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March 15, 2010
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Report : Siddique and Rahim hold up England
Matches:
Bangladesh v England at Chittagong
Series/Tournaments:
England tour of Bangladesh
Teams:
Bangladesh
| England
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Junaid Siddique and Mushfiqur Rahim did everything that could have been asked of them in extending Bangladesh's resistance into the fifth day of the first Test, as they dourly thwarted a medley of pace, spin and part-time bowlers for 37 overs and two-and-a-half hours, to heighten England's frustration on another steaming hot day in Chittagong. However, both men know that their greatest challenge could be lurking just round the corner, as England prepare to get their hands on the second new ball.
The ball is now 75 overs old, and to judge by the lack of assistance they extracted after tea (the odd hint of reverse-swing notwithstanding) England are ready to fling it far out into the Bay of Bengal, and instead revert to the pacy, bouncy line of attack that caused such havoc in Bangladesh's top order in the first innings. In Stuart Broad, Tim Bresnan and, especially, the 6'7" Steven Finn, England's attack is lankier than anything the Bangladeshi batsmen are used to encountering.
"We've been building pressure by going past the bat, but the new ball will be a different kettle of fish," said Finn, who impressed with his discipline in his second innings as a Test cricketer, even if he did not have the figures to show for his efforts. "It will be a harder ball which will bounce more, and that's something the Bangladeshi batsmen have struggled with so far in this Test match. Broad and Bresnan opened the bowling and caused problems for them, and we'll be looking to exploit that tomorrow."
And yet, the efforts of Junaid and Mushfiqur proved once again the fight and tenacity in an ever-improving Bangladeshi outfit. For Mushfiqur, his unbeaten 47 was merely a continuation of the form and focus he had shown in his first-innings 79, when only an exceptional catch from James Tredwell could prise him from the crease. As Graeme Swann noted after the third day's play, his five-foot-nothing frame proved adept at disrupting the lengths of all the bowlers, as naturally good-length deliveries became long-hops, and yorkers turned into half-volleys.
The real surprise package, however, was Junaid, whose place in the side had been under serious scrutiny following a limp first-innings dismissal, when he and Imrul Kayes had been bullied from the crease by Broad's rib-tickling bouncers. This time, however, he fought against his natural instincts, as he ground his way to an unbeaten 68 from 199 deliveries, which is already the longest he has batted in a Test-match innings.
"I had a commitment within myself," said Junaid. "I was practicing against the short ball, but it can't be changed overnight, so I tried to fight with my strengths. The planning was to stay at the crease for a long period. It was a hot day, and in our conditions I believed that if I can survive a little while, it could be a problem for them.
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But after a duck in his only appearance in the ODIs, and an indifferent performance for Bangladesh A last week, Junaid was in need of a score to preserve his place for the Dhaka Test. However, he did a good job of putting such thoughts to one side. "Every innings is important for a cricketer, so I never thought in this way," he said. "Of course I needed some runs, and also it was needed for the team, but I never plan early. I always set my plan after going to the wicket. We were just enjoying our game, and trying to support each other, and hoping to see off the day."
Meanwhile, Finn did a good job of disguising any mounting frustration within the England camp. "At no stage did we sit back and say we were going to finish this game today," he said. "We just want to bowl as many dot balls as possible, and build pressure on Bangladesh, because that will get us wickets. They aren't going to be walked over because they've got good batsmen, but if we bowl enough good deliveries, hopefully they'll get themselves out.
"They played very well," he added. "They didn't score many runs, but they didn't play any loose shots either. They didn't give any chances - there were a couple of lbw decisions that weren't given, but they probably weren't out either. The Bangladeshi batsmen played well, but we expected that. We knew that coming over here on their own turf, we were going to have to work hard to take their wickets."
It's still highly improbable that Bangladesh will escape with a draw, even with a reported threat of rain following two exceptionally humid days. But true to the spirit they have shown since Tamim Iqbal's counterattack towards the end of the second day, the underdogs are determined to keep nipping at England's heels, for as long as they possibly can.
"It would be nice if I could tell you the future," said Junaid. "We have already lost five wickets and their score is very high, but we will try to occupy the crease, and if we can get a good partnership then the positives will come out. Everybody has tried to stay at the crease since we had almost two days to bat, but we will just go session by session."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo. Go to http://twitter.com/miller_cricket to follow him on Twitter through the England tour of Bangladesh.
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Andrew Miller was saved from a life of drudgery in the City when his car caught fire on the way to an interview. He took this as a sign and fled to Pakistan where he witnessed England's historic victory in the twilight at Karachi (or thought he did, at any rate - it was too dark to tell). He then joined Wisden Online in 2001, and soon graduated from put-upon photocopier to a writer with a penchant for comment and cricket on the subcontinent. In addition to Pakistan, he has covered England tours in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand, as well as the World Cup in the Caribbean in 2007
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Eng and Bangladesh are going through a learning process we all know about Englands busy year in cricket they looking to develope a new bowling attack and trying to give some players there chance which I think we need. With Bangladesh I think we need to be more patient they almost won 1 maybe 2 ODI v Eng if it wasn't for a so called (Irish) morgan. But maybe will see a more team performance v Eng in Dhaka can't wait.
Posted by _NEUTRAL_Fan_ on (March 16, 2010, 2:37 GMT)Good maturity I must say by Siddique. The mature thing about it was that he learned from his mistakes. He was loose in the beginning and realised that the less loose he was, the better chance he had of surviving the new ball. The same can't be said for Sahkib. He PLAYED A POOR SHOT and deserved to be out! Moral of the story is...If you play bad shots you increase the chances of being given out even when your not. It is the solid truth. I remember when I used to go to coaching sessions, we would be cursed at by the coach even if the ball reached the fence...why? Because of POOR SHOT SELECTION. Some shots are just plain risky. As for Morgan, he's a good player, he had some luck yes but at least he capitalized on it and did not throw his wicket away with poor shot selection. I doubt the Bangladeshi players are blaming the umpires for their series loss, they will know that was the LEAST of their problems.
Posted by DocBindra on (March 15, 2010, 23:50 GMT)Another game, another loss by Bangladesh, what is new? ...yeah, but Bangladesh "should" be a Test Nation. LOL.
Posted by Bang_La on (March 15, 2010, 23:27 GMT)"Nipping at England's heels" Andrew? Oh comeon, not all of them are five-feet nothing :) Some nips were higher! And oh, did you write it? "tenacity in an ever-improving Bangladeshi outfit"? WOW when did you notice that? Hahahahaha
Take care.
Posted by Bengali-Tiger007 on (March 15, 2010, 19:12 GMT)Hey Pollok, I must admit that your quite funny man. But I do agree with you, morgan can only play good if the umpires love him up. He is a dredfull player!!!!
Posted by DesiChele on (March 15, 2010, 18:58 GMT)Good to see the fear of Bangladeshi batsmen in the English minds. Nothing less than a 500 lead could comfort the England team. How interesting!!!!
Posted by DesiChele on (March 15, 2010, 18:47 GMT)Very much clear that England could not win any of their games in this series without the help of the umpires. But again, who else will the umpires favour? Bangladesh? You must be joking.
Posted by NSUrockr on (March 15, 2010, 17:30 GMT)What i like about Imtiaz is that when he gets a start he bats sensibly.......He doesnt lose it like Ash, Shakib or even Mushfiq at times does.....loved his attitude .Rock Solid and cool all day even in this heat. Playing according to his limitations and having a good look at Swann, Flinn whoever even after playing them allday.....Concentrating , Determination and Patience is the key to this kind of success.....and this what temperment is all about something most Bd players lack in but are slowly developing........However when starts poorly.....he gets out like Imrul playing 2 many shots in the air without getting a hang about the wicket, bowler or conditions.....However his technique against the new ball will be testede again 2moro and that will be a real test of his character......instead of changing players everyday we need 2 stick with a number of players alittle bit longer be4 we look 4 quick success with 19 yearolds....or wit veterns who hav nevr seen a ball at 140 go past thr ear
Posted by Rezaul on (March 15, 2010, 16:39 GMT)Because he will not have 2/3 lives in each innings (like he got in BD) given by umpire in IPL. So Morgan will be the worst player in IPL, no doubt about that.
Posted by pollok911 on (March 15, 2010, 15:54 GMT)hahaha...eoin morgan will be one of the worst player of this years IPL