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Shahid Afridi's position in this side is one he has never been in before: as its' most senior, most experienced member. He looked it on Thursday and Pakistan will hope he does again tomorrow
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Whatever happens tomorrow will be overshadowed by what happened in Karachi
yesterday. At such times cricket appears more frivolous than it might to
the uninitiated but the match, the tour goes on unchanged. The situation
may change, but for future tours to Pakistan, the commendable decision to
continue, reached by the two boards and security officials may well set a
precedent.
If Pakistan can rouse themselves out of the apathy, the listlessness that
has gripped them through this series, it may even bring a little cheer to
matters. As they did in the Test series, Pakistan unveiled another
strangely unbalanced combination during the first ODI at Gaddafi Stadium
in Lahore: heavy on batting, light on bowling. The result? South Africa
controlled much of the contest and Pakistan were in it only at the very
end, and even then barely.
Shoaib Malik, the captain, suggested his bowlers had done well to restrict
South Africa to under 300; commendable though they were in spurts, they
never looked like taking wickets, which isn't a bad way to control runs. A
specialist or two - why not chance Danish Kaneria for an extended ODI
twirl in this new era? - wouldn't go amiss. Abdur Rehman, Pakistan's
leading wicket-taker in the Test series and with handy ODI numbers, may sneak
in to replace Mohammad Hafeez. Kamran Akmal has form in front of the
stumps and on another good pitch could well open.
Promisingly, Sohail Tanvir was not only impressive for eight of his nine
overs, he didn't look too shabby with the bat either. In only three balls
at the Twenty20 World Cup final, he showed some batting skill and he built
upon that impression in the first ODI; the team management are also fans
and may consider utilising him in a different manner.
Indeed, such was Pakistan's batting depth in the first match - and it
failed in any case - that Shahid Afridi came as low as number eight: a
position Graeme Smith later expressed surprise over. But back he was and
sometimes with Afridi that is enough. What spark Pakistan did show came
through him, first with the ball and later with the bat. It hasn't been
commented upon yet, but Afridi's position in this side is one he has never
been in before: as its' most senior, most experienced member. He looked it
on Thursday and Pakistan will hope he does again tomorrow.
If off-field events hang heavy in the air still, little on the field will
disturb Smith and South Africa. Their 45-run win was perfect in many ways,
as a start to the series, as a continuation of their Test form and as a
game in itself. Two batsmen made hundreds so beautifully-paced, they
should be put into an ODI batting manual.
But more than the form of Herschelle Gibbs and AB de Villiers, the return
to form of Makhaya Ntini would've pleased South Africa. A drab tour
suddenly turned brighter, bouncier for Ntini as he demolished Pakistan's
top-order with four wickets. Runs were taken off him later - death bowling
one of Smith's minor concerns - but his bit had already been done.
It was Ntini's first four-wicket haul in 25 matches; more acutely it was
only the second time in his last 17 ODIs that he has taken more than one
wicket in a match. South Africa have won 12 of those games, suggesting
there is life without him. But only half have come against serious
opposition which tells its own story.
Not much is expected to change by way of conditions and big runs again are
likely. In which case, Malik winning his first toss of the series might
also help Pakistan's cause. They have yet to show some coherence, some
solidity in their game, but tomorrow would be as auspicious a moment as
any to start.
Pakistan (probable): 1 Kamran Akmal (wk), 2 Imran Nazir, 3 Younis Khan, 4
Mohammad Yousuf, 5 Shoaib Malik (capt), 6 Misbah-ul-Haq, 7 Shahid Afridi,
8 Sohail Tanvir, 9 Abdur Rehman, 10 Rao Iftikhar Anjum, 11 Umar Gul
South Africa (probable): 1 Herschelle Gibbs, 2 Graeme Smith (capt), 3
Jacques Kallis, 4 AB de Villiers, 5 Justin Kemp, 6 Mark Boucher (wk), 7
Shaun Pollock, 8 Albie Morkel, 9 Johan Botha, 10 Makhaya Ntini, 11 Charl
Langeveldt
Osman Samiuddin is the Pakistan editor of Cricinfo