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Shoaib set to
return in series decider
Bureau Report
LAHORE—Two-all with the decider to play: from a five-match series you
can’t ask for much more. But that scoreline also suggests more
excitement and greater parity perhaps than has been witnessed in Lahore,
Faisalabad and Multan. No doubt it’s been an engaging series but one
without a definitive, crackling, edge-of-the-seat, I-was-there contest.
One chance remains and if Shoaib Akhtar returns, the Gaddafi Stadium
might just get it. First to South Africa, however, and if Makhaya Ntini
is any indicator of the mood in the camp, then they are both jolly and
confident. Pakistan’s training began with an eclectic background score,
courtesy Ntini, of loud chants, songs and general chatter, none of which
anyone really understood.
Perhaps the prospect of taking home two trophies has spurred Ntini on.
No doubt it has his captain, Graeme Smith. “The feeling in the team is
very good right now. We’ve had a successful tour where we’ve played good
cricket barring two matches. If someone had said to me before coming
over that we would go back with two trophies, I would’ve said it’s a lot
of hard work but we’ve done that and are confident for tomorrow.” The
assertion is difficult to disprove. In the ODIs at least, they have done
it without a contribution from Jacques Kallis. The one spinner they have
played - Johan Botha - is the one they shouldn’t have: Botha’s first
wickets of the series in Multan were lower-order, death-over heaves and
who knows what Paul Harris might have done. “We’ve come a long way in
learning how to play cricket on the subcontinent,” said Smith. “Our
batting unit has performed well on slow, turning wickets. Our bowlers’
plans have been better than in the past. We’ve become a lot more
battle-hardened as a team certainly in these conditions.”
The wicket, Smith was not shy in pointing out, looks under-prepared.
Spin and seam both will benefit. South Africa countered Pakistan’s spin
by using Shaun Pollock as a pinch-hitter in Multan and it might be the
way again tomorrow. “The wicket is a little under-prepared and it’s
going to spin,” said Smith. “The seamers might also play a role. We’re
well-prepared and we have certain plans. We’ll discuss the pinch-hitter
role and see what selection they play as well.”
The feel-good factor, this talk of pitches, could go to pot tomorrow of
course. If Shoaib plays, teams and pitches matter little. You wouldn’t
guess it but Shoaib hasn’t played an ODI since September 2006. A
13-match ban finally out of the way, he will start tomorrow.
About time too, for as committed as Pakistan’s bowling has been through
the series, it has lacked a zip, a proper threat, an element of unknown.
With Umar Gul and Mohammad Asif both likely to be rested, Smith cheekily
- but correctly - said that pressure would be on Shoaib, not South
Africa. “He’s the one making a comeback. We’ve prepared for him because
we knew he would be available. He’s short on cricket and whether they
risk him in such an important game will be the key.”
Shoaib Malik knows it is a risk worth taking, as he knows this is as
good a chance as ever to win a first-ever ODI series against South
Africa. “It’s a great opportunity to win a series against them for the
first time. We will use Shoaib as our main bowler in the hope of
bringing the best out of him,” said Malik.
“If fit, he is an asset. But we will need a team effort to win the last
match and if we win we will go on the tour of India with more
confidence.” Naturally, half the mind is on India already. No opener or
opening pair has announced itself and Pakistan will fiddle again.
Neither Shahid Afridi or Yasir Hameed, providers of the best start thus
far (42) are expected to open: a truly Pakistani solution to a truly
Pakistani problem. Kamran Akmal comes back up the order and Imran Nazir
is likely to play again, Malik admitting they were experimenting with
options before India.
The good news is that Younis Khan has a score behind him and Mohammad
Yousuf is in good form. If they can stop running each other out, then
allied to the form of Malik himself, Pakistan’s middle order is healthy.
An innings from Misbah-ul-Haq would top it off nicely, though not as
much as a fearsome Shoaib spell and a Pakistan victory.
Pakistan (probable): 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Imran Nazir, 3 Younis Khan,
4 Mohammad Yousuf, 5 Shoaib Malik (capt), 6 Misbah-ul-Haq, 7 Kamran
Akmal (wk), 8 Abdur Rehman, 9 Sohail Tanvir, 10 Shoaib Akhtar, 11 Rao
Iftikhar Anjum.
South Africa (probable): 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Herschelle Gibbs, 3
Jacques Kallis, 4 AB de Villiers, 5 JP Duminy, 6 Mark Boucher (wk), 7
Shaun Pollock, 8 Albie Morkel, 9 Andre Nel, 10 Johan Botha, 11 Makhaya
Ntini. LAHORE—Pakistan’s captain hopes returning paceman Shoaib Akhtar
can bowl the team to victory in the final match here to clinch their
first-ever one-day series against South Africa.
South Africa beat Pakistan in the fourth match in Multan on Friday to
level the series 2-2 and set up a nail-biting finale in Lahore.
Pakistan recalled the controversial Akhtar on Friday after he finished
serving a 13-match ban for hitting a teammate with a bat during
practice.
“It is a great opportunity to win a series against South Africa for the
first time and we will use Akhtar as our main bowler in the hope of
bringing the best out of him,” said captain Shoaib Malik after practice
on Sunday.
The 32-year-old Akhtar was suspended and given a 34-million-rupee (US
dollars 56,000) fine for hitting fellow bowler Mohammad Asif ahead of
the Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa last month.
Malik said a fit Akhtar, who has been plagued with injuries this year,
was an asset for the team as Pakistan looked ahead to the tour of India.
The team will fly there on November 1 ahead of five one-day
internationals to be followed by three Tests.
“If fit, Akhtar is an asset and has done well for Pakistan for so many
years now. But we will need a team effort to win the last match and if
we win we will go on an important tour of India with more confidence,”
said Malik.
However the Pakistan captain’s counterpart Graeme Smith warned that the
pressure was on Akhtar to perform after such a long absence.
“Akhtar is the one who is making a comeback not us. Certainly, we know
what he is capable of. We are prepared for him in this game because we
always knew he was available for the fifth game so it’s not a surprise
for us,” the South African skipper said.
“He is short of cricket, it’s the first game for him in a very long time
so whether they will risk him or not is the key in such an important
game.”
South Africa, who won the earlier Test series, clinched the first
one-day match in Lahore by 45 runs before losing the next two by 25 runs
and six wickets respectively.
Smith remains confident of clinching the series but he described the
Lahore wicket as “a touch underprepared” ahead of the decider.
“How it’s going to play will be interesting to see but our confidence is
good and that’s always the key going into important games,” he said. “So
far it’s been a very successful tour for us, we played some really good
cricket. “We are confident ... it will be fantastic to finish off on a
high note and then catch a nice flight back home,” he added. |