Dr_Bassim
Senior T20I Player
- Joined
- Dec 25, 2009
- Runs
- 18,854
- Post of the Week
- 8
Pakistan were painstakingly slow in their first innings and it took entire sessions being wiped out to put them into action and finally get close to 450 on the 3rd day.
I am all for attritional cricket and batting at 2 runs per over for 6 sessions and grinding your way to 300 or 400 or even 500 when the pitch is tough and hard.
Accepting due ineptitude from our bowlers, the wicket today when Australia were batting revealed its true nature.
The very fact that a team scored nearly 280-300 runs in little under two sessions signified that the pitch was as flat as they come in Australia. They needed only 57 odd overs to get nearly 300.
A part of it can be explained by the horrible bowling of Yasir, who could not land the ball at the same place at the same time and the awfulness of Wahab who needed 9 balls every over to complete his over.
But leaving that aside, they were no demons in the pitch.
I watched the entire 1st day and some part of 2nd day and most of the 3rd day today. Pakistan's approach has always been safety first irrespective of the wicket. They just don't hit the bad balls often enough.
The usual suspects will defend this team and say that Australia played in different conditions to Pakistan. I would beg to disagree. Barring the first few hours of the 1st day, the conditions were not horribly different.
You only have to see how many times the ball missed the bats of Renshaw and Warner in the first 15 overs today to get a gauge of how the pitch was. It had some movement, but Australia still found it within their hearts to keep batting.
Going into shell is always going to be a problem for Pakistan while batting abroad. This was brutally exposed in New Zealand and it seems if Australia keep batting at this pace, it will be exposed again that , it's not the pitch that is tough, but we don't have the batsmen to play free strokes.
The ones that do play strokes, don't have the mental determination of hitting 100's (for instance Umar Akmal) to have a slight chance of being successful here.
I really admire our team for their UAE style of cricket. I really do. It worked in England to an extent too, because of the overrated English team and finding conditions to our liking in England and winning the toss as well.
But what happens when things don't go your way? You lose the toss? Do you still play attritional cricket and hope that 2 runs per over is going to win you the match ?
Misbah and Mickey Arthur better be ready for some answers after the Sydney test if Pakistan keep playing this way and batting both the teams out of winning equations every single time.
I am all for attritional cricket and batting at 2 runs per over for 6 sessions and grinding your way to 300 or 400 or even 500 when the pitch is tough and hard.
Accepting due ineptitude from our bowlers, the wicket today when Australia were batting revealed its true nature.
The very fact that a team scored nearly 280-300 runs in little under two sessions signified that the pitch was as flat as they come in Australia. They needed only 57 odd overs to get nearly 300.
A part of it can be explained by the horrible bowling of Yasir, who could not land the ball at the same place at the same time and the awfulness of Wahab who needed 9 balls every over to complete his over.
But leaving that aside, they were no demons in the pitch.
I watched the entire 1st day and some part of 2nd day and most of the 3rd day today. Pakistan's approach has always been safety first irrespective of the wicket. They just don't hit the bad balls often enough.
The usual suspects will defend this team and say that Australia played in different conditions to Pakistan. I would beg to disagree. Barring the first few hours of the 1st day, the conditions were not horribly different.
You only have to see how many times the ball missed the bats of Renshaw and Warner in the first 15 overs today to get a gauge of how the pitch was. It had some movement, but Australia still found it within their hearts to keep batting.
Going into shell is always going to be a problem for Pakistan while batting abroad. This was brutally exposed in New Zealand and it seems if Australia keep batting at this pace, it will be exposed again that , it's not the pitch that is tough, but we don't have the batsmen to play free strokes.
The ones that do play strokes, don't have the mental determination of hitting 100's (for instance Umar Akmal) to have a slight chance of being successful here.
I really admire our team for their UAE style of cricket. I really do. It worked in England to an extent too, because of the overrated English team and finding conditions to our liking in England and winning the toss as well.
But what happens when things don't go your way? You lose the toss? Do you still play attritional cricket and hope that 2 runs per over is going to win you the match ?
Misbah and Mickey Arthur better be ready for some answers after the Sydney test if Pakistan keep playing this way and batting both the teams out of winning equations every single time.