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Pakistan v Sri Lanka | 2nd Test | Karachi | Dec 19-23, 2019 | Pre-Match Discussion Thread

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Karachi, 18 December 2019:

Karachi’s National Stadium will be under spotlight from Thursday as Test cricket returns to the iconic venue.

Since hosting the first Test between Pakistan and India in 1955, the stadium has staged some of the most riveting red-ball encounters and has earned the reputation of being Pakistan cricket’s fortress because of the national side’s prolific record here.

In 41 matches, Pakistan have come out victorious on 21 occasions and 18 matches have been drawn. The home team has lost two matches at the stadium, one of them being the famous England win in gloom in December 2000.

The historic second Test between Pakistan and Sri Lanka will see the venue host a Test match after February 2009 – also played between the same teams – and Riaz Ahmed, the head curator of the venue, is optimistic that the fans will get to see an intriguing contest.

“The wicket and conditions at the National Stadium provide the right balance between bat and ball,” he said. “The morning sessions earlier in the match provide assistance to the seam bowlers. The pace bowlers come back in the limelight during the evening session with the sea-breeze coming into play.

“The batsmen have the opportunity to pile up runs across all three sessions due to the true bounce in the wicket and fast outfield. The spinners come into play as the match progresses with the pitch offering grip and purchase.”

Over the years, rousing crowds have added to the flavour with cricket crazy Karachiites filling in the stadiums.

The highest team score in an innings at this venue is Pakistan’s 765 for six, which was made in the last match in February 2009. Pakistan batting great Younis Khan, who has the distinguished record of being the country’s only batsman to have more than 10,000 Test runs, has the highest individual score of 313 at the venue, which was made in the same match.

Batting legend Javed Miandad has made the most runs at the National Stadium, accumulating 1,393 runs at an average of 58, while leg-spin maestro Abdul Qadir took the most wickets here with 59 wickets.

It is also the only venue in Pakistan to host a women’s Test when Pakistan women played the West Indies women in a drawn contest in March 2004.

With Pakistan and Sri Lanka – two of the most exciting Test sides – locking horns, the return of Test cricket at the National Stadium promises to be a truly historic occasion with high-octane cricket keeping the fans at the edge of their seats.


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Training videos.

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There doesn’t need to be an exact cutoff point. Every innings will be different depending the exact usage of the ball, boundaries hit etc. You don’t seem to have understood the point I have made that once the ball got slightly older around the 10-15 over mark, the swing basically went and due to the very very flat nature of the pitch, it became easy to bat.

Perhaps you could argue that Kamran came in during the 11th over and so should be given credit for negotiating a few tough overs. But to call the whole innings ‘one of the best ever’ etc is the most ridiculous claim.

And not one fan ever seems to be able to back it up.

Both the innings were equally easy to bat once the new ball was negated because the Karachi pitch was an absolute road.

Your last paragraph tells a lot about your knowledge of cricket
Ever heard how important the first session is for the batting team when they are sent in to bat.

If the first and 2nd innings are going to be equally easy then no team would send the other team to bat after winning the toss "on a road"

Even if it is was a flat road to come in at 39-6 against arch rivals and series on the line, would still make it a great knock.

Definitely one of the ATG Pak test innings
 
Also [MENTION=144683]Forum363[/MENTION]
Go and see how Abdul razzaq was dismissed after about 37 overs and tell me it was a straight ball that did nothing :)
 
Your last paragraph tells a lot about your knowledge of cricket
Ever heard how important the first session is for the batting team when they are sent in to bat.

If the first and 2nd innings are going to be equally easy then no team would send the other team to bat after winning the toss "on a road"

Even if it is was a flat road to come in at 39-6 against arch rivals and series on the line, would still make it a great knock.

Definitely one of the ATG Pak test innings

Once again, trying to mock my knowledge of cricket with a illogical point.

You should know that it is very rare for a team to win the toss and bowl on a road. Why? Because it is equally easy to bat and it is better to put runs on the board (scoreboard pressure) and keep the opposition on the field for 120+ overs (tired legs when they come out to bat).

If you instead are referring to favourable bowling conditions, then yes often the bowling team try to make use of the first hour of play where there might be a bit of cloud cover with the new ball to extract some swing. This varies based on so many factors that I do not even know the point you are trying to make.

I have already agreed it was a great knock, (highlight of his awful career) exactly because of the stage and context. However I merely started this debate by saying it is vastly overrated because of some early swing which means people remember it as extraordinary batting on a minefield etc.
 
Also [MENTION=144683]Forum363[/MENTION]
Go and see how Abdul razzaq was dismissed after about 37 overs and tell me it was a straight ball that did nothing :)

Yes you’re right. That one ball with a ‘hint of swing’ suggesting it was awful conditions. They should have called off the match for being dangerous.

I mean, let’s ignore the fact that after this wicket Shoaib Akhtar managed to put on almost 100+ run partnership with Kami before Kamran fell to a slower ball and Akhtar slogged a ball into the air.

Is it that hard to just accept you’re wrong?
 
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