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The Report by Andrew McGlashan
February 3, 2013
Pakistan 183 for 4 (Misbah 44*, Shafiq 53*) and 49 need 297 more runs to beat South Africa 253 and 275 for 3 dec (de Villiers 103*, Amla 74*, Smith 52)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Players/Officials:
Asad Shafiq
| AB de Villiers
| Jacques Kallis
| Misbah-ul-Haq
| Nasir Jamshed
| Vernon Philander
Series/Tournaments:
Pakistan tour of South Africa
Teams:
Pakistan
| South Africa
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Starting a series with a total of 49 leaves a low base for improvement, but Pakistan's second innings showed them in a far better light as they ensured the Test would enter a fourth day. At 82 for 4, chasing a huge 480, a swift conclusion was still on the cards before Misbah-ul-Haq and Asad Shafiq combined in an unbroken century stand including a wicketless final session
There will be no concern over the scoreline from Graeme Smith, but maybe just the odd glimpse towards weather forecasts. They are unpredictable, especially for Johannesburg, although do suggest a greater threat of rain over the last two days. Having not enforced the follow-on with Pakistan on the ropes yesterday he will not want any hiccups.
South Africa could have been closer to victory, and perhaps savouring a celebratory drink already, if it had not been for two spurned chances in the final session. Firstly Shafiq, on 40, edged Vernon Philander to first slip only for replays to show a clear no-ball. In the next over Misbah cut Jacques Kallis to backward point but Robin Peterson dropped a relatively straightforward chance. Smith started chewing on his gum just that little bit harder.
The chances should not remove the fact that Misbah and Shafiq provided an important lesson for the remainder of this series. Pakistan will, weather permitting, still lose here but it was vital that the aura around South Africa's attack was at least pierced a fraction. The surface had lost some of its spite, and the ball grew softer, but the principles they showed of sound judgement and solid concentration will serve batsmen well in any conditions.
It was a proper rearguard from the pair as they dug in either side of tea. The hard work brought rewards, particularly against the slightly erratic Morne Morkel, although both batsmen nearly lost concentration against Robin Peterson when their eyes lit up at something slower.
Shafiq is an impressive young batsman, already with an average over forty, had enjoyed a solid 2012 with runs against England and Sri Lanka. He does not mind soaking up the dot balls, but also has a range of shots to take advantage of loose deliveries. His ninth boundary, a square cut, took him to his half-century from 117 balls.
He was partnered by a player who adores the chance to drop anchor. Misbah was tested by Dale Steyn in a spell after tea but he left the ball well and drove strongly through the off side. He was less convincing on the pull and, ten minutes before the close, nearly top-edged to deep square-leg. It would have been a horrid waste of his diligence.
There was another encouraging performance in the shape of Nasir Jamshed who dominated the early scoring after losing Mohammad Hafeez, caught down the leg side, in the fourth over. He was strong on the drive and through the leg side but had some uncomfortable moments against Morkel before, sensing another boundary for a maiden fifty, pulled Steyn to mid-on.
Kallis' productive match with the ball continued when he trapped Azhar Ali lbw, the batsman wasting a review which bordered on the selfish. The ball was full, nipped back, and struck him in front of middle.
Younis Khan could only contribute 15 - and he already survived a mighty close review for lbw on 11 - when he tried to leave Morkel and provided a very thin edge to the keeper. Younis walked and Hot Spot showed a small white mark, but this time the focus was on Morkel's front foot which was close to a no-ball.
South Africa's innings had lasted for a further nine overs during the morning as Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers added 68 more. De Villiers was at his expansive best, taking balls from outside off through the leg side and also reverse sweeping Saeed Ajmal. The concerns about his workload have certainly been helped by the ability of South Africa's quicks to skittle a team at least once in a Test.
His 11th boundary, slotted through the covers, took him to his hundred from 117 balls. The applause had just died down when Smith stood in the dressing room and waved his batsmen in to begin searching for a quick finish. It did not quite work out that way.
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Assistant Editor Andrew arrived at ESPNcricinfo via Manchester and Cape Town, after finding the assistant editor at a weak moment as he watched England's batting collapse in the Newlands Test. Andrew began his cricket writing as a freelance covering Lancashire during 2004 when they were relegated in the County Championship. In fact, they were top of the table when he began reporting on them but things went dramatically downhill. He likes to let people know that he is a supporter of county cricket, a fact his colleagues will testify to and bemoan in equal quantities.
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Problem for Pakistan: Lack of practice on alien land. I believe they must make as much of this second innings as they can to have a good taste of the conditions as well as a look into the SA bowlers. First inning collapse was also instigated by some amazing spell by Steyn, he was bowling an almost perfect channel to right handers and squaring them up. If Pakistan had a few more left hander batters, things could have been different, it would unsettle the bowlers too. They do miss Taufiq Umer, I would say that Pakistan must stick to the same squad with only once change: Tanvir or Irfan in for Rahat. I am hopeful that Pakistani batting line up will start performing much better as the series progresses, they should have had at leas one more tour match. Good fight is what fans wanted and they were treated by this century stand of Asad-Misbah.
SA's new ball attack is clearly the best in the world, however they continue to struggle with the old ball. That was clearly evident in Brisbane and Adelaide in the Australia tour, largely disguised against NZ because the ball rarely got the chance to get old and back with a vengeance yesterday. They rely heavily on demolishing a batting side before the ball gets old, when a tenacious pair like Misbah and Shafiq come along and hold them off for a full session or more, they get frustrated, sloppy in the field and start to let the match drift. South Africa are unquestionably the No. 1 side in the world at the moment with daylight second and probably for some time to come, but they wont be remembered among the great sides of all time unless they learn to cope when an opposition reaches 4-150 instead of being all out for less than 50.
@Msharif911 i would be carefull before making statements like that, especialy when you take into consideration that the next test is in New Lands, a ground in which Australia and New Zealand got bowled out under 50.
Posted by Smahuta on (February 4, 2013, 12:12 GMT)Doosra inventor - You need to survive that new ball first, good luck with ODI openers to do that. Speaking of Doosra invention, does the instruction manual come with wearing long sleeves while bowling and short sleeves while batting?
Posted by Solid_Snake on (February 4, 2013, 12:00 GMT)@KingKongIn->How do you decide who is the all time great?.What's the criteria of yours?Do you seriously believe that the batsmen today are better than the greats of past that Waqar used to bowl..In am not going towards Waqar now because it's no use mentioning him here..If a guy with Avg of 23 & SR of 43 seems less to you then you must be kidding..Inzamam isnt the all time great but Questioning Waqar is ridiculous.His Duo with Wasim was the most fearsome in 90's.. Do you want to discuss them or stay to the topic?
Posted by matchfixerpkn on (February 4, 2013, 11:33 GMT)Solid_Snake ...baji defiently not in statndard of steyn..but he is miles a head of junaid and ajmal oiut side subcontinent..his intial records in australia and s afrcia are very good.. but oiur spin maghcian ajmals first over seas tour only produced one gifted wikcet by kallis that also after considering more tahn 130 runs at 4/over..
Posted by matchfixerpkn on (February 4, 2013, 11:25 GMT)Solid_Snake..hmm...batsman scored runs or opposition allowed batsman to score runs in second innings to avoid huge loos to home teams board and broadcaster .. credit must go to smith for not forcing follwo on.. imagine mathc ending in 1 and half days...and the loss to board and broadcasters.. apprecialte the sportsman spriit of smith..
Posted by KingKongIn on (February 4, 2013, 11:22 GMT)Pak fans are bit irratic...they will always include waqar as all time great bowler and Inzamam as all time great batsman...I am accepting ..Imran was the world beater...and Waseem was one of the all time great bowler...but Waqar and Inzamam ..are you kiiding !! they are good players not greate...and Yes Steyn comes in all time great bowler. !!!
Posted by matchfixerpkn on (February 4, 2013, 11:16 GMT)MunafAhmed811 ..itsa not 3 days..test lasted in 2 and half days.. and if want give credit ..give it to smith for not forcing follwo on..
Posted by Smahuta on (February 4, 2013, 11:15 GMT)@Fijicricket- Why does everyone moan about mismatches when the number one side thrashes another team? A team ranked 4th in the world at this point in time? According to you then only SA, AUs and Eng should play each other, then if one side gets bowled out cheap, then they too should not play tests. Soon only SA can play against themselves, dont be stupid. Before this game, Pak won 6 out of 8 tests, that is a good record, no matter where you play, especially if you dont play at home with your home crowd behind you. Win some, lose some, get hammered in some, thats cricket. Roll on the next gam and stop crying for Pak to be barred from tests.