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Dropped catches, missed chances put England back on track
Bell, Pietersen revive
England with centuries
From Our Correspondent
FAISALABAD—At least four each catches in the field and one easiest
chance of stumping were missed by Pakistani fielders and wicketkeeper,
giving room to England batsmen to recover from the earlier devastation
as they managed to pile up 391-7 in reply to Pakistan’s 462 on the close
of the third day of the second Test, here on Tuesday. It appeared that
the Pakistan fielders were either taking the game too casually or were
over coutious as they entered the field on the fine sunny morning of the
third day and let go simple chances with an equal ease, not only
disappointing the spectators and cricket lovers at the stadium but also
cruelly demoralizing the exceptionally hardworking bowlers out there in
the middle.
Kevin Pietersen and Ian Bell steered England close to safety with
contrasting centuries in the second Test against Pakistan. Ashes hero
Pietersen hammered a 137-ball 100 and Bell a watchful 115. Ashley Giles
(23) and Shaun Udal (six) were the not-out batsmen when bad light
stopped play with 12 overs remaining here on Tuesday.
England began the day on a shaky 113-3 before Bell and Pietersen
restored their team’s fortunes, with each batsman making his second Test
century. They added 154 for the fourth wicket to deny Pakistan a
breakthrough for nearly three hours, batting confidently against both
pace and spin on an easy-paced track.
Pakistan managed to break the stubborn stand with the second new ball,
with Shoaib Akhtar having Pietersen caught by Mohammad Yousuf at mid-on
off a mistimed pull in the afternoon session. But England had already
avoided the follow-on mark of 262 when the 25-year-old Pietersen
departed after smashing three sixes and six fours. Wicket-keeper Geraint
Jones then built on the Pietersen-Bell stand, scoring a gutsy 55 for his
fifth Test half-century before being trapped leg-before by leg-spinner
Shahid Afridi.
Pakistan, leading 1-0 in the three-match series, had only themselves to
blame for not keeping the pressure on England. They let off Bell twice
and Pietersen once. Bell, on 38, survived a stumping chance when Kamran
Akmal failed to collect the ball off leg-spinner Danish Kaneria. He was
on 90 when Salman Butt dropped a catch at square-leg off seamer
Naved-ul-Hasan. Pietersen got a “life” on 64 when Kaneria failed to
judge an uppish but powerfully-struck drive off Afridi.
Key spinner Kaneria was under pressure after being warned twice by
Australian umpire Darrell Hair for running onto the pitch. Kaneria, who
knows the third and final warning will debar him from bowling in this
innings, looked ineffective when he changed ends and bowled round the
stumps. He put down 30 wicketless overs for 90 runs.
Akhtar alone impressed, removing Pietersen and ace all-rounder Andrew
Flintoff in the space of 11 runs in a fiery spell. There were no nervous
90s for the aggressive Pietersen, who reached his hundred with a hooked
six off Akhtar. The next ball was again short, but Pietersen could not
time it properly and gave a simple catch.
Akhtar got another big wicket in his next over when he uprooted
Flintoff’s middle-stump with a fuller-length delivery after the batsman
had made one. Bell, who scored only 171 in five Ashes Tests against
Australia at home this summer, was in danger of losing his place but was
included for the first Test at Multan after skipper Michael Vaughan
pulled out due to a knee injury.
He has made the most of the opportunity, following his first-Test 71
with a disciplined century here. He was caught behind while trying to
cut Afridi after hitting seven fours in a 272-ball knock. Afridi, banned
for one Test and two one-day internationals for damaging the pitch on
Monday, finished the day with two wickets. |