Kamran Akmal hits out during his superb innings. Photo: AFP/Getty Images
Kamran special helps Pakistan beat India
Big Indian total of 185 for 3 not enough as Pakistan batsmen shine in warm-up tie
17 September 2012 - 05:42pm IST by R Kaushik in Colombo
The disappointingly sparse turnout at the R Premadasa
Stadium was the only giveaway that this wasn’t a full-blown international
fixture. No quarter is asked and none given
when India and Pakistan go head to head, and it was no
different on an overcast and muggy Monday afternoon.
By classification, this was a warm-up fixture ahead of
the ICC World Twenty20 2012, beginning in Hambantota on Tuesday. No
India-Pakistan cricket encounter can ever be only a ‘warm-up’ game, and this
run-fest wasn’t either. Pakistan came through a riveting clash of former
ICC World Twenty20 champions, the 2009 winners overpowering the 2007 titlists
by five wickets in a high-scoring thriller.
India looked to have the upper hand after it
amassed 185 for 3, but as is its wont, Pakistan didn’t gave up. Virat
Kohli and Rohit Sharma had provided the Indian innings with the thrust it
required, and Pakistan found its own heroes in Kamran Akmal and
Shoaib Malik as it blasted its way to 186 for 5 with five deliveries to spare.
The older of the Akmal brothers played a lone hand
once his burgeoning stand with Mohammad Hafeez, the captain, was terminated by
R Ashwin. But when he found another ally in Malik, the match turned on its
head. Malik took his time playing himself in as Akmal raced into overdrive,
repeatedly clearing the boundary boards by some distance to
keep Pakistan well in the hunt.
Akmal and Malik took on India’s most experienced
bowlers, Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan Singh, unleashing a succession of beefy
strikes. Pakistan was 111 for 5 after 14 overs, but piled up 46 in
the next three so that going into the last three overs, it needed only 29 for a
famous victory. From there, it was a breeze as Akmal finished undefeated on 92
and Malik made 37, their 95-run stand spanning a mere 46 deliveries.
Ashwin (4/23) clearly outbowled Harbhajan, nipping a
dangerous opening alliance by getting rid of Imran Nazir, then returning to
dismiss Hafeez, Shahid Afridi and Umar Akmal in the space of seven deliveries,
but with little else by way of support, India couldn’t mount a
successful defence of its intimidating total.
Pakistan has another warm-up tie scheduled for
Wednesday against England, and will hope that its stronger suit, the
bowling, picks itself up. The nature of the Premadasa strip did play its part,
but Pakistan’s bowling lacked customary discipline, only Saeed Ajmal
commanding respect with his high-quality offspin.
India, opting to bat, was provided a frenetic start by
Virender Sehwag, while Gautam Gambhir, looking none the worse for sustaining a
blow to his right hand in the previous game against Sri Lanka, was content
to play second fiddle. Boundaries flowed in torrents at the start but the
introduction of Ajmal brought a temporary lull to the proceedings.
Ajmal could have had Sehwag first ball, did get rid of
him off his second, acrobatically caught at point by Shahid Afridi, and
conceded just one run in his first over. It triggered Pakistan’s best
bowling phase of the game as it conceded only 10 runs between overs five and seven,
but that was the phase during which Kohli and Rohit were getting their eye in.
Once the pair sized up the conditions, it was fairly
unstoppable. Kohli, in the middle of a purple patch that netted him the ICC ODI
Player of the Year award, was all classical strokeplay while Rohit continued
his good form of the previous match with a power-packed knock during which he
took a heavy toll of Afridi’s leg-spin.
At no stage during the third-wicket partnership, worth
127 off just 79 deliveries, did Pakistan look like breaking through.
Hafeez rang the changes, but beyond that, he could do little else as the two
batsmen kept finding the boundaries regularly, and running brilliantly between
the wickets as they tested Pakistan’s athleticism on the relatively vast
outfield.
Kohli was the first to reach his half-century,
drilling Sohail Tanvir straight back past him, but India would have been more
buoyed by Rohit’s 50, coming as it did on the back of a 26-ball 37 against Sri
Lanka on Saturday. The association was finally terminated by Ajmal in the
penultimate over of the innings, but by then, it had done serious damage.
Not as much as Akmal would inflict later though.
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