Thursday, August 29, 2013

Zimbabwe chase history as Pakistan look to save series

HARARE: Having beaten Pakistan by seven wickets in the first match, hosts Zimbabwe are a win away from claiming their first ODI series win over the same opponents and with it their first significant bilateral series in 12 years when they take to the field for the second ODI at the Harare Sports Club on Thursday.
Following the 5-0 sweep at the hands of a weakened India last month, Brendan Taylor’s team are now in the rare position to press for an epic series win over top-class opposition.
Zimbabwe have never beaten Pakistan in bilateral ODI series dating back to 1993; they have lost eight and drawn one series 1-1 in 1995.

“We know how good Pakistan are and we know the quality of their players, we know they are going to come back harder on us,” said Zimbabwe batsman Malcolm Waller.
Tuesday’s victory was Zimbabwe’s first over Pakistan in 15 years, but it remains to be seen if they can reproduce such a performance a second time in less than three days.
The win was fashioned in the field where Pakistan lost five wickets for 44 runs after being given a 99-run stand for the third wicket and could only manage 244, a total that Zimbabwe overhauled with ten deliveries remaining.
Medium-pacers Brian Vitori and Tendai Chatara were economical and claimed two wickets each as Pakistan’s batsmen, barring Mohammad Hafeez and Misbah-ul-Haq, struggled to dominate.
These two bowlers will need to be frugal again, while the support act must be sharper. A repeat act of their fine fielding — Prosper Utseya’s one-handed stunner was jaw-dropping — would only give Zimbabwe more of an edge.
“To beat the quality team that Pakistan have got shows that we are doing the right things,” Taylor said after Tuesday’s match. “But there is still room for improvement; we dropped some pretty easy catches.”
Half-centuries for Vusi Sibanda and Hamilton Masakadza paved the way for a historic chase before skipper Taylor added the final touches. Considering the magnanimity of the last win, its unlikely Zimbabwe will tinker with their line-up.
For Pakistan, the sloppy batting and lacklustre bowling will be a concern.
Openers Nasir Jamshed and Ahmed Shehzad were far from fluent while the lower middle order managed 20 runs between them.
Batting has for long been Pakistan’s problem and the way they collapsed in Harare on Tuesday was just another example of adding to a lost cause.
Pakistan also have a lot of experience in the form of captain Misbah-ul-Haq and Shahid Afridi, but the latter has been inconsistent with both the bat and the ball in recent times.
“I think we have to go back and think where we went wrong to really improve our batting, bowling and fielding,” Misbah said looking ahead to Thursday’s game. “We need to just come back strongly and play our A game, our best game then you can really win these games.”
Pakistan are in the unfamiliar position of needing to beat a minnow team to salvage a series, and how they retaliate adds to the appetizing fixture.
Teams (likely):
ZIMBABWE: Vusi Sibanda, Hamilton Masakadza, Brendan Taylor (captain/wicketkeeper), Timycen Maruma, Sean Williams, Malcolm Waller, Elton Chigumbura, Prosper Utseya, Tinashe Panyangara, Tendai Chatara, Brian Vitori.
PAKISTAN: Nasir Jamshed, Ahmed Shehzad, Mohammad Hafeez, Misbah-ul-Haq (captain), Umar Amin, Shahid Afridi, Haris Sohail, Sarfraz Ahmed (wicketkeeper), Saeed Ajmal, Junaid Khan, Mohammad Irfan.—Agencies