and it wasn't enough to delay Australia's charge to a series clean-sweep and a fifth Test win of the summer. Australia have now equalled the record for the most consecutive Test wins by any country over any other nation, matching the 12-game streak currently held by Sri Lanka over Bangladesh.

The only slight concerns for Australia came during a 66-run seventh-wicket stand between Manzoor and Mohammad Aamer. Manzoor, who came in for this Test at No. 3, enhanced his chances of keeping his place in the side with a patient 77 from 239 deliveries that gave Pakistan, for the morning at least, a tiny sniff of saving the game.

Manzoor showed impressive resolve for most of his innings but it didn't hold, and soon after an injudicious swipe against Hauritz he slashed at a cut against the spinner and was caught behind. The rest of Pakistan's resistance fell away and Hauritz had Umar Gul brilliantly caught at slip by Michael Clarke for a duck, before Mohammad Asif (0) was bowled by Mitchell Johnson.

Hauritz finished with 3 for 30 and was comfortably the leading wicket-taker for the series, with 18 at 23.05. Siddle was also happy with his 3 for 25, which was his best return of a lean summer, and he wrapped up the victory with the second new ball when Danish Kaneria played on for 1.

Pakistan's victory target of 438 was not the issue for Australia, they simply needed to grab the remaining wickets while the weather held up. Showers had been tipped on the final day but the Tasmanian local Ricky Ponting, who was confident in his knowledge of the state's weather, had his decision not to enforce the follow-on vindicated.

Australia began the day impressively wth Shoaib Malik caught behind off Siddle for 19, after adding only one to his overnight score. That was the key breakthrough for Australia as it opened the way into Pakistan's lower order, and the wicketkeeper Sarfraz Ahmed finished his debut Test with a disappointing batting return when he was caught at slip off Hauritz for 5.

Sarfraz departed in strange circumstances, when his edge clipped the gloves of Brad Haddin, went through the hands of Clarke and onto his boot before bouncing up for Clarke to complete the catch. If Pakistan had made their catches stick throughout the series it might have been a more enjoyable tour for them. Now they must wait until the two Tests in England in July to redeem themselves. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Shaky Pakistan hope for rain after Katich ton

Australia v Pakistan, 3rd Test, Hobart, 4th day

The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale at Bellerive Oval
January 17, 2010

On a day of inevitabilities, Australia moved within six wickets of completing a clean-sweep against a disappointing Pakistan. Simon Katich scored his first century of the summer, Ricky Ponting recorded his highest aggregate in a Test and Pakistan's top order looked shakier than the few yachts brave enough to take to the Derwent River on a gloomy, windy and eventually rainy Hobart day.
Doug Bollinger

Since Pakistan's capitulation in Sydney, it seemed inevitable that they would struggle to lift themselves for the dead rubber at Bellerive Oval. At the start of the fourth day, the most likely scenario was for Australia to add quickly to their overnight score and bat until after lunch, and Pakistan's batsmen to struggle and rain to play a part as the afternoon wore on. And so it unfolded.

Pakistan entered this Test with only two men averaging more than 40 for the series and until Salman Butt's first-innings century the best score by any of their players was his 71 at the SCG. Australia fancied their chances against the Pakistan order despite the forecast showers, and gave them a victory target of 438 from just under five sessions.

A win for Australia would be their 12th consecutive triumph against Pakistan, equalling the record for any team over any other Test side, which is currently held by Sri Lanka over Bangladesh. It came closer when Pakistan lost both openers within the first ten overs, then the captain and best batsman Mohammad Yousuf with the score on 61, and the young star Umar Akmal with the total at 4 for 83.

When the rain came an hour before the scheduled close, Pakistan were 4 for 103, needing an extremely unlikely 335 more for victory, with Khurram Manzoor on 23 and Shoaib Malik on 18. Yousuf and Akmal both fell lbw to Shane Watson, both had their decisions reviewed, and neither finished with the result he desired. Earlier, Butt failed to keep out a Doug Bollinger delivery and was bowled for 9, before Peter Siddle drew an edge behind from Imran Farhat (14) to begin Pakistan's slump.

The day had been yet another ugly one for them even before their innings began. Ponting and Katich added 141 in a brutal opening session as Pakistan continued to set defensive fields and waited for a declaration. Katich has had trouble reaching triple-figures this season and had posted scores of 92, 80, 99 and 98.

He hadn't scored a hundred since the Ashes opener in Cardiff and when he moved to 99, Pakistan tried to increase the pressure, but he found an easy single behind square on the leg side to register his century from 137 deliveries. In the next over, Katich holed out to deep midwicket off Danish Kaneria and departed for an even 100, his ninth Test century.

Playing with the freedom of having a hefty buffer, Katich took a more aggressive approach than normal and struck 13 fours in his 138 balls. Ponting also went after the bowling during their 191-run stand and was happy to be inventive, driving in the air over fielders and taking balls from outside off to the leg side.

Ponting failed to become the seventh batsman in Test history to score a double-century and a century in the same match when he departed for 89 on the fourth ball after lunch. He tried to sweep Malik and was taken down the legside by Sarfraz Ahmed, and the umpire's not-out decision was overturned on review when Hot Spot showed the ball brushed Ponting's glove.

He did finish with his best aggregate of runs in a Test match, scoring 298 and beating by ten his previous best set against India in Melbourne in 2003-04. After his dismissal, Brad Haddin and Mitchell Johnson came in as pinch-hitters but failed to have any impact and Australia lost 4 for 27 starting with Katich.

It didn't matter. Ponting already felt he had enough and declared at 5 for 219, setting Pakistan 438 to win. Yousuf's men need either a deluge of rain or runs to save them and only their most ardent fans could expect it to be the latter. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Clumsy Pakistan wilt after Ponting double

Australia v Pakistan, 3rd Test, Hobart, 2nd day

The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale at Bellerive Oval
January 15, 2010

Ricky Ponting's fifth Test double-century and Michael Clarke's highest Test score have left Pakistan facing a mountainous task to avoid defeat over the next three days in Hobart. Their already fragile confidence took another hit when Peter Siddle struck twice in one over and Salman Butt ran out two partners to leave them 425 runs adrift. With six wickets in hand, avoiding the follow-on looked as far away as the Australian mainland.
Ponting

There is every chance that, given the opportunity, Ponting will enforce the follow-on for the second time this summer as there are showers forecast over the next three days and the fast men are on the verge of a two-month break from Tests. He'll also be buoyed by Pakistan's ongoing self-implosion, which continued with the two run-outs.

The captain Mohammad Yousuf went hard for a third, which was refused by an overly casual Butt, and turned back to be caught short for 7. Yousuf stood by the pitch glowering at Butt before walking off and Pakistan's frustrations continued when Butt and Umar Akmal took off for a single, Butt stopped far too late, and Umar was run-out after his about-face. It was all the more disappointing after Butt and Imran Farhat reached 63 without loss.

Farhat (38) drove away from his body off Siddle and was caught behind and four balls later Khurram Manzoor, the No. 3 brought in for this match, played an ill-advised cut that on the slower pitches in Pakistan might have worked, but here resulted in an ugly edge to second slip. The wickets were a timely boost for Siddle, who had only six in his previous four Tests this summer and has been by far the least potent member of the attack.

But there was no doubt that the second day belonged to Ponting and Clarke, as had the first. Their 352-run partnership, which lasted 437 minutes and 626 balls, was Australia's sixth-highest for any wicket in Test history. The stand ended when Clarke tried to pad up to the legspinner Danish Kaneria coming around the wicket but saw it take his off stump on 166.

Ponting's innings of 209 came to a close when he attacked in spite of Pakistan's defensive wide-outside-off line and skied a catch to cover off Mohammad Aamer. The captain Yousuf took the chance, showing Aamer how it should be done after he put Ponting down at deep square-leg before he had scored on the first day. It wasn't the most expensive miss in Test history - in 1938 Ben Barnett missed a stumping off Len Hutton on 40 and he went on to score 364 - but it was depressingly costly for Pakistan.

When Ponting finally departed, fans stood all around the ground to cheer off their local Tasmanian hero, who made his third-highest Test score and his first double-ton since January 2005, the first Test double-century by any player at Bellerive Oval, and the highest Test score by an Australian since Justin Langer's 215 in Adelaide against New Zealand five years ago. He picked up an even hundred runs in boundaries - 25 fours - in a near nine-hour stay at the crease.

Ponting was given another life today on 167 when he drove Kaneria and the ball flew through the hands of Farhat at cover. But by that stage Australia were going for their shots and in truth, Clarke and Ponting were rarely troubled by a defensive Pakistan group that seemed simply to be waiting for a declaration.

That didn't come until the stroke of tea, by which time Brad Haddin had added a quick 41, Marcus North had scratched out 21, and Australia had climbed to 8 for 519. Ponting called an early end to Australia's innings in Melbourne but here seemed intent on grinding Pakistan into the Bellerive turf, both with his own batting and his declaration. Australia have never lost a Test in Hobart and they won't start now. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Cricket Australia says players can decide on IPL

Indian Premier League 2010

Cricinfo staff
January 15, 2010


Cricket Australia will let players involved in the IPL make their own decisions about whether to take part in the tournament following threats on their safety from India. The Shiv Sena political party has said they would not allow Australians to play in Maharashtra following attacks on Indian students in Melbourne.

"At the end of the day those players make their own decision about whether or not they go," Peter Young, the Cricket Australia spokesman, told AAP. "But we want them to be able to make informed decisions and we'd like to work with the ACA [Australian Cricketers' Association] to ensure they can make informed decisions.'' The IPL is due to begin in March and Australian players feature heavily in the franchise line-ups.

The Foreign Affairs Minister Stephen Smith said the final decision on whether players go to the country would rest with Cricket Australia. "They [Shiv Sena] are known to make colourful remarks, and they have engaged in conduct which both India and Australia have been disapproving of in the past, so far as disrupting cricket games are concerned," he said in the Courier Mail. "But we take any threat to Australian sportsmen and sportswomen ... playing sport overseas very seriously."

Player security has been an issue for Australia whenever they are scheduled to travel to the subcontinent. Australia has not toured Pakistan since 1998 due to the safety situation and sends independent security personnel to review arrangements before each trip.

"Our policy, as demonstrated over the years, is to only travel if dispassionate, expert, independent advice suggests that it is safe," Young said. "On those occasions when advice has suggested otherwise, we have not travelled, including when the ICC said Pakistan was safe and our advice was that it was not."

In 2008 there were a series of bombs that went off in India before the Test visit, which went ahead without any problems. However, teams are much more sensitive following the attack on Sri Lanka's team bus in Lahore, and this week three of the Togo football team were killed by gunmen who targeted their vehicle in Angola.

Tim May, the international players' association chief executive, claimed in the Australian the security situation in India was now as worrying as a year ago, when Mumbai terrorist attacks and a national election forced the tournament to be moved to South Africa at the last minute.

"We don't have to go too far back to the attack on the bus carrying the Togo soccer team in Africa," May said. "It underlines the fact that sporting teams are very palatable targets for terrorist organisations who want to make a lot of noise and lift their international profile."

May said a franchise had written to a player saying "if you're scared, don't come" to the IPL. "That doesn't do the player any good and it doesn't do the IPL any good," May said. "You'd like to think the IPL would realise that it is a reasonable request by players wanting to know about security arrangements." Australia are also due in India for another seven-match one-day series at the end of the year. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Plenty of life left in dead rubber

Australia v Pakistan, 3rd Test, Hobart

The Preview by Osman Samiuddin in Hobart
January 13, 2010

The Big Picture
It is in dead rubbers that the basis of cricket as an individual sport becomes clearest. But for the grace of Pakistan everyone would've come to Hobart much happier; the series is gone and with it the prospect of a good end to summer. Now attention turns to personal battles of form and there is enough to this Test to keep it sprightly.

To Pakistan first and who would have thought dropping a wicketkeeper who dropped four chances in the last Test - and it wasn't a one-off - would be so difficult? Not least of the confusion surrounding l'affaire de Kamran, as it will now be remembered, has come from the Pakistan camp itself; just as coach Intikhab Alam was definitively ruling him out on Tuesday, Kamran Akmal, definitively, was ruling himself in to an Australian newspaper.
Kamran Akmal

He was finally ruled out as Pakistan, surprisingly, announced their playing XI a day before the Test. But the matter has overshadowed a number of other issues, namely the continuing failures of Faisal Iqbal and Misbah-ul-Haq in the middle order. Changes have been made and Shoaib Malik and Khurram Manzoor are back in but sending back Fawad Alam, who represents a future - in whatever form and shape - was a poor choice. Mohammad Aamer is back as well to give Pakistan, finally, it's first-choice attack and that is something that just hasn't happened in recent years. In all, there will be enough new faces from Sydney so that Pakistan are likely to have a fresh, energetic feel to them. They will be keen to prevent a 12th successive loss and a fourth successive whitewash against this particular opponent.

Australia are far more settled. Such messes they don't often find themselves in and when they do, they are generally quieter and handle it with greater grace and coherence. Still, there are little niggling things that don't quite sit right about their line-up just yet.

A lack of runs from their middle order is chief among them. Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke and Marcus North have two fifties each from six Tests this summer and the first two, at least, should be doing much more than that. Neither has looked particularly out of form, but that in itself can be a greater worry than being out of touch, as North appears to be. Some wickets for Peter Siddle would go down nicely as well, though his presence has never been a non-threatening one.

In the bigger picture this Test may not matter much, but within it there will be enough players for whom it matters a great deal and that makes for compelling viewing.

Form guide
Australia WWWDW
Pakistan LLDWL

Watch out for...
Shane Watson was the Test find of the year for Australia in 2009 and he started the new year in style with 97 at the SCG. In his five Tests this summer, Watson has collected 579 runs at 72.37. His quick scoring at the top of the order has been a key to Australia's positive results, even if scores of 96, 89, 93 and 97 have made him a tragi-comic figure. This will be Watson's first Test at Bellerive Oval, where he started his first-class career in 2000-01, and it was his home ground until he moved back to Queensland in 2004-05.

Who else but the wicketkeeper? Pakistan's handling of the Kamran Akmal/Sarfraz Ahmed issue has been abysmal and inept. On wicketkeeping form alone Akmal, who is 28 today, should have been dropped long ago, but his batting has kept him alive. Sarfraz is a safe keeper and though not as game-changing with the bat, he is no mug either, as success on an A tour to Australia last year proves. His debut tomorrow means it is the first time since October 2004 that anyone other than Akmal has put on the wicketkeeping gloves for Pakistan in a Test match.

Team news
The only change for Australia is the return of Simon Katich, who missed the Sydney Test with an elbow problem. Phillip Hughes flew home to Sydney on Tuesday, having been released from the squad, leaving Clint McKay to serve as 12th man for the fourth consecutive match. Marcus North retained his place despite struggling for form this summer.

Australia 1 Shane Watson, 2 Simon Katich, 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Michael Hussey, 5 Michael Clarke, 6 Marcus North, 7 Brad Haddin (wk), 8 Mitchell Johnson, 9 Nathan Hauritz, 10 Peter Siddle, 11 Doug Bollinger.

Pakistan have made four changes to the line-up that imploded in Sydney. Misbah and Iqbal are out, with Malik and Manzoor the beneficiaries. Aamer is fit again and has replaced Mohammad Sami, and Sarfraz has come in for Akmal.

Pakistan 1 Imran Farhat, 2 Salman Butt, 3 Khurram Manzoor, 4 Mohammad Yousuf (capt), 5 Umar Akmal, 6 Shoaib Malik, 7 Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), 8 Mohammad Aamer, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Danish Kaneria, 11 Mohammad Asif

Pitch and conditions
Hobart is renowned as a swing bowler's paradise and if the conditions are overcast that is often the case. However, just as often there are big runs to be had and Ricky Ponting was expecting a surface on which his attack would have to work extra hard for their rewards. "It looks like a pretty good wicket now, a fair bit drier than it has been over the last couple of days," Ponting said. "As the state games have been this year, they've been pretty good batting wickets and it's been pretty hard to bowl sides out, so I'd imagine this might be the same." The first two days are likely to provide perfect, mild conditions but there could be showers over the final three days of the Test.

Stats and trivia

* It's 20 years since Bellerive Oval first hosted a Test but this is the first time the venue has had a Test in the post-Christmas period

* In eight Tests at the venue, Australia have won six and drawn two - they have never been beaten

* The ground hosted one of the most memorable Australian Tests in the modern era, when Adam Gilchrist and Justin Langer rescued Australia from 5 for 126 to chase down 369 against Pakistan in 1999-2000

* Faisal Iqbal, Pakistan's No.3, has scored more runs (97) in this series than his opposite number Ricky Ponting (80)

* Nathan Hauritz is the leading wicket-taker in the series so far with 12 wickets

Quotes
"What we have to do down here is not let them get back into the game like we let them start in Sydney. There's still a lot of mystery around about them."

Ricky Ponting on the riddle that is Pakistan

"There is no doubt that Sarfraz will play."
Intikhab Alam, Pakistan's coach, puts an end to all speculation regarding Pakistan's wicketkeeper in Hobart. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Akmal confident of keeping wicket in Hobart

Australia v Pakistan, 1st Test, Hobart

Osman Samiuddin in Hobart
January 11, 2010

Kamran Akmal Pakistan's embattled wicketkeeper, has ruled out the possibility of playing in the Hobart Test as a batsman alone, and has insisted again that he is confident he will play. Akmal's position in the side has come under intense scrutiny after a dismal second Test in Sydney in which he dropped four catches and failed with the bat as Pakistan handed Australia a remarkable win that sealed the series.

The PCB immediately decided to fly out Sarfraz Ahmed as a replacement wicketkeeper and said that he will "participate" in the third Test beginning Thursday. The statement left scope for Akmal to come in as a specialist batsman in a faltering middle-order, but for the second day running, the Pakistan vice-captain has defied board directives, maintaining that he will play at Hobart, and do so as a wicketkeeper-batsman.
Kamran Akmal

"I am very happy with being wicketkeeper-batsman, not only batsman," he said. "I have played for Pakistan as a wicketkeeper-batsman with pride, so hopefully I am playing a similar role."

However, Akmal said a final decision would be made by the tour selection committee. A routine meeting is due to be held the day before the Test to finalise the playing XI, but the debate within indicates the discord between the on-tour management and the board.

The matter is further complicated by the composition of the touring selection committee. As vice-captain, however, Akmal has a vote on the playing XI, alongside captain Mohammad Yousuf, coach Intikhab Alam and manager Abdur Raquib. Within that group it is believed that the decision on playing Akmal may reach a stalemate, in which case the captain is likely to prevail with a deciding vote. Given the backing that he has given Akmal all along, it means Yousuf could conceivably choose to continue with the wicketkeeper, and thus clash openly with the board.

"Definitely, I'm very keen I am playing in this Test match but it depends on the captain and coach and management," Akmal said. "I've worked very hard in the nets. I'm still positive and hopefully I will play well here. They will tell me or not in the next few days if I am playing.

"Nothing is on my mind as a batsman. I am playing as a wicketkeeper-batsman. Before the match there is a selection meeting and I will decide with the coach and captain if I'm playing or not." (www.cricinfo.com)
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Latif advised PCB to drop Kamran

Pakistan in Australia 2009-10

Osman Samiuddin in Sydney
January 7, 2010

Rashid Latif, the former Pakistan wicketkeeper and captain, had recommended in a report to the PCB to drop Kamran Akmal from international cricket, to give him time to correct a number of flaws.

Latif, widely regarded as the best, pure gloveman to come out of Pakistan after Wasim Bari, worked for the PCB in a brief stint as a wicketkeeping coach at the National Cricket Academy (NCA) from June 2008. A number of the country's top wicketkeepers attended, including Akmal, Sarfraz Ahmed and Salman Ahmed, both of whom have often been touted as potential replacements.
Kamran Akmal

"I gave the board a report in which I recommended that Akmal not play international cricket for at least six months but they didn't listen," Latif told Cricinfo. "He had too many technical faults, had put on too much weight for a wicketkeeper of his size and wearing a helmet to spinners was really hampering him."

Akmal's glovework has long become a source of worry for Pakistan. For a period over 2004-05, including the last trip to Australia, his keeping was widely lauded. But during 2006, in particular the tour to England where he continued playing with an injured finger, his form dipped alarmingly, and he dropped a number of chances over the next two years.

His work became a little tidier last year, but he dropped four catches in the Sydney Test, including Michael Hussey three times off Danish Kaneria. Hussey went on to score a hundred, setting up a shock 36-run win for his side from a dire position.

There are reports now that Sarfraz has been called up to the squad, though management in Australia is yet to confirm it. Sarfraz, who led Pakistan to an U-19 World Cup triumph, briefly replaced Akmal in ODIs during the 2008 Asia Cup. But Akmal's batting - he has 11 international hundreds - has often saved him; he scored valuable runs on the recent tour to New Zealand, which resulted in Sarfraz, who was on tour as a back-up, being sent back to Pakistan.

"The blunder was to send Sarfraz back," Latif said. "I had recommended that at least try guys like Sarfraz and Salman Ahmed. He wears helmets to spinners which I think they shouldn't because it messes up the eye-line.

"And as far as the argument for his batting goes, in such Tests what help is the batting? He scores a hundred every six or seven innings. Outside Pakistan and the subcontinent his average is very low. If another guy comes and scores 30 or 40 in most innings, isn't that better?"

Pakistan appear reluctant to lose or even rest Akmal, however. Yousuf - and Younis Khan and Shoaib Malik before him - has enough faith in his batting to keep him in the side. Yousuf defended Akmal after the third day, when he had dropped Hussey thrice, and did so again in the aftermath of the loss.

"It's not easy to make such players," Yousuf said. "If you drop him, his confidence is totally down and it will go further down. If you don't want to play him again then it is understandable. But making such a player is not easy. He will get spoilt if he is dropped."

Yousuf conceded, however, that something might be done, though it is believed even he is unaware of the reports of Sarfraz's impending arrival. "This is something to discuss after a few days really," Yousuf said. "Kamran Akmal - okay if we say let's not play him in Tests, but he will do well in ODIs and Twenty20s and come back again into Tests. And not everything is in my hands."
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Younis Khan's chances of playing in Sydney thin

Pakistan in Australia 2009-10

Osman Samiuddin in Melbourne
December 30, 2009

The chances of Younis Khan appearing for Pakistan in the New Year Test in Sydney have reduced significantly after no further decision was taken on the Pakistan team management's request to call up the former captain to bolster the batting.

The second Test is due to begin on January 3 and given the considerable travel time between the two countries, even if the request is accepted tomorrow and Younis were to leave the same day, he might struggle to be ready in time for the Test on Sunday.


In any case, it appears as if the selection committee is not entirely convinced of the need for Younis, at least without him having attempted to find some kind of form first in the RBS Pentangular Cup, a domestic tournament due to begin on January 1. "It is not like the team is losing just because he isn't there," a member of the selection committee told Cricinfo.

"The Pentangular is happening and that would be a good way for him to play and get some practice. The Sydney Test is looking very unlikely right now and no decision was taken today. And who will he replace there? Various batsmen have scored some runs here so it might be unfair to drop them."

Initially, the selection committee appeared to be waiting for the result of the first Test in Melbourne, which Pakistan ultimately lost by 170 runs, before taking a decision. Mohammad Yousuf, Pakistan's captain, reiterated after the match that the side needed Younis and that a request had been made some time ago.

But there appears to be a gap in communication: one selector claims that no official request has come in writing to them from Australia and another said that the chairman of the PCB, Ijaz Butt, had received the request and was going to consider it after discussing it with the selectors. That, in all probability, will now happen tomorrow.

Amid the confusion, it is increasing likely that Pakistan will have to do without Younis as they attempt to level the series in Sydney. Pakistan's batting struggled in both innings of the first Test, bowled out for 258 and 251 on what was widely acknowledged to be an unusually placid MCG surface. On the final morning, they lost seven wickets for 81 and it prolonged a run in which they have, as a side, passed 350 only twice in 14 Test innings. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Hauritz five seals Australian victory

Australia v Pakistan, 1st Test, Melbourne, 5th day

The Bulletin by Alex Brown
December 30, 2009

Australia 5 for 454 dec (Katich 98, Watson 93, Hussey 82, Ponting 57) and 8 for 225 dec (Watson 120*, Aamer 5-79) beat Pakistan 258 (Mishah 65*) and 251 (Yousuf 61, Hauritz 5-101) by 170 runs

The Australians rounded out 2009 with their most clinical final day bowling performance of the year to seal a 170 run victory over Pakistan. Nathan Hauritz, placed on notice by Australia's selectors prior to the series, claimed his first career five-wicket haul as Pakistan crumbled from 3 for 170 overnight to be all out for 251 shortly after lunch on the final day.


Hauritz's ability to exploit wearing pitches had been called into question of late, not least by Andrew Hilditch, and he proved himself worthy of the challenge on Wednesday. Unable to replicate the biting turn that accounted for Faisal Iqbal the previous day, Hauritz instead utilised flight and bounce to challenge Pakistan's lower and middle orders and was rewarded with four final-day scalps.

Australia began the day in emphatic fashion with Mitchell Johnson removing Umar Akmal and Misbah-ul-Haq with consecutive deliveries in his first over. Hauritz then repeated the dose with the back-to-back dismissals of Kamran Akmal and Mohammad Aamer shortly after the first drinks break to extinguish any hope of an improbable Pakistan fightback.

Mohammad Yousuf showed admirable determination to post 61, but support for the Pakistan captain was thin on the ground. With wickets falling in clusters, the Australians required only four overs after lunch to seal victory and claim a 1-0 series lead in the best-of-three series. The result took their Test record in 2009 to an encouraging seven wins, three defeats and three draws; a substantial improvement on their 5-5-4 record from the previous year.

The younger Akmal was the first victim of the final day, pushing at a fast, swinging delivery from Johnson that was claimed millimetres above the MCG turf by a tumbling Brad Haddin. Misbah fell to an identical mode of dismissal, albeit to a straighter ball, leaving the tourists' hopes of a fightback in tatters less than an over into the day. Kamran Akmal denied Johnson his hat-trick, but almost triggered one for Hauritz when, after an hour of stern resistance, he was stumped attempting a reckless charge to a slower, bouncing delivery. Hauritz then beat Aamer for bounce with his next ball, resulting in a gloved catch to Simon Katich at short leg.

Abdur Rauf survived Hauritz's hat-trick delivery - which featured the rare sight of nine fielders around the bat - but fell soon after to Doug Bollinger. Rounding out a forgettable match, Rauf played onto his stumps to expose the Pakistan tail shortly before lunch. Hauritz completed the rout after the break by removing Yousuf to another bat-pad catch, and Saeed Ajmal to a wild swipe that was accepted by Shane Watson, who was later named Man of the Match.

The breakthroughs ensured Johnson and Hauritz a positive end to a 2009 campaign that has proved testing in the extreme. Both bowlers have been subjected to criticism - Johnson for his erratic ways during the Ashes series, Hauritz for his lack of penetration on deteriorating tracks - but have emerged better for the experience. Though not quite back to his wrecking ball ways of South Africa, Johnson is nonetheless a bowler far improved from that which struggled for much of the Ashes series. Hauritz, meanwhile, has continued his steady evolution as an international spinner, as demonstrated by his subtle changes of flight and angle on Wednesday.

For Pakistan, there is much to ponder before the Sydney Test. The selection of Rauf over the experienced and versatile Umar Gul was flawed, and the catching at the MCG largely lamentable. The likely return of Danish Kaneria and the possible reintroduction of Younis Khan could prove a significant boost for the tourists, but on the evidence of the past five days, there remains much work to do.

If nothing else, Pakistan have at least closed the chapter on the annus horribilus that was 2009. In a year that witnessed the Lahore terrorist attack, and the subsequent stripping of host venue status, the Pakistanis can look ahead to the New Years' Test with hope for healing and renewal. (www.cricinfo.com)
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On song Australia back up their leader

Australia v Pakistan, 1st Test, Melbourne, 2nd day


The Bulletin by Alex Brown
December 27, 2009

Pakistan 4 for 109 (Butt 45) trail Australia 5 for 454 dec (Katich 98, Watson 93, Hussey 82, Hauritz 75, Ponting 57) by 345 runs

Australia's bowlers vindicated Ricky Ponting's bold first innings declaration with a disciplined and aggressive display on the second day at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. Shane Watson and Nathan Hauritz followed their enterprising half-centuries with a top-order wicket apiece, but the major blow was landed by Peter Siddle on the stroke of stumps when Mohammad Yousuf, the Pakistan captain, was ruled by Billy Doctrove not to have edged to Brad Haddin, only to have the decision overturned by the video umpire.

Asoka de Silva's ruling left the Pakistanis reeling at 4 for 109 in pursuit of Australia's 5 (dec) for 454. Hot Spot and slow motion replays supported de Silva's assertion that Yousuf gloved the ball down the leg-side in a flinching motion, but the knowledge will come as little comfort to the tourists, who are now faced with a mountainous climb to remain competitive in the match.
Mitchell Johnson

Ponting demonstrated Australia's ruthless intent by delcaring less than an hour after the lunch break on Sunday, having watched each of his first five batsmen, the nightwatchman included, notch half centuries. Mitchell Johnson was first to back-up his captain's endeavour by trapping Imran Farhat lbw to a tailing delivery, while Watson, Hauritz and Peter Siddle swung into action in the final session to leave the tourists in a grim fight for survival.

Hauritz, contending with a groin injury that hampered him throughout his 152-ball stay at the crease, coaxed Faisal Iqbal into a cut-shot that was accepted by Michael Clarke at slip. Watson then pressed home Australia's advantage with an excellent spell of reverse swing bowling that accounted for Salman Butt (45) and severely tested the defences of Mohammad Yousuf and Umar Akmal.

Much of the pent-up frustration of the previous day's run-out was released when, from the beginning of his spell, Watson hooped the old ball both ways. His set-up of Butt was one to make Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, Pakistan's pioneers of reverse swing, proud - a succession of away-swingers followed by one which attacked the pads and survived a video appeal.

Doug Bollinger ensured there was no respite for Pakistan's batsmen, attacking the stumps consistently and conceding runs at less than two-per-over. But the final indignity for the tourists was inflicted by Siddle, whose removal of Yousuf eroded any optimism Pakistan had mustered on the second day. Yousuf looked the most assured of Pakistan's batsmen, opening his account with a straight six off Hauritz and battening down thereafter, but his dismissal left only the brothers Akmal and Misbah-ul-Haq standing between Australia and the tail.

Earlier, Michael Hussey (82) and Hauritz (75) took Australia's unconverted century tally to an unflattering 20 for the summer, but not before they had propelled the hosts into a position of dominance. Like Watson, Simon Katich and Ponting before him, Hussey appeared in superb touch on a flattening MCG surface. Strong on the cut shot and off his pads, the veteran left-hander provided further reason to believe the worst of his extended form trough was behind him as he registered his 19th Test half-century with a degree of fluency and poise all but absent in his batting for much of 2009.

But with a ton in sight, Hussey fell victim to the impressive Saeed Ajmal, who posed a constant threat to the Australians with deft changes of pace, flight and turn. Ajmal rapped Hussey on the pads while attempting to sweep and was awarded a well-deserved wicket by Doctrove - one upheld by the video umpire on appeal.

Ajmal might well have had Hauritz, the nightwatchman, dismissed earlier in the morning with a direct-hit run-out. Replays showed the ball striking the stumps with Hauritz short of his ground, however they could not prove definitively whether the bail was entirely out of the groove. Hauritz advanced his total to a career-best 75 with a series of strokes more befitting the Twenty20 arena before eventually falling victim to Abdur Rauf via the video. He was ruled lbw by de Silva after being initially spared by Rudi Koertzen, the on-field official.

Of some concern to the Australian camp was Hauritz's grimacing reaction to a quick single taken late in the first session. A groin injury almost ruled him out of this Test - Steven Smith, the New South Wales legspinner, was called in as cover - however his introduction into the attack after just nine overs of the Pakistan innings allayed concerns.

The early use of Hauritz, coupled with the surprise declaration, were the latest in a series of aggressive captaincy moves from the reputedly conservative Ponting. An early closure and a rare enforcement of the follow-on in Brisbane last month set the tone for the summer, and the Australian captain maintained course in the first innings at the MCG with his pursuit of Pakistan. (www.cricinfo.com)
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Pakistan tempted to play Saeed Ajmal

Australia v Pakistan, 1st Test, Melbourne

Osman Samiuddin at the MCG
December 25, 2009

Saeed Ajmal
Pakistan are seriously pondering the prospect of playing two spinners against Australia in the Boxing Day Test at the MCG. Much of the pre-series focus has centred on Pakistan's impressive pace trio of Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Aamer and Umar Gul, but swayed by what they feel may be a responsive surface, Mohammad Yousuf and the team management may drop one of the three, in favour of Saeed Ajmal.

Ajmal has had success against Australia in limited-overs matches in the UAE and South Africa, with his doosra proving particularly troublesome, but Test conditions provide a different framework. Since making his Test debut earlier this year, Ajmal has contributed well with 16 wickets in four Tests, though he was dropped after a quiet first Test against New Zealand in Dunedin.

The issue is not yet settled, however, because of an injury to Danish Kaneria's fourth finger on his spinning hand. The legspinner picked it up initially in New Zealand, attempting a return catch from Daniel Vettori during the third Test in Napier. He hurt it again in fielding practice on Thursday and bowled in the nets on Friday with the finger bandaged, albeit in a little discomfort, though Yousuf said it wasn't serious enough to prevent him from playing.

Kaneria has taken 20 wickets in his last three Tests, in response to being dropped for the first time in four years - to be replaced by Ajmal - earlier this year in Sri Lanka. He was also Pakistan's highest wicket-taker on their last tour to Australia in 2004-05.

An injury to Gul has also necessitated the surprise call-up of Mohammad Sami for the Tests. Pakistan has worried about the burden on their effective but fragile pace trio, who bowled well over 400 overs between them in New Zealand recently, for 34 wickets.

Yousuf, however, said Gul was "fully fit" though he didn't reveal much about the playing XI. "We haven't yet decided on our XI. We'll only do that after having a look at the surface."

Pakistan though, will take note of their distinct lack of success when playing two spinners in a Test. They couldn't force a win in Colombo earlier this year, despite a strong last day position when Kaneria and Ajmal first bowled in tandem for nearly 80 overs between them. And in 2007-08, they lost a series at home to South Africa in which they relied heavily on a two-spinner attack - left-arm spinner Abdur Rehman and Kaneria - in both Tests.

Traditionally Pakistan have been served best by one spinner operating alongside three pacemen; Abdul Qadir in the age of Imran Khan, Mushtaq Ahmed and Saqlain Mushtaq alongside bowlers such as Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Aaqib Javed and Shoaib Akhtar. (www.cricinfo.com)
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