~Test Series~

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~Fragi~

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Pak Vs S.A
Posted 17 Oct 2003

                           South Africa won the toss and elected to bat first

South Africa 320 (83.0 ov)

Close South Africa 320 (Boucher 72, Kirsten 53 retd hurt, Malik 4 - 42)







The two Shoaib's – Malik and Akhtar – revived Pakistan and restricted South Africa to 320 on the opening day of the first Test at Lahore. Gary Kirsten (53) showed all the virtues necessary to tackle spin bowling until he was hit by a thundering bouncer by Akhtar. Mark Boucher made a plucky 72 and prevented a batting collapse when Akhtar was running red hot. The other Shoaib, Malik, showed all the subtleties involved in offspin bowling and picked up four wickets on a truly absorbing day of cricket.

Yousuf Youhana made his captaincy debut, but lost both the toss and the morning session. His counterpart, Graeme Smith, literally bullied the inconsistent Akhtar in his first four overs when he clattered him with bludgeoning venom. Mohammad Sami was the antithesis of his partner. He bowled a teasing spell, restricting the flow of runs and occasionally flirting with batsmen's edge. He was rewarded when he pitched a rare one short and wide, and Smith got a top edge while trying to pull him over midwicket (52 for 1).

Kirsten then joined Herschelle Gibbs, and the pair continued the swift pace of scoring until Gibbs edged a full ball from Danish Kaneria to Taufeeq Umar at first slip (84 for 2). Kirsten showed his experience, forcing the bowlers to pitch it up as he paddle-swept everything in sight. But as soon as the ball was tossed up, he came down the track and lofted it over the infield, disturbing the bowlers' rhythm and ensured that his side's runaway start didn't fritter away.



Gary Kirsten cops one in the face from Shoaib Akhtar



Kallis began as if performing for a sweeping circus, and he survived a huge appeal for lbw from Kaneria, which was very adjacent. But he gradually showed that there were more shots in his book, rocking back to punch the ball through the covers. However both Kirsten and Kallis had Lady Luck on their side as both escaped regulation catches. Apart from Sami, Pakistan's bowling in the morning session was pedestrian and the fielding was very close to horrific. Just as a massive total was looming large South Africa were hit by an Akhtar whirlwind of gut-wrenching pace and bulls-eye accuracy.

First Kallis faced the bombardment and was beaten three time in one over. He was glued to his crease and his lack of footwork cost him in the next over when he was given out caught behind off Danish Kaneria to a dubious decision. Kirsten reached his fifty with an elegant cover-drive and was all set to pitch tent for the whole day. But all such hopes were literally dashed in the seventh over after lunch, when Akhtar unleashed a well-directed short ball on Kirsten's off stump. Kirsten tried to pull him away with a swift swing of the bat, but the ball was just too fast and sneaked in through the visor onto his left cheekbone. He was covered in blood within a few minutes and was hurried to the hospital for safety.

McKenzie came in to face the death-metal music and received an incisive yorker that started outside off and swung and got him lbw (159 for 4).

Boucher walked in amid blood and swing, and played a truly memorable innings. He kept out the yorkers and swept all the spinners. He was aided by some large gaps left in the field and hurried South Africa along to safety. Along with Boetta Dippenaar, and then Shaun Pollock , he rebuilt the innings which was threatening to collapse.

And when the game was drifting away from Pakistan, they found the other Shoaib revitalizing them and picking up the crucial wickets of Dippenaar – who was in good touch – and Boucher, both caught at leg-slip. Shoaib then tantalized the tail with looping variation – they were clueless against the `doosra' – and wrapped up the innings for 320.

When Smith was blazing away he might have envisaged a batting mauling, but the two Shoaibs had other ideas – one brutal and the other subtle





Posted 17 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
i watched the day 1...man that was awesome, it was no test match i call it a longer one day...shoaib akhtar was awesome, made kirsten bleed...

Pakistan all the way baby...

Posted 18 Oct 2003

dosselpoh says
yara shoaib ko ban ker dya.........abb match ka maza kya aye ga
Posted 18 Oct 2003

~Fragi~ says
dosselpoh said:

yara shoaib ko ban ker dya.........abb match ka maza kya aye ga





jabke paul adams khel raha hai ..
Posted 18 Oct 2003

ban us ne jaan bouj ke mara tha jo ban kar diya leken us ne appeal ki hai, leken us ki galti nahi thie.in ko bahana chahiyey hota hai
Posted 18 Oct 2003

                   Pakistan trail by 45 runs with 6 wickets remaining in the 1st innings

Pakistan 275/4 (95.0 ov)



Batsmen: R B 4s 6s S/R   
Asim Kamal (LHB) 49 119 2 1 41.18 Striker
Shoaib Malik (RHB) 27 54 5 0 50.00 Non-striker
Taufeeq Umar blended deft touches with powerful drives and sustained long periods of inertia when the runs dried up to post his fourth Test hundred that enabled Pakistan to finish the second day's play at 275 for 4. South Africa were ragged in the morning but looked sharp for the next three hours, until they took the new ball and conceded some valuable runs. There was no blistering pace and quick-fire innings like yesterday, but the day was about nagging spells of bowling and gritty grinding batting.

Umar held sway for almost the whole day. He began shakily, was a hairsbreadth away from being out, profited from some shoddy bowling and drove with flourish. He then gre in confidence and put touch ahead of power, glanced, glided and brought up his fifty in an over when he tore into Andre Nel. Then came the really impressive part.

The South African's succeeded in achieving long stretches when they dried up the runs completely and frustrated the batsmen into false strokes. Imran Farhat (41) accepted the bait and began a spell of audacious stroke play, which culminated in an ugly attempt at lofting Paul Adams out of Lahore and lost his off-stump instead. Before this rush of blood, Farhat showed some brutal instinct and looked more like a Caribbean marauder on some impossible mission (109 or 1).

But Umar could have fallen in the first hour itself. Pollock was bowling faster than usual and had both the openers lunging uncertainly in the corridor. He got one ball to lift of a good length and Umar got an inside edge for the ball to roll back and hit the stumps, but the bails stayed put. Pollock had to wait till little before tea to get some reward for his accuracy, but he was easily the best bowler on show for the whole day.

Umar then showed his driving force. With a swift bat swing he lapped up the half volleys served up by Makhya Ntini and battered Nel for 16 of one over. But hat is exactly when the bowlers plugged the run flow and he impressed with some unerring concentration though his partners fall to the break-the shackles syndrome. Yassir Hameed looked in total control on the benign pitch but fell prey to the probing Pollock, slashing at a wide ball and edging it to Mark Boucher. Yousuf Youhana was uncharacteristically tentative and put an end to the torture by edging a ball from Nel to the keeper (160 for 3).

Only 66 runs were added in the second session and the momentum had certainly shifted South Africa's way. Umar could not afford any lapses and he cut out all the risk elements and nudged the singles without too much fuss. He was ably supported by debutant Asim Kamal – who survived a huge appleal for lbw first ball – who was willing to pitch tent even longer. Kamal left a majority of the balls alone, hit some straight to the fielders and put many a spectator into a deep slumber, but that was the need of the hour and he was doing just what was needed.

Umar fell just before the new ball when he lazily drove a ball straight back to Adams who completed a great low catch. But he had battled through the tough period and ensured there was no batting collapse. Shoaib Malik joined Kamal and they made good use of the pace of the new ball racing off their bats to the boundary. At the end of the day South Africa looked jaded – exemplified by some clumsy fielding and poor bowling.

Pakistan are only 45 runs behind, but some quick wickets in the first hour tomorrow could see the lengthy tail exposed and the advantage surrendered. They will do well to pick up valuable lessons from Umar, who today showed that the best way to counter nagging, disciplined bowling is by dogged disciplined batting


Posted 18 Oct 2003

ohhh against paul adams bakwas kar rahe hain us se darte jo hain
Posted 18 Oct 2003

MrDeath says
hahaa..i like kirstan bleed...uska to sar hi phod dena chahiye tha...lol..... sala bahut run banata tha....
Posted 18 Oct 2003

lol mr death
Posted 18 Oct 2003

~Fragi~ says
MrDeath said:

hahaa..i like kirstan bleed...uska to sar hi phod dena chahiye tha...lol..... sala bahut run banata tha....




lolz @ mr.death
Posted 19 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
they banned shoaib cuz they know they can't face him...stupid kids...
but oh well pakistan still gona win, we got danish, sami, mushtaq n malik...who knows abdur razzak might come back
Posted 19 Oct 2003

~Fragi~ says
n vicki ka bhi chance hai
Posted 19 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
pak is doin good so far...
Posted 19 Oct 2003

South Africa lead by 18 runs with 9 wickets remaining


Pakistan 401
South Africa 320 & 99/1 (31.0 ov)Despite the best efforts of Asim Kamal, who became only the third player to be dismissed for 99 on his Test debut, Pakistan's batting crumbled in the second session of play on the third day, allowing South Africa to reach 99 for 1 by stumps and regain the lead.

Pakistan had a splendid chance to build a substantial lead that, given their spin-fortified attack on a fourth- and fifth-day track, might have ensured that they only needed to bat once. But after Kamal was dismissed, Paul Adams broke through the lower order to finish with 7 for 128, his best Test analysis.

Shoaib Malik and Kamal, when they began the day, seemed grimly determined to make sure that Pakistan got past South Africa's first-innings total. The runs, consequently, came slowly and stodgily, and the only excitement for much of the morning session lay in a close shave for Malik after an lbw shout. But he did not last much longer after that; once Pakistan got past 320 and into the lead, Malik played inside the line to Adams and had his off stump uprooted (322 for 5).

Kamal, the 27-year-old Karachi left-hander, seemed certain to become the tenth Pakistani to make a century on his Test debut. Instead, he achieved a more exclusive but more unwanted record shortly after lunch, becoming only the third player - after Robert Christiani and Arthur Chipperfield - to be out for 99 in his first Test.

Kamal went to 98 by tonking a full-toss from Adams back over his head to long-off, but then had to sweat for a few overs on 99. The stroke that was meant to fetch him the crucial single, therefore, was perhaps a bit loose; trying to cut a ball that was too close for the stroke, Kamal edged it into his stumps and departed in an understandably blue mood (363 for 6). It was a sad end to what had been a neat, responsible innings, with nudged singles and occasional fluid cover-drives.

While Kamal battled away, Moin Khan batted as if he had never been out of the Test side. He ran hard, placed the ball well, and struck Adams for six over long-off with the same misleading ease that he has brought to his game ever since the 1992 World Cup. At the other end, however, Adams struck twice in an over, first luring Shoaib Akhtar out of his crease to get him stumped (366 for 7), and then pushing one through to induce Mohammad Sami to chop the ball on (366 for 8).

Adams bowled well all day, tossing the ball up and varying his pace well while remaining uncompromisingly accurate. He took the final two wickets as well, trapping Moin lbw for 38 (401 for 9), and then persuading Danish Kaneria to offer a tame catch to extra cover.

South Africa started their second innings as rollickingly as the first, with Herschelle Gibbs top-edging a pull off Akhtar over fine leg for six. Although Gibbs's knock put South Africa back on top by the close of play, it was not one of his best. Early on he collected a lot of his runs from edges, and only after the spinners came on did he start to settle down.

Akhtar got rid of Smith early on, when a swift delivery rose off a good length to take the shoulder of the bat and fly to slip (43 for 1). But after that Gibbs and Boeta Dippenaar dropped anchor, shrugged off some absolute jaffas from Akhtar and Sami, and refused to be worried by the sharp break that Pakistan's spinners extracted from the pitch.

Gibbs might have departed, but Moin put down the thinnest of edges off Akhtar just before tea. He was a picture of despair after grassing the chance - symbolic of the manner in which Pakistan threw away a perfectly good position in a little less than two sessions of play.




Asim Kamal - what would he have given for just one run more?

Posted 19 Oct 2003

Asim kamal just one runs behind 100 if i was there main NEL ke daanta tor deta
Posted 19 Oct 2003

moin khan should go for 2 runs
Posted 19 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
moin khan was goin for the second run, but asim stopped, he didn't wanted to go back...the good thing is shoaib akhtar is still playin...

don't worry guys, PAK will win this one...its for sure...if they can make 401 with losing youhana n hameed then they can win this easily in the second innin...
Posted 19 Oct 2003

shoaib is not playing 2nd test en 3 odi coz of ban. even gibbs couldn't see how dani ball spins,hope he will do tomorrow as today
Posted 20 Oct 2003

sanam411 says
SO PAKISTAN WON!
Posted 20 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
pak will win...don't worry...
Posted 20 Oct 2003

sirf 27 runs chahe
Posted 20 Oct 2003

Pakistan require another 24 runs with 9 wickets remaining

South Africa 320 & 241
Pakistan 401 & 137/1 (33.2 ov) Batsmen: R B 4s 6s S/R   

Taufeeq Umar (LHB) 61 107 9 0 57.01 Striker
Yasir Hameed (RHB) 3 1 0 0 300.00 Non-striker

Pakistan stand on the threshold of a famous victory after an engrossing day at Lahore. Set 161 to win after Shoaib Akhtar and Danish Kaneria combined to shoot South Africa down for 241, Pakistan were within 24 runs of victory when the light closed in. A late wicket for Graeme Smith persuaded the batsmen to go off with the target tantalisingly close. But barring a downpour, Pakistan should complete their win early tomorrow morning.

South Africa had held most of the aces when play began, and it required the shock-and-awe bowling of Akhtar and the guile of Kaneria to alter the script. Akhtar mainly concentrated on bouncing the batsmen, and in his second over nearly had Boeta Dippenaar lbw when he pitched one up. In the next over, Dippenaar, trying to fight fire with fire, attempted to pull a wide one, got a top edge and was easily caught by Yousuf Youhana at midwicket (104 for 2).

Gibbs had reached 59 when he received a peach of a bouncer that climbed and kissed the glove before hitting his shoulder and lobbing up to Taufeeq Umar at first slip. Jacques Kallis drove with a flourish during his short stay, but he too was undone by an Akhtar short one. The bouncer homed in on him, and Kallis, trying to pull, was hit on the shoulder as the ball zoomed through to the keeper. But the umpire thought it had touched the bat, and sent Kallis packing (149 for 4).

Akhtar had to leave the field shortly lunch with a hamstring tweak. It was at first reported that he would be out for three weeks, then this gloomy diagnosis was replaced by a chirpier one suggesting he might be fit to play in the second Test - if his appeal against his ban is successful and he is allowed to play.

But the damage was done, and Kaneria stepped into the breach. He bowled unchanged from the start of play, and stuck to a probing line, but didn't claim any wickets during Akhtar's spell. But eventually Neil McKenzie surrendered his wicket, playing a premeditated paddle-sweep and being embarrassingly bowled around his legs (159 for 4).

Mark Boucher was swinging the bat aggressively, and Gary Kirsten (46) showed real grit as they looked to rebuild the Akhtar-bulldozed ruins. Kirsten played a memorable knock, considering the facial blow he received in the first innings, and the way he went after every bouncer hurled down at him was a lesson in courageous batting.

Trying to score off every ball is fraught with risk, as Boucher learnt when he pushed at a good-length ball without negotiating the bounce, and only lobbed a catch to forward short leg (192 for 6). Then Kirsten, unusually aggressive, tried to break the shackles by smashing Kaneria out of the ground. But he only managed a leading edge, and Yousuf Youhana gratefully gathered the steepler (237 for 7).

And then the procession really started. Paul Adams didn't read the straighter ball that crashed into his back leg, and was plumb lbw (238 for 8). Mushtaq Ahmed – in his first over of the day – bowled Andre Nel through the gate, and Shaun Pollock was also flummoxed by Kaneria's googly, which sneaked and bowled him. South Africa lost their last four wickets for four runs – to four googlies.

The openers, Taufeeq and Imran Farhat, started the chase for 161 as if possessed. Farhat was the more dominant, and slashed his way to a powerful 58. He had shown glimpses of some powerful back-foot play in the first innings, but this time he wasn't going to throw it away. The bowlers served him delicious balls that were short and wide and he feasted on them with a swirling bat. Taufeeq, though not as cavalier, made sure he swatted the loose balls to the fence as well.

Nel bowled a testing, pacy spell, and Pollock was treated with respect, but the rest were disposed of with disdain, mainly to the square fence. Finally, with the winning post in sight, Farhat holed out (a rare Test wicket for Smith), and the players trooped off for the light.

The final rites will be enacted tomorrow, but the turning point came early today, with Shoaib Akhtar's sensational speedy spell.




Shoaib Akhtar: unstoppable

Posted 20 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
hell yeah man, pakistan is gona win like its nothing...

SHOAIB AKHTAR n DANI all the way...we can never afford to lose these two...never means never...


GO PAK...
Posted 20 Oct 2003

yeah nasir khan brother of nasir hussain    
Posted 20 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
lol who's nasir hussain
Posted 21 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
PAK WON BY 8 WICKETS...
Posted 21 Oct 2003

Pakistan coast to eight-wicket win
Pakistan v South Africa, 1st Test, Lahore, 5th day

Pakistan coast to eight-wicket win

The Wisden Bulletin by Siddhartha Vaidyanathan

October 21, 2003



Pakistan 401 and 164 for 2 (Taufeeq Umar 63, Imran Farhat 58) beat South Africa 320 and 241 by 8 wickets
Scorecard
Pakistan completed an eight-wicket victory, and went one up in the series, when they speedily knocked off the 24 runs they needed this morning at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. It was Pakistan's first Test win at home against South Africa, coming six years after a 1-0 series defeat.

Pakistan lost Taufeeq Umar (63) this morning – cleaned up by a ball from Paul Adams that kept really low – but by then, the script was done and dusted. A Shoaib Malik boundary finally sealed the triumph. The fate of the match had been decided by two lethal spells of fast bowling – of contrasting styles – from Shoaib Akhtar that crashed through the batting sluice-gates.

South Africa had run away with the first session on the opening day, but with a nasty mix of reverse-swing and blasting pace, Akhtar got Pakistan back into the contest. The turning point came when he smacked Gary Kirsten on the face, as he attempted to pull a short one, forcing him to retire hurt. He then picked up Neil McKenzie first ball to well and truly dent the South Africans' morale.

Again, on the fourth morning, after the pendulum had swung back towards South Africa, Akhtar produced a blistering spell - characterised by steepling bounce and ruthless precision - that had the top-order batsmen hopping.

It was also a memorable Test for Shoaib Malik – the replacement for Saqlain Mushtaq – who bowled a teasing spell on the first day, and Danish Kaneria, who spun his web on the fourth. Taufeeq Umar's gritty hundred, Asim Kamal's fine 99 on debut, and Imran Farhat's positive approach were the other gains that Pakistan will take with them to the second Test at Faisalabad. Both Umar and Farhat, who was making a comeback to the Test team, were under pressure to perform, and they won hearts with the manner in which they chased down a potentially tricky fourth-innings target.

Mark Boucher's attacking approach with the bat and Paul Adams's seven wickets in the first innings were some consolation for South Africa. But the biggest positive was the courage shown by Kirsten in the second innings. Not fazed by the way he had been felled in the first, he took on everything the bowlers threw at him. His team-mates will need similar grit to take on Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Sami in Faisalabad, assuming that Akhtar is cleared to play.

South Africa were a spinner short on a wearing pitch at Lahore, and will definitely blame some of their shot-selection for the batting collapses, but the problems began with Shoaib Akhtar, who gave them no respite at all. Richie Benaud (who is to consider Akhtar's appeal against a one-match ICC ban) will now decide whether South Africa have to face another examination by raw pace in the second Test.





Shoaib Akhtar: too hot to handle

Posted 21 Oct 2003

Rain Man says
they should allow shoaib to play in the second test, cuz he's an important player of pakistan...
Posted 21 Oct 2003

~Fragi~ says
hurra ....
Posted 21 Oct 2003

inzamam is cuming back in second test
Posted 22 Oct 2003

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