Wednesday 30 October 2013

Pakistan v South Africa, 1st ODI, Sharjah - 2013

Parnell's late surge takes SA to 183

The Report by Andrew Fidel Fernando

A hostile opening spell from Mohammad Irfan drew first blood of the series for Pakistan, before Saeed Ajmal and Shahid Afridi took seven wickets between them, brutally exposing South Africa's frailty against spin in ODIs - a wound that has already bled profusely this year. That the innings didn't flatline before the 40th over is thanks largely to Wayne Parnell's fearless 56 from No. 8, but despite the late surge, South Africa's 183 will not daunt even as erratic a batting unit as Pakistan's.

None of the top five mustered scores of more than 20, and as each new man plodded and perished against the slow bowlers, the run rate dragged along in the wickets' wake. Neither Ajmal nor Afridi might reflect this effort was among their best limited-overs spells, but on a turning pitch, their opponents only threatened competence once a competitive total seemed out of reach. Ajmal, who gutted the middle order, finished with 4 for 30, and Afridi consolidated Pakistan's dominance with 3 for 37.

South Africa had groped their way around Sri Lanka two months before, and despite assurances that lessons from that series had been internalised, Ajmal's arrival at the bowling crease prompted familiar timidity in an already cautious batting effort.

Graeme Smith had not been on that trip to Sri Lanka, but early in Ajmal's second over - the 13th of the innings - he survived a voracious shout for caught behind, and determined from then on, to reach the pitch of the ball. Only, he stretched too far forward three balls later, and when the ball spun past the blade, he had dragged his foot out of the crease. Easy work for wicketkeeper Umar Akmal, and the square-leg umpire, ensued.

Faf du Plessis couldn't decide whether to play forward or back in Ajmal's next over, and was trapped in front by one that spun hard to beat the inside edge. In a moment that epitomised South Africa's lack of awareness, he reviewed the decision to find he had been pinned on the crease, by a ball heading for the middle of leg stump. AB de Villiers brought a more positive outlook to the crease, but soon misread Ajmal's doosra, and danced down the pitch to offer a leading edge, which prompted another dance from Ajmal, who took it on the second grab.

At the end of his first six over spell, Ajmal had conceded nine runs, and bowled two maidens - his three scalps leaving South Africa at 68 for 5 after 21 overs.

Afridi bowled flatter and with less venom, but was soon extending South Africa's slide, albeit at a less dramatic rate. David Miller had been among South Africa's best batsman in Sri Lanka, and he provided a brief resistance alongside Parnell, who was out of his depth technically, but possessed enough gall to compensate. The pair put on 39 together, in 45 balls, as Miller even ventured the first six of the innings, and though Afridi removed Miller with a slower one for 37, the seeds of defiance had been sown in Parnell, who was on 20 at the time.

In Lonwabo Tsotsobe, Parnell found a partner that found a way to survive as he did - through a series of inside and outside edges that were almost willed into falling safely. There were 15 overs remaining in the innings when this penultimate pair were brought together, and they played the match situation well - defending everything that was not susceptible to their limited range of attacking strokes.

Occasionally Parnell grew bolder, even reverse-swatting Ajmal over point, but the majority of his efforts were directed towards making use of the overs. Boundaries were a result of genuinely poor bowling or genuinely pathetic fielding, and by finding the batting wits that eluded their top order, the pair put on 52 together and lifted South Africa to a total they might conceivably defend, however unlikely.

India v Australia, 6th ODI, Nagpur - 2013 (Final Report)

Kohli, Dhawan gun down 350 again

The Report by Sidharth Monga
Push the boundaries, shift the goalposts, change vocabularies. Three hundred and fifty no longer inspires awe. Not when Indian batsmen batting on flat Indian pitches surrounded by quick outfields with only four fielders outside the circle and two new balls to kill any chance of reverse swing. With Shikhar Dhawan's assured century at the top, and Virat Kohli's 61-ball one at No. 3 - the third-fastest by an Indian, challenging his own record of 52 balls - India became the first team to have chased down 350 or more twice, both of them in this series, and both without much frenzy.

The belief and the absolute absence of any slogging was remarkable once again, but India did face some nerves this time around. The match was doing a pretty fine job of retelling the Jaipur ODI story - Dhawan was dropped early, there was a big opening partnership, and Kohli was bursting through the target - when Dhawan played a rare low-percentage shot and exposed Suresh Raina and Yuvraj Singh. Mitchell Johnson duly removed them, and 62 off 48 required became 35 off 18 at one point.

Kohli, though, pulled out some of the most incredible shots of his innings, driving chest-high balls for fours wide of long-off, to take India through with three balls to spare. With this result the series remained alive, and George Bailey, who might have had reason to believe he had booked his Ashes spot with a 114-ball 156, will have to put in the drawer possible plans of going home early for Ashes preparation.

Alongside Bailey, adding 168 for the third wicket, was another Ashes candidate, Shane Watson, who scored a century. The two did seem to be struggling against spin, with Australia 89 for 2 after 22 overs, but Watson did enjoy some luck as Ravindra jadeja overstepped when he edged a slog-sweep to point. Once Bailey started taking on the spinners, the wheels came off, India began to bowl poorly, and a colossal 261 runs came in the last 28 overs.

As the hitherto respectable figures of all the bowlers took a beating, Bailey reached a host of landmarks. He beat the records for most runs in a bilateral series by an Australian or a captain, becoming the second-fastest man to 1,500 runs, and overtaking Misbah-ul-Haq as the leading run-getter this year. In the end, he was left with a rueful smile, half marvelling at the quality of the batting, half resigned to the playing conditions and the pitch and the outfield.

MS Dhoni, although he won, shared the views about the lopsided nature of the contest, but at one level you can't take away from the composure Kohli, Dhawan and Rohit showed for a majority of the massive chase. It was as if they didn't acknowledge the enormity of the task of maintaining a run rate of seven an over for 50 overs. There was no anxiety, no need to hit out, even if Rohit - for example - struggled to find the gaps early in the innings.

Glenn Maxwell, who later took a diving catch at point off a free hit, will rue dropping an easy offering from Dhawan when the batsman was 19 off 22. Crisp shots and lovely placement remained the feature of the rest of the 178-run partnership as Rohit made up for a slow start with two sixes off Glenn Maxwell in the 29th over. He picked out deep midwicket off a long hop, but that only hastened the chase with Kohli's entry.

From the moment Kohli drove the fifth ball he faced for four through extra cover, he knew he was good for an encore of Jaipur. A few blinks later, the partnership for the second wicket was worth 50 runs, out of which Dhawan had scored just nine runs. Kohli was 40 off 26 then. Dhawan, who was cramping by the time he reached his hundred, walked across next ball, and was bowled, giving Australia an opening.

Before Australia could enter that opening, though, Kohli brought up his fifth consecutive score of fifty or more. He would soon make it a third consecutive year with 1000 runs or more. There would be a hiccup before the win, though. Johnson, who had been kept back for the middler order, was brought back on, and he accounted for Raina and Yuvraj in the same over.

Out came Dhoni, and India suddenly slowed down. James Faulkner and Johnson both began to get the ball to move away from the right-hand batsmen, and slowly the asking rate began to climb. Dhoni told Kohli to wait for Johnson to finish off, and that the big over can come in the last four. Johnson finished off with three overs to go and 35 to get.

Kohli had seen enough. His proximity to the hundred - his 11th in 69 chases, behind only Sachin Tednulkar's 17 in 242 attempts - didn't matter. He would charge down the wicket, the bowler would drop short, and he would still manage to drive him to wide long-off. When Australia plugged that gap, he began going wide long-on with similar success. Eventually the 
asking rate came down to a run a ball in the last over, and India were through with three balls to spare.

Pakistan v South Africa, 1st ODI, Sharjah - 2013

Ajmal makes quick work of South Africa top order

The Report by Andrew Fidel Fernando

A hostile opening spell from Mohammad Irfan drew first blood of the series for Pakistan, before Saeed Ajmal opened an old South African wound - their deficiency against spin - to leave the top order in tatters. No one in the top five eclipsed 20, as the run rate dragged along in the wake of regular wickets, and at the halfway stage, South Africa were looking at a total below 200, at 83 for 5. Irfan lived just short of a length, extracting as much bounce and carry from the Sharjah surface as there might ever have been found there. His reward for his fire and discipline came at the front-end of his five-over spell. Colin Ingram saw out a challenge from Quinton de Kock for the second openers' spot, but that's practically all he saw out, squaring up to Irfan second ball and sending an edge to the keeper.

Smith and JP Duminy were watchful after that loss, and set an ambling pace for the innings that had not changed by the halfway stage. Sohail Tanvir did not pose the threat Irfan presented, and while his spell was largely tight, even his poor balls escaped punishment, thanks to the visitors' deferred reticence. Just when Duminy began to grow in confidence, though, he pulled Tanvir straight to the square-leg fielder.

Two months prior, South Africa had groped and bungled their way around Sri Lanka, and despite assurances that the lessons from that series had been internalised, familiar failings against spin emerged when Ajmal came to the crease. Graeme Smith had not been part of that Sri Lanka tour, but having had his outside edged beaten early in Ajmal's second over, he overreached, hoping to get to the pitch of the ball and was stumped sharply by Umar Akmal. New man Faf du Plessis couldn't decide to play forward or back, in Ajmal's next over, and was trapped in front by one that spun hard and beat the inside edge. Soon after, AB de Villiers attempted to come down the pitch and attack, but Ajmal had slipped in a doosra and the unwitting batsman ended up providing a return catch. David Miller had been South Africa's best batsman in Sri Lanka, and it is on him, that their innings now hangs.

India v Australia, 6th ODI, Nagpur - 2013

Watson, Bailey open up after rebuilding

The Report by Sidharth Monga
Asked to bat first on a slow pitch, Australia failed to take toll of the quick bowlers, found themselves struggling to go 
fluently once the spinners came on, but had begun to get some momentum owards the 25th-over mark. R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja 
and Amit Mishra - playing his first ODI in India - shackled them with their variations and accuracy, going for 45 in their 
first 12 overs, but the last three cost 35. 
Phillip Hughes and Aaron Finch both threw away starts, and it could have been worse for Australia had Ravindra Jadeja not 
overstepped - by centimetres - when Shane Watson was caught off his bowling. Australia would have been 69 for 3 then in the 
17th over.

The slowness of the pitch was apparent from how MS Dhoni stood up to the stumps as early as in the third over, and had short 
straight mid-on and short midwicket in place quite often. The start looked good for Australia until Hughes pulled 
Bhuvneshwar Kumar straight into the lap of square leg. Finch, who had looked even more dangerous, lost his head at the sight 
of Ashwin, jumping out of the crease and hoicking down the wrong line.

At 45 for 2 in the 12th over, Australia needed some solid rebuilding, but Watson didn't seem to be of the mindset to settle 
down and then open up. He soon tried to slog-sweep Jadeja, and got an edge towards cover-point. Replays, however, revealed 
the tightest of no-balls: as his toe landed, his heel - in the air - was over the line, and not behind it.

Jadeja was replaced by Mishra, who looked the most impressive of the spinners. Neither Watson nor George Bailey picked his 
quicker legbreak or googly early on, but towards the 25th over the two batsmen began to open up. Bailey took the charge to 
Ashwin, lofting him over extra cover and then straight down the ground for four and six in the 23rd over. In the 24th, 
Mishra provided a full toss that Watson deposited behind deep midwicket. In the 25th, Watson late-cut Jadeja for four to 
bring up his fifty a ball later with a single, and followed it up with a flat straight six to suggest the tide had begun to 
turn.

Tuesday 29 October 2013

ODI Hat-tricks

Jalal-ud-Din Pakistan v Australia Hyderabad (P) 20/09/1982 
BA Reid Australia v New Zealand Sydney 29/01/1986 
C Sharma India v New Zealand Nagpur 31/10/1987 
Wasim Akram Pakistan v West Indies Sharjah 14/10/1989 
Wasim Akram Pakistan v Australia Sharjah 04/05/1990 
Kapil Dev India v Sri Lanka Calcutta 04/01/1991 
Aaqib Javed Pakistan v India Sharjah 25/10/1991 
DK Morrison New Zealand v India Napier 25/03/1994 
Waqar Younis Pakistan v New Zealand East London 19/12/1994 
Saqlain Mushtaq Pakistan v Zimbabwe Peshawar 03/11/1996 
EA Brandes Zimbabwe v England Harare 03/01/1997 
AM Stuart Australia v Pakistan Melbourne 16/01/1997 
Saqlain Mushtaq Pakistan v Zimbabwe The Oval 11/06/1999 
WPUJC Vaas Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe Colombo (SSC) 08/12/2001 
Mohammad Sami Pakistan v West Indies Sharjah 15/02/2002 
WPUJC Vaas Sri Lanka v Bangladesh Pietermaritzburg 14/02/2003 
B Lee Australia v Kenya Durban 15/03/2003 
JM Anderson England v Pakistan The Oval 20/06/2003 
SJ Harmison England v India Nottingham 01/09/2004 
CK Langeveldt South Africa v West Indies Barbados 11/05/2005 
Shahadat Hossain  Bangladesh v Zimbabwe Harare 02/08/2006 
JE Taylor West Indies v Australia Mumbai (BS) 18/10/2006 
SE Bond New Zealand v Australia Hobart 14/01/2007 
*SL Malinga Sri Lanka v South Africa Guyana 28/03/2007 
A Flintoff England v West Indies St Lucia 03/04/2009 
MF Maharoof Sri Lanka v India Dambulla 22/06/2010 
Abdur Razzak Bangladesh v Zimbabwe Dhaka 03/12/2010 
KAJ Roach West Indies v Netherlands Delhi 28/02/2011 
SL Malinga Sri Lanka v Kenya Colombo (RPS) 01/03/2011 
SL Malinga Sri Lanka v Australia Colombo (RPS) 22/08/2011 
DT Christian Australia v Sri Lanka Melbourne 02/03/2012 
NLTC Perera Sri Lanka v Pakistan Colombo (RPS) 16/06/2012 
CJ McKay Australia v England Cardiff 14/09/2013
Rubel Hossain Bangladesh v New Zealand Dhaka 29/10/2013 
Notes: 
Aaqib Javed was the youngest at 19 years and 81 days when he achieved this feat.

* SL Malinga took 4 wickets in 4 balls in Guyana, 2007