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"Until the last ball before lunch I was really happy, at 1-60 we were in a good position" : Arthur

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"Until the last ball before lunch I was really happy, at 1-60 we were in a good position" : Arthur

Much like the weather bureau briefing that dominates the Sydney-Hobart regatta’s pre-race planning, the sage warning from the MCG curator clearly found an attentive audience.

David Sandurski had warned that his pitch, baked longer than a seasonal turkey on a blistering Test eve, would offer cheer to the pace bowlers on the opening morning but would get progressively more friendly for batters.

So when Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq nominated correctly at the coin toss, he knew – upon opting to bat first – that it was the first few hours of play that brought with them the greatest peril.

And as such, Pakistan’s brains trust set their team a goal of being 60 runs for the loss of a solitary wicket come the lunch break, at which point their decision would be vindicated and their game strategy on track.

The fact they came within a single Josh Hazlewood delivery of achieving that outcome would suggest a far more fruitful day than the end of day (albeit a day badly hampered by rain that set in shortly before tea and did not abate) score of 4-142 reveals.

The delivery in question was the ball from Hazlewood that held its line, perhaps even decked slightly away from right-hander Babar Azam and was snared low to the right of second slipper Steve Smith.

The Australia captain’s second catch of the session, having clung to a far more straightforward chance off opener Sami Aslam from the third ball of Nathan Lyon’s opening over.

A moment that was pre-ordained to trigger something special, of a far-less match-defining nature.

“Up until the last ball before lunch I was really happy, I thought if 1-60 we were in a really good position at lunch time,” Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur said at the conclusion of a day foreshortened to 50.4 overs.

“We knew batting first at the MCG … the first two hours you give away to the bowling team.

“So we set up for that and we thought at 1-60 we were in a very good place, but then obviously losing Babar took us to 2-60 which probably meant it was Australia’s session.”

If the morning session marginally edged towards the home team, then the briefer one that followed was undeniably Australia’s.

When seamer Jackson Bird got rid of Pakistan’s senior middle-order pair Younus Khan and Misbah in the midst of a highly impressive spell that was the day’s most influential, if not the most economical.

Bird darted a ball back into Younus, who had earlier survived an lbw shout against Hazlewood that was given out on field but overturned on review for missing leg stump, and rattled the 39-year-old's stumps.

He then got another delivery to jag sufficiently into Misbah to force an inside edge on to the skipper’s thigh pad, and have the ball hang in the air sufficiently for Nic Maddinson at short leg to lurch forward and pluck a deft catch in his left claw.

It was yet another failure for the increasingly out-of-sorts Misbah, who at 42 years of age might be fast arriving at his international cricket use-by date having reached 20 only once in his past six Test innings.

And it left Pakistan well short of their pre-game aspirations at 4-125, a total to which they added a further 17 before the rain set in with Arthur conceding they have work ahead of them when the Test resumes half an hour early (10am) tomorrow to try and make up some of the 40 overs lost to rain.

On the least productive Boxing Day since 2001 when several bouts of rain saw just 40 overs bowled, in which South Africa laboured even more so than Pakistan today to reach 3-89 under leaden skies and biting cold.

“I think the wicket was tough,” Arthur said tonight. “It was really tough to bat on for a period, if you got the ball in the right area there was just enough there for the bowlers.

“We’re comfortable that will continue, and when you win the toss and bat you always rationalise that decision against what could happen in the fourth innings.

“We think that in the fourth innings that it will be tough to score, history says it is, and we can set ourselves straighter fields and hopefully our leg-spinner (Yasir Shah) comes more and more into the game.

“That’s what we hope but we’ve still got a hell of a lot of work to do in getting some runs and then bowling very well when we get first crack with the ball.”

Link
 
Pakistan backs Test veterans to continue

http://wwos.nine.com.au/2016/12/26/18/48/pakistan-backs-test-veterans-to-continue

The future of Pakistan veterans Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan remains in their hands despite another poor showing in the Boxing Day Test, coach Mickey Arthur says.

The stalwarts were each dismissed cheaply as Pakistan reached 4-142 on day one before rain forced an early end to play at the MCG.

Misbah appeared determined to redeem himself after a poor showing in the first Test in Brisbane, smashing Nathan Lyon over mid-on for six to open his account.

But the 42-year-old captain's innings ended on 11 off just 13 balls, with Nic Maddinson taking a superb reflex catch at short leg off the bowling of Jackson Bird.

Bird had earlier seen off Younis (21) with a ripping inswinger which found the gap between the 39-year-old's bat and pad.

With Younis averaging 38.17 this year and Misbah just 33.93, questions have been raised about the veteran pair's future beyond the tour of Australia.

But Pakistan coach Arthur insists they have earned the right to decide for themselves whether they should retire or keep playing.

"Ultimately, they'll decide when they think the time is right," he said.

"But within our dressing room, they are held in such high esteem and we back them every time they go out and play.

"One's been an inspirational leader for the last six years and the other guy's closing in on 10,000 Test runs. They've earned the right in a massive way."

With Arthur unsure of either man's intentions, it's possible Misbah and Younis could both choose to bow out after the Australia tour.

Considering the mercurial nature of Pakistan's batting order, that would be a nightmare scenario for Arthur who would prefer their exits to be staggered.

Younis, in particular, has shown he still has plenty to offer at Test level, smashing 218 against England at The Oval in August.

He also chipped in a handy 65 during Pakistan's second-innings fightback in Brisbane before throwing his wicket away with a widely criticised reverse sweep.

And while Pakistan are building plenty of young talent, Arthur believes the veterans' presence in the dressing rooms can only be good for youngsters like Babar Azam and Sami Aslam.

"They're still model professionals, they train, they practice, they're fit and they're inspirational around the change rooms," Arthur said.

"The longer they can be in the dressing rooms, the better for the young guys that are with us."
 
Its a more seamer friendly pitch at the MCG than last year. I hope our seamers can something out of the conditions - cloudy weather is also forecasted for the next few days.
 
The ball was definitely nipping around quickly off the wicket during that period of cloud cover. Thought Azhar batted exceptionally well!
 
Don't know why we always lose wickets with just a few overs to spare before some break. Again it proves our batsmen are mentally weak.
 
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Younis still has plenty to offer at Test level?

Pardon?

He has played 14 Test innings outside Asia in the last six months.

And failed in 12 of those 14 innings.

It doesn't matter that he scored 218 in one of the other two. Gordon Greenidge was axed forever one Test after he scored 223.

Once your consistency goes, a veteran becomes unselectable.

12 failures in 14 innings just can't be carried, not even if you score 400 in the other Test.
 
Azhar Ali batting fantastically. 70 odd in the last game and runs in this innings as well. Needs to carry on and make a big ton
 
Asad has to move to 4-5 in the 2nd innings. Enough of the walking wicket Misbah.

Yes, earlier I was not in favour of moving around Asad since he is the only one actually performing (other than Azhar), but now Shafiq has to come in at 4 before Younis and Misbah. If Sarfaraz has a good first innings I wouldn't mind if he comes in at 5.

Push non-performing oldies as far down the order as possible.

It may even improve others performance if they have this false sense of "security" that YK and Misbah are yet to come.
 
Love seeing posters changing opinions on players after just 1 innings. From 'drop him asap' to 'promote him up the order' after 1 hundred, reflects the thinking and mentality of the majority of Pakistani fans.

Ideally need 350 runs on the board to compete in the match, permitting there is no further significant delay in the match.
 
Love seeing posters changing opinions on players after just 1 innings. From 'drop him asap' to 'promote him up the order' after 1 hundred, reflects the thinking and mentality of the majority of Pakistani fans.

Ideally need 350 runs on the board to compete in the match, permitting there is no further significant delay in the match.

Is this directed at me lol? Because I predicted Asad to come good in Australia.
 
Love seeing posters changing opinions on players after just 1 innings. From 'drop him asap' to 'promote him up the order' after 1 hundred, reflects the thinking and mentality of the majority of Pakistani fans.

Ideally need 350 runs on the board to compete in the match, permitting there is no further significant delay in the match.

Who asked Shafiq to be dropped?
 
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