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Brian Lara's ton went in vain as Pakistan were the clear victors, thanks to their allround performance
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Brian Lara's brilliance shone brightly at the Gaddafi Stadium, but as has
happened so often in his career, the final outcome was yet another Test
defeat for West Indies, as Pakistan eased to a nine-wicket win to take a
1-0 lead in the three-match series. Lara stroked a classy 122 and, with
Shivnarine Chanderpaul (81), threatened a West Indian revival, but his
dismissal sparked a familiar collapse, as Umar Gul finished with a match
haul of nine wickets to leave Pakistan with the formality of scoring just
13 to seal the victory.
When play started this morning, West Indies' fortunes were always likely
to hinge on Lara's performance, and that's exactly how it transpired.
While Lara was going strong, with Chanderpaul offering him solid support,
the pitch seemed to be a batting paradise and runs were scored at a
canter. The moment Lara left, though, regular service resumed, though
Chanderpaul offered dogged resistance despite being unwell. Had it not
been for some sloppy work by the close-in fielders and Kamran Akmal, the wicketkeeper, the match would have finished even earlier than it eventually did.
Lara's first-innings effort, by his own admission, wasn't a fluent one,
but here he was in charge from the first ball he faced. He had started off
with fours off the first two balls he faced yesterday, and was
similarly in control from the start today. Driving exquisitely through the
off side, he repeatedly drilled boundaries with typical flourish - the
front foot going out in a huge stride, the bat coming down in a lovely arc
and finishing up in a huge follow-through. He uncannily found the gaps
almost every time as well, ensured that the score kept moving and denied
Pakistan the opportunity to attack with too many fielders around the bat.
Lara's was the key innings, but given West Indies' plight at the start of
the day, they needed more than a one-man act to make this a contest, and
Chanderpaul filled the support role perfectly. He was solid in defence,
and yet didn't miss out on scoring opportunities, easing the ball into the
gaps on both sides of the wicket. He struggled to combat dehydration after
lunch and regularly needed medical attention on the field, but he hung on,
not bothered by the number of times Gul passed the outside edge of his
bat, or by the reprieve handed to him by Akmal, who missed a regulation
stumping when Chanderpaul was on 56. Till he finally miscued a pull off
Shahid Nazir, West Indies were in contention to at least stretch the
contest into the final day.
Pakistan's bowlers had a mixed day - Gul was outstanding, getting plenty
of seam movement and some reverse swing later in the afternoon to trouble
Chanderpaul. Nazir was steady, Danish Kaneria quite disappointing, while
Abdul Razzaq was pedestrian. Nazir gave them the early breakthrough by
getting rid of the nightwatchman Fidel Edwards, but thereafter there was
little for them to celebrate for the next three hours as Lara and
Chanderpaul took charge.
Lara began proceedings by clipping and steering the fast bowlers for
fours, and that set the trend for the morning. Each of his landmarks came
in style too: a glorious straight-drive off Gul brought Lara his fifty,
and he crashed the same bowler off the back foot through point to get to
his 33rd Test century, and his first in Pakistan. Though he was the best
bowler on view, Gul clearly came off second-best against Lara, going for
47 runs from 56 balls.
As the partnership grew, so too did Pakistan's frustration: there were
regular appeals against Lara, and while most of them didn't have much
merit, one - an lbw shout off Shoaib Malik, when Lara was on 80 - should
clearly have been given. The deficit was getting whittled in quick time
when Hafeez - who had earlier dropped a tough chance from Lara - got one
to pitch, straighten and beat his attempted sweep. Simon Taufel agreed
that the ball would have hit the stumps, and Pakistan finally had their
man.
With the biggest barrier out of the way, Pakistan moved in for the kill.
Gul took care of Dwayne Bravo while Denesh Ramdin became Kaneria's only
victim of the innings. The second new ball then took care of the last
three wickets, with Chanderpaul finally miscuing a pull after a gutsy
178-ball effort. Gul was denied his second five-for of the match, but
finished off the West Indian innings.
Pakistan were made to work harder than they would have thought to get to
the target of 13 - Hafeez fell for 1, and more than five overs were bowled
- but those were small crumbs as Pakistan pocketed the big prize.
S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo