Saeed Ajmal bowled a super spell of 4 for 30 to help Pakistan beat New Zealand. Photo: AFP/Getty Images
Jamshed, Ajmal star in Pakistan win over New Zealand
Jamshed with the bat and Ajmal with the ball help Pakistan to a 13-run win
23 September 2012 - 07:11pm IST by Wisden India staff in Pallekele
Pakistan
and New Zealand. Pakistan, a team with fantastic pedigree at the ICC World
Twenty20s; New Zealand dependent on one or two key players – usually good for a
scrap, but not always a serious contender against the big teams. The two sides
played to reputation at the Pallekele International Stadium on Sunday afternoon,
where some solid hitting in the first half and disciplined bowling in the
second took Pakistan to a 13-run win.
Batting
first after winning the toss, Pakistan started brilliantly, with Mohammad Hafeez,
the captain, and Imran Nazir having a strong go at the New Zealand bowling,
opened by Kyle Mills and Daniel Vettori. The scoring rate hovered between eight
and nine an over at this stage, and it remained there till the end of the
innings.
Nazir
fell, caught and bowled by Tim Southee, for a 16-ball 25, but with Nasir
Jamshed walking in to partner Hafeez, things only got worse for New Zealand.
The duo put on 76 for the second wicket in eight overs, and it looked like
Pakistan might take its total close to 190, or even 200.
But
with Hafeez (43 in 38 balls), Kamran Akmal (3 in 3) and Jamshed (56 in 35)
falling between the 14th and 16th overs, the innings
stuttered. It took a bit of late-order flourish from Umar Akmal (23 in 15) and
Shahid Afridi (12 in 6) to keep the scoring rate up and end the 20 overs on a
solid 177 for six.
From
New Zealand’s point of view, Vettori was the most economical, giving away just
23 from his four overs, while Tim Southee (2 for 31) and Jacob Oram (2 for 44)
were the most successful.
Chasing
178 was always going to be tough, whether Brendon McCullum got going or not. In
any case, he got his chance only after Rob Nicol and Kane Williamson, the
openers, had used up 40 balls to take the score to 53. It was slow going by
Twenty20 standards, with Nicol getting his 33 runs in 28 balls and Williamson
making 15 from 13.
McCullum
was also slow – by his own swashbuckling standards and otherwise – in scoring
32 from 31 balls, and when he was dismissed in the 16th over
with the score on 108, the match was heavily stacked in Pakistan’s favour.
Surprisingly,
Ross Taylor, the captain, kept himself back, promoting Vettori (18 in 16 balls)
and Oram (11 in 7) in the batting order. That decision could have changed the
way the match eventually panned out because when Taylor did come in, he slammed
26 in 11 balls. By then though, the asking rate had shot through the roof, and
despite some lusty hitting, wickets kept falling and the target remained out of
reach.
Saeed
Ajmal was again the best of Pakistan’s bowlers, returning figures of 4 for 30
from his four overs, saving his best for the death and keeping things tight
just when New Zealand’s lower order threatened to pull off a miracle.
It was not a day of complete despair for New Zealand, though, with its narrow margin of defeat ensuring that it was through to the Super Eights by virtue of its Net Run Rate.
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