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Gayle leads
West Indies fightback in second Test
MULTAN—Chris Gayle and Daren Ganga made a confident start after Jerome
Taylor’s five-wicket haul in the second Test against Pakistan, boosting
West Indian hopes of levelling the series.
Gayle was unbeaten on a punishing 87 and Ganga was 59 not out at stumps,
taking the tourists to 151-0 in reply to Pakistan’s first-innings total
of 357 on the second day at the Multan Stadium on Monday.
The West Indies, 1-0 down in the three-match series after losing by nine
wickets in the first Test in Lahore, now trail by 206 runs with all
their wickets in hand.
Gayle — the player of the Champions Trophy in India earlier this month
with 414 runs including three hundreds — hit ten boundaries and a six
during his 233-minutes at the crease and put the home bowlers into
submission. The 27-year-old Jamaican, who managed 34 and 11 in the first
Test, cut loose after tea by hitting leg-spinner Danish Kaneria for two
successive boundaries to reach his half-century.
He treated Mohammad Hafeez with the same disdain, pulling the
off-spinner for a huge six over mid-wicket and then driving two
consecutive boundaries to stamp his authority. Ganga, who played second
fiddle to Gayle, reached his eighth Test fifty when he drove paceman
Umar Gul for his ninth boundary to add to the home team’s
problems.Earlier fast bowler Jerome Taylor took 5-91 — his second
five-wicket haul in nine Tests — and Corey Collymore posted (2-67) to
stop Pakistan from hitting a big score after they resumed at 263-4. The
22-year-old Jamaican Taylor bowled his heart out on a lifeless pitch and
was rewarded as the West Indies took the last six Pakistan wickets for
88 runs.
The tourists started with the second new ball and got an early result in
the third over, when Taylor produced a sharp outswinger to find an edge
off Inzamam’s bat to wicket-keeper Denesh Ramdin. Inzamam failed to add
to his overnight score of 31.
The West Indies could have snared Malik in the next over, but Brian Lara
grassed a low catch when the batsman was on 14. Dwayne Bravo at third
slip let Malik off again four runs later, with Collymore the unlucky
bowler on both occasions.
Collymore, who bowled unchanged for 15 overs, finally forced an edge off
Malik to third slip, where Bravo held a superb left-handed catch. Malik
hit seven boundaries in his 42.
The 28-year-old Barbadian then dismissed Kamran Akmal (17) with another
slip catch to Bravo to leave Pakistan at 333-7.
Taylor returned for his second spell to trap Shahid Nazir leg before for
seven but Abdul Razzaq and Gul defied the West Indian bowling for 40
minutes. Taylor changed ends to dismiss Gul (seven) with another slip
catch. Last man Danish Kaneria was run out for nought, leaving Razzaq
unbeaten on 16.—Agencies |