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2nd Test Preview : Adelaide is Pakistan’s best hope of breaking a 24-year streak

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An excellent preview of the 2nd Test Match by our resident expert [MENTION=150928]Boiz Played Well[/MENTION]

===

The last time a team had breached the Australian fortress at Brisbane—it was 1988 and the likes of Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose and Malcolm Marshall had run through the Australian batting line-up—decimating them to a meagre 167 all out in the first innings. The West Indies eventually won that Test match by nine wickets.


pjimage_-_2019-11-25T143620.817.jpg


So 31 years later, when Pakistan showed up at the Gabba with a pace battery of two teenagers and a 32-year old with 28 Test wickets making a comeback after nearly three years—pitted against a resurgent Australian side which had just managed to retain the Ashes in England; as well as counting one of the greatest-ever Test batsman and the world’s number one-ranked Test bowler in its ranks—no neutral observer was expecting the unexpected.

One can dissect the ensuing match from many different perspectives. What if Pakistan had managed 60 or 80 more runs in the first inning? What if Mohammad Rizwan was given not out of that Pat Cummins’ no-ball? What if Mohammad Abbas had played instead of Imran Khan Sr.? Yet in honest hindsight, the result is exactly what most would have predicted on paper: a resounding defeat by an innings and five runs, and a rocky start to Pakistan’s World Test Championship.

With the Brisbane Test match behind them, Pakistan now head to Adelaide for the second and final Test match of the tour. Is there reason to expect a different result this time round? Can Pakistan come back from behind and finally pull off their first Test victory in Australia since 1995? Is even a draw possible?

The fact is that the likeliest outcome is still a comfortable win for Australia. But just as it was irrationally optimistic to expect Pakistan to win the first Test match at the Gabba, it would be unreasonably cynical to write them off for the second Test match at the Adelaide Oval.

There are three main reasons why Pakistan can surprise the Australians and potentially even level the series this time round. First, the main game-changer at Adelaide is that it is a day/night, pink-ball Test match. Now the Australians have won all five of their day/night Test matches so far, but this format also gives the Pakistanis a slight advantage. The pink-ball increases swing and seam movement in the game and gives the Pakistan bowlers a better chance at attacking the opposition batsmen.

The main difference between the Pakistani and Australian pacers at the Gabba was bowling discipline; and the Pakistanis’ inability to hold a line or length long enough to trouble the Australian batsmen. Chalk that down to inexperience, lack of practice, or match pressure—but if the ball and conditions can help the Pakistan pacers more at Adelaide than they did at Brisbane, it will give the likes of Shaheen Shah Afridi, Naseem Shah or Mohammad Musa better wicket-taking chances even if they lack the bowling discipline of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazelwood. This is close to how Pakistan absolutely dominated a formidable Australia A side—in their day/night practice game at Perth two weeks ago—which included nine Australian internationals. Australia A were reduced to 57/9 in under 24 overs in the first innings—with the likes of Joe Burns, Usman Khawaja and Alex Carey all sent back before reaching double figures.

This leads into the second reason why Pakistan could be a force at Adelaide: there are chinks in the Australian armour. Yes, the Australians scored 580 runs in a single inning at the Gabba. But the Pakistan bowlers can be forgiven for their one bad day out in the team’s first Test match in ten months; and equally so if they can repeat their bowling performance from Day 3 then the Australian batsmen will find it tough to post a total which takes the match away from Pakistan. David Warner might have scored a 150 in the last match, but he made only three runs off 25 balls on Day 3 before losing his wicket when Naseem Shah regularly challenged him in his vulnerable areas. Before the Brisbane Test match, Australian batsmen in the same line-up including Warner, Travis Head, Matthew Wade and Tim Paine, were struggling for form and can be tested still if Misbah-ul-Haq and Waqar Younis can get the bowlers to execute plans against their documented “blind spots”. If the Australian top-order loses early wickets—Pakistan can be right in the game.

The third reason for Pakistan’s elevated chances for this game will be the forced changes brought on by the performances from the last Test match. Mohammad Abbas will most likely return in place of Imran Khan Sr. and will give Pakistan much needed leadership, experience and discipline in the bowling attack after being inexplicably benched for the first game. A third opener, most likely Imam-ul-Haq, will be added to the top three in place of the out-of-form Haris Sohail which could give the batting order more stability against the new ball. After his defining century at Brisbane, Babar Azam could be promoted to bat at number four, with Asad Shafiq, Iftikhar Ahmed and Muhammad Rizwan to follow—all moves which could strengthen the Pakistani line-up at Adelaide.

As the final match of a (so-far) forgettable Australian tour beckons, Misbah-ul-Haq’s team will be out searching for Pakistan’s first Test win in over a year. Questions over tactics and selections hang in the air and another loss will only make them louder. Players too are feeling the heat—Haris Sohail’s expected axing will be a wake-up call for others. Captain Azhar Ali has to score runs and take more charge of on-field tactics if he is to justify his place in the side; Iftikhar Ahmed has to contribute with the bat and ball if he is to be a mainstay in this Test line-up; and Yasir Shah has to control the barrage of runs scored against him if he is to be Pakistan’s premier spinner in Test matches overseas.

In the end, it’s all down to what happens at the Adelaide Oval over the weekend. An uninspiring loss is expected by most. A respectable draw will give everyone a temporary reprieve. But if this team somehow pulls off an unlikely victory and breaks a streak going back 24 years—all faults will be forgotten, all mistakes forgiven.

It can happen. Will it happen? Your guess is as good as mine.
 
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Was a bit down about Pakistan's chances but after reading this... I say... Bring it on Baby!
 
The only way pakistan wins a test match in australia if australia forgets their way to the ground.

We have a lot of mentle scarring in respect to playing here
 
The next match is always your best chance to win - but reality is you dont win in Australia with kids however good they are. This tour is all about experience and small victories for Pakistan.
 
Under this young and exciting team, we can probably do it.

Misbah needs to use his tactics that got him a lot of success in Tests. If we can do it in ENG, we can do in AUS as well.

All the best.

:salute
 
The next match is always your best chance to win - but reality is you dont win in Australia with kids however good they are. This tour is all about experience and small victories for Pakistan.

Hopefully those who gain the experience actually return next time to build on it. Otherwise it just becomes a practice in futility.
 
Yes Its On..... for the first 10 overs and then we 'll be floored :yk2
 
Under this young and exciting team, we can probably do it.

Misbah needs to use his tactics that got him a lot of success in Tests. If we can do it in ENG, we can do in AUS as well.

All the best.

:salute

A very young team? haha Misbah delusional and his fans are more delusional. Now if you bring young in terms of experience so if this team tour Aus every year they will still not able to come even close to defeating Aus.

Misbah ruined pak cricket when he was player and he is destroying being coach/selector. Success Misbah got ? lol that was in UAE and with using same plot over and over again. He is using the same tactics again and so far have failed miserably.

Azhar 34 years 244 days
Abid 32 years 5 days
Asad 33 years 266 days
Haris 30 years 285 days
Shaan 30 years 7 days
Yasir 33 years 172 days
Iftikhar 29 years 48 days LOL....
Imran Khan 32 years 98 days
Kashif Bhatti 33 years 88 days
Abbas 29 years 225 days lol...
Rizwan 27 years 142 days
Babar 25 years 6 days
Imam 23 years 313 days
Musa 19 years 54 days
Naseem 16 years 248 days lol
Shaheen 19 years 198 days
 
Pakistan's first chance to draw a test since 1995 because of a washout.
 
An excellent preview of the 2nd Test Match by our resident expert [MENTION=150928]Boiz Played Well[/MENTION]

===

The last time a team had breached the Australian fortress at Brisbane—it was 1988 and the likes of Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose and Malcolm Marshall had run through the Australian batting line-up—decimating them to a meagre 167 all out in the first innings. The West Indies eventually won that Test match by nine wickets.


pjimage_-_2019-11-25T143620.817.jpg


So 31 years later, when Pakistan showed up at the Gabba with a pace battery of two teenagers and a 32-year old with 28 Test wickets making a comeback after nearly three years—pitted against a resurgent Australian side which had just managed to retain the Ashes in England; as well as counting one of the greatest-ever Test batsman and the world’s number one-ranked Test bowler in its ranks—no neutral observer was expecting the unexpected.

One can dissect the ensuing match from many different perspectives. What if Pakistan had managed 60 or 80 more runs in the first inning? What if Mohammad Rizwan was given not out of that Pat Cummins’ no-ball? What if Mohammad Abbas had played instead of Imran Khan Sr.? Yet in honest hindsight, the result is exactly what most would have predicted on paper: a resounding defeat by an innings and five runs, and a rocky start to Pakistan’s World Test Championship.

With the Brisbane Test match behind them, Pakistan now head to Adelaide for the second and final Test match of the tour. Is there reason to expect a different result this time round? Can Pakistan come back from behind and finally pull off their first Test victory in Australia since 1995? Is even a draw possible?

The fact is that the likeliest outcome is still a comfortable win for Australia. But just as it was irrationally optimistic to expect Pakistan to win the first Test match at the Gabba, it would be unreasonably cynical to write them off for the second Test match at the Adelaide Oval.

There are three main reasons why Pakistan can surprise the Australians and potentially even level the series this time round. First, the main game-changer at Adelaide is that it is a day/night, pink-ball Test match. Now the Australians have won all five of their day/night Test matches so far, but this format also gives the Pakistanis a slight advantage. The pink-ball increases swing and seam movement in the game and gives the Pakistan bowlers a better chance at attacking the opposition batsmen.

The main difference between the Pakistani and Australian pacers at the Gabba was bowling discipline; and the Pakistanis’ inability to hold a line or length long enough to trouble the Australian batsmen. Chalk that down to inexperience, lack of practice, or match pressure—but if the ball and conditions can help the Pakistan pacers more at Adelaide than they did at Brisbane, it will give the likes of Shaheen Shah Afridi, Naseem Shah or Mohammad Musa better wicket-taking chances even if they lack the bowling discipline of Pat Cummins and Josh Hazelwood. This is close to how Pakistan absolutely dominated a formidable Australia A side—in their day/night practice game at Perth two weeks ago—which included nine Australian internationals. Australia A were reduced to 57/9 in under 24 overs in the first innings—with the likes of Joe Burns, Usman Khawaja and Alex Carey all sent back before reaching double figures.

This leads into the second reason why Pakistan could be a force at Adelaide: there are chinks in the Australian armour. Yes, the Australians scored 580 runs in a single inning at the Gabba. But the Pakistan bowlers can be forgiven for their one bad day out in the team’s first Test match in ten months; and equally so if they can repeat their bowling performance from Day 3 then the Australian batsmen will find it tough to post a total which takes the match away from Pakistan. David Warner might have scored a 150 in the last match, but he made only three runs off 25 balls on Day 3 before losing his wicket when Naseem Shah regularly challenged him in his vulnerable areas. Before the Brisbane Test match, Australian batsmen in the same line-up including Warner, Travis Head, Matthew Wade and Tim Paine, were struggling for form and can be tested still if Misbah-ul-Haq and Waqar Younis can get the bowlers to execute plans against their documented “blind spots”. If the Australian top-order loses early wickets—Pakistan can be right in the game.

The third reason for Pakistan’s elevated chances for this game will be the forced changes brought on by the performances from the last Test match. Mohammad Abbas will most likely return in place of Imran Khan Sr. and will give Pakistan much needed leadership, experience and discipline in the bowling attack after being inexplicably benched for the first game. A third opener, most likely Imam-ul-Haq, will be added to the top three in place of the out-of-form Haris Sohail which could give the batting order more stability against the new ball. After his defining century at Brisbane, Babar Azam could be promoted to bat at number four, with Asad Shafiq, Iftikhar Ahmed and Muhammad Rizwan to follow—all moves which could strengthen the Pakistani line-up at Adelaide.

As the final match of a (so-far) forgettable Australian tour beckons, Misbah-ul-Haq’s team will be out searching for Pakistan’s first Test win in over a year. Questions over tactics and selections hang in the air and another loss will only make them louder. Players too are feeling the heat—Haris Sohail’s expected axing will be a wake-up call for others. Captain Azhar Ali has to score runs and take more charge of on-field tactics if he is to justify his place in the side; Iftikhar Ahmed has to contribute with the bat and ball if he is to be a mainstay in this Test line-up; and Yasir Shah has to control the barrage of runs scored against him if he is to be Pakistan’s premier spinner in Test matches overseas.

In the end, it’s all down to what happens at the Adelaide Oval over the weekend. An uninspiring loss is expected by most. A respectable draw will give everyone a temporary reprieve. But if this team somehow pulls off an unlikely victory and breaks a streak going back 24 years—all faults will be forgotten, all mistakes forgiven.

It can happen. Will it happen? Your guess is as good as mine.

Very well written indeed.
 
A very young team? haha Misbah delusional and his fans are more delusional. Now if you bring young in terms of experience so if this team tour Aus every year they will still not able to come even close to defeating Aus.

Misbah ruined pak cricket when he was player and he is destroying being coach/selector. Success Misbah got ? lol that was in UAE and with using same plot over and over again. He is using the same tactics again and so far have failed miserably.

Azhar 34 years 244 days
Abid 32 years 5 days
Asad 33 years 266 days
Haris 30 years 285 days
Shaan 30 years 7 days
Yasir 33 years 172 days
Iftikhar 29 years 48 days LOL....
Imran Khan 32 years 98 days
Kashif Bhatti 33 years 88 days
Abbas 29 years 225 days lol...
Rizwan 27 years 142 days
Babar 25 years 6 days
Imam 23 years 313 days
Musa 19 years 54 days
Naseem 16 years 248 days lol
Shaheen 19 years 198 days

way to ruin the "young and inexperienced" narrative :wahab2
 
Yeah sorry, I'm not buying any of this. And I really, really hope I'm wrong but Pakistani batsmen will be like deer caught in the headlights during the night session.
 
Interesting and not far fetched at all, this pink ball can definitely reduce the existing skill gap between the two bowling attacks but can the Pak bats rise to the occasion? I highly doubt that.
 
There are some positives and the forced changes, if they happen, might work (the batting probably more so than the bowling). The problem is someone like Abbas may be low on confidence not just being dropped but with Younis' recent comments.

I hope the batting now includes Imam and somehow Sohail is dropped.
 
I hope they do go ahead to win it, but I find it surprising that we have so many write-ups for our tours to Australia, where no one wants to talk about probably the worst kept secret in international cricket. Pakistan are a blubbering mass of nerves when they get to Australia.
We lose so regularly from positions of strength because we don't have the mental fortitude to handle 5 overs if really tight bowling or a batting assault.

The talent gap is not as big the mental one - that is a chasm as wide as the Grand Canyon.
 
Rivals to write fresh chapter in short history

Pakistan's previous Test appearance at the Adelaide Oval coincided with the formal opening of a new grandstand named in his honour by Australia's most revered sportsperson, Sir Donald Bradman.

Almost three decades later, neither the grandstand nor the knight bestride Australia's cricket landscape, and the redeveloped stadium has become the principal home of day-night Test cricket in this nation.

Pakistan have played just one prior pink-ball fixture in Australia – three years ago at the Gabba, where they lost the 2019-20 Domain Test Series opener last week – and just three day-night Tests in total since the format was pioneered (at Adelaide) in 2015.

Despite their lack of familiarity with the new-look Adelaide Oval and the day-night format it will host from November 29, Pakistan have a lengthy association with the historic ground that dates back to their first multi-Test tour of Australia.

1972-73 (First Test)

Pakistan's second Test appearance on Australian soil, a dozen years after their maiden visit, was scheduled either side of Christmas Day and coincided with a rebirth for the home team. Not long returned from the UK where they had the better of a 2-2 drawn Ashes series against England, Ian Chappell's young team was as hard-edged as they were supremely confident.

That was apparent from Dennis Lillee's opening spell when he struck Talat Ali a brutal blow, forcing the Pakistan opener to retire hurt with a fractured thumb. After a haphazard schedule of warm-up fixtures that included games against a Western Australia colts team and a Victorian country XI, Pakistan's batters were ill-prepared for Lillee's ire and Bob Massie's control and crashed to 6-104. It was only some doughty tail-end defiance that lifted them to 257.

Ian Chappell then helped himself to the highest score of his Test career, taking particular delight in the bowling of rival skipper Intikhab Alam who was belted for three sixes in the space of five deliveries. More history followed when Rod Marsh, fresh from a first-class career high 236 for WA against the hapless tourists weeks earlier, became the first Australia wicketkeeper to post a Test century.

In deficit by 328 runs, Pakistan drew hope from a 79-run first-wicket stand between Sadiq Mohammad and makeshift opener Saeed Ahmed. However, it was the looping off-spin of Ashley Mallett rather than the thunderbolts of Lillee that decided the outcome.

Mallett's 8-59 remains the best Test innings bowling return by a specialist off-spinner in Australia. The match ended in somewhat farcical circumstances with Pakistan nine wickets down and still 114 runs adrift when stumps were drawn on Boxing Day, which meant the teams had to return next morning to complete the formality. That was duly achieved after one over, from which Mallett had Talat Ali – batted bravely with one hand – caught without addition to the score.

Pakistan 257 (Wasim Bari 72, Intikhab Alam 64, Lillee 4-49, Massie 4-70) and 214 (Sadiq Mohammad 81, Mallett 8-59) lost to Australia 585 (I. Chappell 196, Marsh 118, Edwards 89, Mushtaq Mohammad 3-67, Asif Masood 3-110) by an innings and 114 runs.

1976-77 (First Test)

This attritional match was defined by a history-altering collision in its first hour, and crowned by some decidedly timid Australia tactics throughout its last.

Pakistan's arrival had been preceded by unrest within the player group over remuneration, and morale dwindled further in the face of a torrid opening spell from Jeff Thomson. Refreshed after almost a year without international playing commitments, Thomson bowled as fast as any time in his storied Test career and snared two early wickets before disaster struck.

Having watched teammate Alan Turner spill an earlier catch from his bowling, Thomson took it upon himself to sprint and dive for a miscued pull shot that looped towards mid-wicket, only to collide with Turner running at speed towards him. As he nursed his badly dislocated right shoulder, Thomson reportedly cursed: "I'll kill that @#&% … if I ever bowl again".

It was never made clear if the threat was directed at Turner laying prostrate alongside him, or reprieved batter Zaheer Abbas. What was sorely evident, when Thomson returned to international cricket six months later, that he could not generate the fearsome bowling speeds for which he was renowned pre-injury.

Australia's already depleted bowling stocks were further thinned when allrounder Gary Gilmour was hobbled by a foot infection, which left Dennis Lillee and leg-spinner Kerry O'Keeffe to shoulder the burden. Pakistan were unable to capitalise on their foes' woes, as their first innings 274 was dwarfed by an Australia batting fest in the days that followed Christmas.

Centuries to recalled opener Ian Davis and veteran Doug Walters lifted the hosts' lead to 182, and on track for victory when Pakistan limped to 6-298 midway through day four. However, the injury toll mounted as Lillee strained a thigh (but kept running in across almost 50 overs) and Asif Iqbal's defiant hundred carried his team to 466.

With most of the final day to score 285 and win, Australia exhibited a distinct lack of urgency in the face of tight bowling and growing spectator unrest. Despite needing 56 for victory when the last hour's mandatory 15 overs began, seventh-wicket pair Gary Cosier and Rod Marsh closed shop – perhaps mindful of the walking wounded left in the sheds – and finished 24 runs shy.

Pakistan 272 (Zaheer Abbas 85, O'Keeffe 3-42) and 466 (Asif Iqbal 152no, Zaheer Abbas 101, Javed Miandad 54, Lillee 5-163, O'Keeffe 3-166) drew with Australia 454 (Walters 107, Davis 105, McCosker 65, Mushtaq Mohammad 4-58, Javed Miandad 3-85) and 6-261 (G. Chappell 70, Walters 51, Iqbal Qasim 4-84).

1983-84 (Third Test)

In the days before drop-in pitches wore the blame for producing lifeless Test matches, the Adelaide Oval gained a deserved reputation as a bowlers' graveyard. For a decade starting in 1981, the famous ground hosted 11 Tests of which eight ended in run-engorged draws.

Aware of the workload these conditions would impose on their bowlers, Pakistan rushed Sarfraz Nawaz into their touring party, and directly into the starting XI, when his six-month ban for criticising national selectors had lapsed.

Despite having turned 35 just days earlier, Sarfraz was called upon to send down 42 overs during Australia's first innings that yielded 465. The backbone of which was opener Kepler Wessels' 179 hewn from almost six hours' batting.

By the end of day two, another stalemate was all-but assured as Pakistan cantered to 1-184, and set for their highest Test innings total in Australia. A maiden century to livewire No.3 Qasim Omar, who became something of a cult hero for local crowds during the summer, was more than matched by tons to opener Mohsin Khan and Dennis Lillee's sparring partner, Javed Miandad.

Lillee had been earmarked to carry the drinks in Adelaide having gone wicketless (bowling second-change) in the previous Test at the Gabba. However, injury to fellow quick Carl Rackemann meant Lillee not only took his place but bowled 50.2 overs in Pakistan's mountainous 624 before calling time on his career three weeks later.

It was late on day four when Australia undertook their second innings, 159 runs in deficit and in search of nothing other than batting practice. Kim Hughes gained the most and scored a century in the process, while Allan Border ground out 66 in almost four hours at the rock-hard crease.

That Pakistan employed nine bowlers across the five dour days said sufficient about the Adelaide deck, which has since been transformed into a seam bowlers' favourite and thus poses a very different challenge in the upcoming day-night Test.

Australia 465 (Wessels 179, Border 117no, Yallop 68, Azeem Hafeez 5-167, Sarfraz Nawaz 3-105) and 7-310 (Hughes 106, Border 66, Phillips 54) drew with Pakistan 624 (Mohsin Khan 149, Javed Miandad 131, Qasim Omar 113, Lillee 6-171).

1989-90 (Second Test)

The three-match series of 1989-90 was billed as a playoff for the title of world's second-best Test team behind the unassailable West Indies. Earlier that year, Australia had swept England four-nil to regain the Ashes in the UK, and Pakistan arguably had the best of two drawn Tests at home against arch-foes India.

After Pakistan slumped to a 92-run loss in the first Test at Melbourne, both teams underwent significant personnel changes for the next game in Adelaide. Ashes hero Terry Alderman was ruled out with a groin strain (replaced by Tasmanian Greg Campbell) and allrounder Peter Sleep made way for off-spinner Peter Taylor.

Pakistan flew in two fresh batters – opener Ramiz Raja and Salim Malik – and also summoned uncapped leg spinner Mushtaq Ahmed as replacement for the mercurial Abdul Qadir who had returned home with a damaged finger. However, the revitalised batting stocks struggled against Australia's seamers and 257 was deemed a sub-par first innings total.

It would have been sizeably smaller but for allrounder Wasim Akram's breezy 52 batting at No.8. The apprentice to skipper Imran Khan's mastery of reverse-swing bowling, Akram then mesmerised Australia's middle and lower-order.

While Dean Jones stood defiant with a century, Akram ensured Australia's last five wickets fell for 13 runs, among them opener Geoff Marsh who had initially retired hurt due to a thumb injury that was later diagnosed as a fracture.

Trailing by 84 runs, Pakistan seemed to have surrendered the series when Merv Hughes reduced them to 5-90 early on day four. That was when Imran and Akram showed they could be as potent with bat as they had proved with ball, and summoned a game-changing 191-run sixth-wicket stand.

Imran fell for a typically majestic 136, the final hundred of his 21-year Test career. Akram's 123 off 195 balls was contrastingly brutal, but the pair somehow turned imminent defeat into a possible last-day win with Australia needing 304 to win or survive 78 overs for a draw.

Both of those scenarios dimmed with Marsh unable to bat, and Australia slumping to 4-129. It was Jones's second century of the match, and stubborn resistance from Ian Healy (27 from 94 balls) that ultimately stemmed the visitors' unlikely charge to victory.

Pakistan 257 (Javed Miandad 52, Wasim Akram 52, Rackemann 4-40, Campbell 3-79) and 9(dec)-387 (Imran Khan 136, Wasim Akram 123, Hughes 5-111) drew with Australia 341 (Jones 116, M. Taylor 77, Wasim Akram 5-100) and 6-233 (Jones 121no, M. Taylor 59, Tauseef Ahmed 3-80).
https://www.cricket.com.au/news/ade...es-lillee-thomson-imran-khan-wasim/2019-11-28
 
Batting needs to step it up in 1st inns of a test match away from home in god know how many years, cant keep putting in sub par efforts and then playing catch up for the rest of the game all the time.
 
The danger hour when bowlers dominate is immediately after Dinner.

The game resumes at 7 pm.

It’s now 7.50 pm and this is the state of the light from my hotel room:

9E2949BC-9626-444D-B3D5-61FE732C9509.jpg

The goal is not to bowl after dark.

It’s to bowl in the light I’ve shown, because every minute the natural light is being replaced by artificial light and it’s hard to judge the length and line of the bowling.
 
If pakistan want to this test then they have do 2 things :

1.) Top 4 batsmen have to bat like pujara , make opposition bowlers tired first and then plan to start making runs

2.) When bowling one bowler should plan to contain runs, others should attack and try to take wickets..


In 1st test when warner & other opener started hitting they opened the field which they shouldn't do..
 
Still believe that match will be washed out to a draw.

So everything else is hypothetical.
 
8.17 pm and the light has all but gone.

Batting is now entirely under artificial light, and much easier.

5B45652E-2773-45A9-9C40-B7E7DB9DF7EF.jpg
 
If pakistan want to this test then they have do 2 things :

1.) Top 4 batsmen have to bat like pujara , make opposition bowlers tired first and then plan to start making runs

2.) When bowling one bowler should plan to contain runs, others should attack and try to take wickets..


In 1st test when warner & other opener started hitting they opened the field which they shouldn't do..

Not in a Day/Night Pink Ball Greentop Adelaide Test.

There have been 10 completed innings, and of the 121 individual innings only two lasted as long as 200 balls.

It’s a greentop (unless it’s prepared differently this year). Don’t try to survive, just score runs while you can.
 
And literally five minutes later, look at the difference in lighting...
9AA70D1E-35B5-4256-97DB-A8BE3852FA8A.jpg
 
The danger hour when bowlers dominate is immediately after Dinner.

The game resumes at 7 pm.

It’s now 7.50 pm and this is the state of the light from my hotel room:

View attachment 97395

The goal is not to bowl after dark.

It’s to bowl in the light I’ve shown, because every minute the natural light is being replaced by artificial light and it’s hard to judge the length and line of the bowling.

This is fascinating stuff. Will you be around to watch those sessions in-person?
 
I hope they do go ahead to win it, but I find it surprising that we have so many write-ups for our tours to Australia, where no one wants to talk about probably the worst kept secret in international cricket. Pakistan are a blubbering mass of nerves when they get to Australia.
We lose so regularly from positions of strength because we don't have the mental fortitude to handle 5 overs if really tight bowling or a batting assault.

The talent gap is not as big the mental one - that is a chasm as wide as the Grand Canyon.

Related to your point on the mental gap — patience for batsmen and consistency for bowlers often lacks. That’s why Abbas is such a star for Pakistan even if his bowling speed drops. He’s one of very few in Pakistan who can keep putting it in the same place again and again.

On the batting side, Babar’s shot in the first innings and Rizwan’s shot at 95 in the second were again just so short on patience. With tuk tuk as coach, hopefully they can work on that.
 
Interesting and not far fetched at all, this pink ball can definitely reduce the existing skill gap between the two bowling attacks but can the Pak bats rise to the occasion? I highly doubt that.


It’s unlikely, but there is some precedent. Three years ago it was a day/night match at Brisbane when Pakistan got to 450 in the second innings and gave the Australians an almighty scare. But the first innings saw them all out for 142. So you never know. Might be the slightest of chances they don’t fold as easily.
 
Boys are not playing well as expected. We are terrible. Truly terrible.
 
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