Pakistan v Australia | 1st T20I | Abu Dhabi | October 24, 2018 | Pakistan innings

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The Sheikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi plays host for the first encounter of the three-match T20I series between Pakistan and Australia on Wednesday 24 October.

Overview

Pakistan v Australia
1st T20I
Wednesday 24 October, 20:00 (local), 5:00 (BST)
Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi

After an impressive effort in the first Test to salvage an unexpected draw, Australia’s inexperienced Test side went down by 373 runs in a horror performance in the second and final encounter of the two-match series, and the visitors will be hoping the shortest format offers a chance of redemption.

Earlier this year, Australia and Pakistan met three times in the tri-series in Zimbabwe, with Pakistan emerging victorious twice, including their triumph in the final.

Pakistan, the highest-ranked team in the MRF ICC Team Rankings for T20Is, are a fairly settled T20I unit, not that they haven’t rung some changes. Babar Azam, who averages north of 50 in T20Is, missed Pakistan’s last T20 assignment in Zimbabwe due to a fractured arm, but both he and Imad Wasim, who returns to Pakistan’s 20-over side after being exiled for nearly a year, are included.

Mohammad Amir, who was dropped for the two-Test series despite being largely considered the leader of the attack across formats since his reintegration into the international side, once again misses out. He has returned to domestic cricket to rediscover his rhythm.

Instead, the likes of Hasan Ali and Shadab Khan are once again expected to be Pakistan’s go-to men with the ball. The latter has 32 T20I scalps from 23 matches at a brilliant average of 18.

Australia, meanwhile, will have gained some confidence after thrashing the UAE in the only T20 on Monday, though stiffer tests await. The visitors are likely to keep faith with Monday's line-up, with a swashbuckling top four of Chris Lynn, D'Arcy Short, Aaron Finch and Glenn Maxwell hoping to unsettle the Pakistan bowlers. Their batting doesn’t run particularly deep, though, so Australia will hope their top-order firepower yields the desired results.

The signs are good for opener Short, who smacked an unbeaten 68 from 53 balls as Australia cruised to a seven-wicket victory over UAE. Finch (1) and Lynn (20) weren’t at their best, but Pakistan’s bowlers will be wary of their talents.

Billy Stanlake and Nathan Coulter-Nile took two wickets apiece against UAE and will be hoping for similar success on Wednesday, while Andrew Tye impressed during the T20I series in Zimbabwe and is likely to lead the attack once more.

Interestingly, Australia have a chance to overhaul Pakistan and attain top position in the MRF Tyres ICC T20I Team Rankings for the first time when the two face off. It’s no straightforward task, however – Australia require a 3-0 series sweep to jump to the top of the tree – but a lesser series victory would see them edge past India into second position. So Pakistan only need to triumph in one outing to retain their crown.

An Australia whitewash would see them become the eighth side to attain top ranking in the T20I format, with England, India, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the Windies the previous teams to lead the way.

Key men

Australia: Aaron Finch

Aaron Finch, the highest-ranked T20I batsman in the world, is the leader of the Australia team in more ways than one Aaron Finch, the highest-ranked T20I batsman in the world, is the leader of the Australia team in more ways than one
Australia captain Aaron Finch leads the list of batsmen in the MRF Tyres ICC Men’s T20I Player Rankings, so, naturally, the Australia captain poses a mighty threat. He brings an aura to an Australia batting line-up depleted of household names David Warner and Steve Smith. The top-order batsman will be hoping to rectify his forgettable outing against UAE, but with a T20I average of 44.36 he is unlikely to be perturbed.

Pakistan: Fakhar Zaman

Fakhar Zaman has been in hot form in T20Is for Pakistan Fakhar Zaman has been in hot form in T20Is for Pakistan
Pakistan’s Fakhar Zaman is the second-highest ranked T20I batsman, hoping to bridge the 49-point gap between him and the Australia skipper. An average of 30.76 in the format is not particularly impressive, but his recent performances are: his last eight outings have produced five scores of 40-plus, with only one score in single figures. In his last two T20Is – both against Australia – Fakhar added 73 and 91 runs in the tri-series in Harare in July.

Conditions

The forecast is promising, with sunny skies and temperatures around 33ºC. The previous two encounters that Pakistan featured in at this ground were played a year ago against Sri Lanka and were low-scoring affairs. While T20 cricket is often labelled a ‘batsman’s game’, this series could well see an even contest between bat and ball.

Squads

Pakistan XI : Fakhar Zaman, Babar Azam, Mohammad Hafeez, Hussain Talat, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Asif Ali, Shadab Khan, Faheem Ashraf, Imad Wasim, Hasan Ali, Shaheen Shah Afridi


Australia (From): Aaron Finch (c), Mitch Marsh (vc), Alex Carey (vc), Ashton Agar, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Chris Lynn, Nathan Lyon, Glenn Maxwell, Ben McDermott, Darcy Short, Peter Siddle, Billy Stanlake, Mitch Starc, Andrew Tye, Adam Zampa

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/886738
 
Akmal, Gul term Pakistan favourite for series opener

Veteran wicketkeeper-batsman Kamran Akmal and pacer Umar Gul have termed Pakistan favourite in the first T20I of the three-match series against Australia.

Both teams have already clashed in the two-Test series, where the home side came on top courtesy 373-run in Abu Dhabi. It is the same venue where the T20I series opener will be played on Wednesday.

The series can have a major impact on the ICC T20I ranking as Sarfraz Ahmed-led unit are placed on the top of the chart, whereas Aaron Finch’s Australia are placed on the third spot.

Akmal, who has represented the Men in Green in 53 Tests, 157 ODIs and 58 T20IS, while talking to The Express Tribune, said the home side have the kind of players who can have great impact in the format.

“As a T20 side, they [Pakistan] have been leading the charts for quite some time because they have the players who are undoubtedly the best in this format,” said Akmal. “We saw in Tests the team suffered because of playing poor shots which resulted in early wickets. But T20 format is a different ball game. We’ve players who are good strikers of the ball and can take the team out of trouble from any situation.”

Akmal further went on to highlight the importance of left-handed opener Fakha Zaman by saying: “He [Fakhar Zaman] is a genuine hitter. He has the ability to hit the ball out of the park and at the same time, he can find gaps on the field as well. He keeps the score board rolling. This is what he is capable of and in the T20 format, he knows how to play well. He is number two in the world and can be a key player for the team in the series.”

Former fast-bowler Gul also believes the team have enough quality to get the better of the opposition, and also highlighted leg-spinner Shadab Khan as the main threat for the visitors.“T20 format requires a lot of energy,” he said. “For that we have the youngsters who can change the dimension of the game at any time. As a bowler, the only way to put pressure on the batsman is by attacking constantly, and I think Shadab can do really well for us in that regard. He can be our trump card and Australia should be aware of what he can deliver for Pakistan.”

https://cricketpakistan.com.pk/en/news/detail/akmal-gul-term-pakistan-favourite-for-series-opener
 
Not very excited about this series, perhaps it is the lack of new youngsters to look forward to. We are still playing oldies Malik and Hafeez, and bits and pieces Imad.
 
In T20s these boys have done extremely well and will do so. But when it comes to longer format, they don't have a clue.
 
In T20s these boys have done extremely well and will do so. But when it comes to longer format, they don't have a clue.

That's because we are playing T20 specialists like Asif Ali in ODIs. Jury is still out on Shadab Khan's worth in ODIs as well.

In typical Pakistani fashion we select players in ODIs based on their performances in T20s and it is showing in the results.
 
That's because we are playing T20 specialists like Asif Ali in ODIs. Jury is still out on Shadab Khan's worth in ODIs as well.

In typical Pakistani fashion we select players in ODIs based on their performances in T20s and it is showing in the results.
And now with PSL on the rise and Domestic on decline perhaps we should prepare for WT20 2020 rather than 2019 WC.
 
Why was there so much hype about playing Billy? I am hoping he is taken to the cleaners :wahab2
 
What kind of rubbish is this? Lights go off the minute the match is supposed to start, and only in this stadium
 
Gosh its torture listening to Waqar Younis with no cricket going on
 
Pakistan should have played asif the off spinner. He looks decent off spinner and we need him the WC and playing 11.
 
These two seem to be batting on different pitches.

Babar is in excellent touch.
 
Class!

Babar has all the potential to score at 2-300 if he really tries!
 
Most comical top order innings ive seen recently. Funnier than the time when Pakistan had Rafatullah opening
 
Hafeez to face a guy bowling 92 + mph. What could possibly go wrong?
 
Pretty much predicted wicket. The way Zaman was looking it was more than likely that Stanlake will get him out.
 
Hafeez batting at 3. More wasted time. We need to test Talat and Asif and not waste time on Hafeez.
 
The way Hafeez tried playing that short ball is embarrassing.

Selfless servant of Pakistan [MENTION=143023]SarfiBabarHaris[/MENTION].
 
Pakistan need to explode here , they have depth in batting , need to use all resources
 
Babar needs to score a 75 today at 160 strike rate.
 
Took a day off today, packed schedule from 4:30AM to 5:00PM - so far time well spent. Now, Liverpool needs to put 5 at least, to make it good investment.
 
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