Saturday, 17 December 2011

The Test Updates

Second Slip review the 2nd days play of Sri Lanka and South Africa where the host are trampling all over Sri Lanka but the question is how much trampling is done in that 1st innings lead plus we will preview the 2nd Test between Bangladesh and Pakistan in Dhaka.

Just one shy, De Villiers caught at point. Courtesy Associated Press

Nazimuddin was the young batsmen flourishing in the First Test












South Africa 389 for 9 (de Villiers 99, Boucher 49*, Tahir 24*) lead Sri Lanka 180 by 209 runs

Sri Lanka needed to make the most of the moisture in the wicket provided in the morning. They were helped by Jacques Rudolph, who was batting with pain from a dislocated finger yesterday, adding to the fact that he isn’t much of a player... But he wasn’t the first to go, it was nightwatchman Dale Steyn, who was run out for a duck. There was never really a single in it, although Steyn getting out was more of a blessing, as it brought Hashim Amla to the wicket. Thankfully, Dean Jones was not on commentary when Hashim was at the wicket, but he seemed in a hurry. He hit two glorious cover drives, one the flashed through gully then the impressive Perera found the perfect length and line, got Amla pushing with hard hands and a good catch was taken at 3rd slip.

Perera continued his impressive spell, getting Rudolph for a painful 44. Perera was looking threatening because he was getting the ball to dart off the wicket, and when there is variable bounce involved too, it becomes a handful. This brought Jacques Kallis to the middle, and started with 3 fours of one Perera over, his cover drives on one knee the ultimate definition on a cricket orgasm.... Or was it just me?

But then he ducked into a short ball from Fernando, which on reflection didn’t look too short,  and it didn’t ‘get up’ as much as he expected, but only ended up putting his head in the line of fire. Kallis got up and shook his head a couple of times and then collapsed. He took his helmet off and just collapsed. Then blood appeared on his ear, and as a superb slo-mo replay showed, the ball was smack-bang in the middle of the ear piece of the helmet, not the actual lid as such, and it basically jarred on his head on impact. Nasty. All sorts of South African team hierarchy were out there, trying to get their warhorse back up to speed. Or maybe they were checking if the stitching on the piece of road kill atop of his head was still okay... After a 10 minute delay, he continued on. Unsurprisingly, he never got settled again. He was dropped by keeper Silva, but soon after the lunch interval he played a similar shot to Amla, and perished as well. Game on at 5/173, with the out of form Mark Boucher due in next.

Thankfully for the Proteas, Sri Lanka couldn’t sustain pressure over long periods, the sign of a good test attack. They were good in patches, but in the de Villiers-Prince stand of 96, they put away anything loose with vigour. After Prince departed to Angelo Matthews, who later was taken away for scans on his groin, Boucher and de Villiers batted well, before AB was caught on 99. Sort of. He cut a wide ball from Perera, and the sub fielder Karunaratne took a low catch. De Villiers asked a took the fielders word, as it was very low to the ground..... By very low to the ground, I mean he claimed a half-volley at backward point, but good on AB for taking the fielders word, in the back of his mind would have been the incident where SL were sure he was caught behind on 64, and a faint hotspot appeared but there was enough doubt to keep him at the wicket.

Boucher and tailender Imran Tahir batted very well at the end of the day, getting the lead to 209. It was a funny days cricket, neither team dominating, but South Africa’s class shone through. Sri Lanka were valiant, but not finding the killer blow- a trend the I believe will continue during the three tests. Only time will tell.

Pakistan look to show dominative form in a crushing year for cricket

The need for players to play more first-class cricket and to improve on their quality of batsmen were the mian talking point after a convulsing win by Pakistan that shown a lot of weaknesses. Bangladesh's vice captain, Mahmudullah said that they couldn't amke out what is going wrong as everything was going well in their training and practices.

Bangladesh horror story of Tests continue with their current form is from the last 11 Tests, they only drawn 1 against the West Indies recently. With more and more defeats, the nation is losing their patience with their team losing every time to a Test playing nation.

While for Pakistan, the rebuilding of their team is ahead of schedule with some players they fielded from young talent like Asad Shafiq who reached his first international century after a couple of innings without success and uses the pace of the ball really well to his advantage very well. The veterans also had their good days with Abdur Rehman picking up 7 wickets so far in the Test series as well.

With their final game of 2011, Bangladesh need to salvage some pride to move away from the carnage they had suffered from the Cricket World Cup and other tours of this year and look forward while Pakistan look to justify their place as the one to contend with England's number 1 spot in the Test rankings.

Pakistan squad (probable): 1 Mohammad Hafeez, 2 Taufeeq Umar, 3 Azhar Ali, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq (capt), 6 Asad Shafiq, 7 Adnan Akmal (wk), 8 Abdur Rehman, 9 Umar Gul, 10 Saeed Ajmal, 11 Aizaz Cheema.

Bangladesh squad (probable): 1 Tamim Iqbal, 2 Nazimuddin, 3 Shahriar Nafees, 4 Mushfiqur Rahim (capt and wk), 5 Naeem Islam, 6 Shakib Al Hasan, 7 Nasir Hossain, 8 Mahmudullah, 9 Elias Sunny, 10 Shahadat Hossain, 11 Shafiul Islam

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