A boundary drought, and Kevin Rudd's desperate plea
Plays of the day for the second day of the second Test between Australia and Pakistan at the MCG

Umpires receive mixed reviews
The umpire decision review system contributed to Australia's continued
failure to find a Test centurion this summer. Michael Hussey was given lbw
for 82 when he tried to sweep Saeed Ajmal and although it was a close
call, Billy Doctrove's decision was upheld when Hussey asked for a review.
The ball struck him marginally in line with off stump and Hawkeye
suggested it was just clipping the stump, so the out verdict stood. Later,
a less-than-enthusiastic Mohammad Yousuf requested a review of a not-out
lbw decision against Nathan Hauritz, who was on 75. Abdur Rauf picked up
his first wicket of the innings when Asoka de Silva viewed the footage and
saw an appeal that couldn't have been much more plumb, and duly overturned
Rudi Koertzen's call.
Fail of the century continues
Australia remain the carry-over champions in this show and the
million-dollar question is how many half-centuries they will post before
someone finally registers a hundred. The efforts of Hussey and Hauritz
took Australia's remarkable record to 20
half-centuries this home summer without a single person reaching
triple-figures. The last time an Australian made a Test hundred was when
Hussey struck a career-saving 121 in the final Ashes Test at The Oval.
Six and out…or not
Pakistan's catching has been as poor as their luck so far at the MCG and
thus it was entirely appropriate that the best catch they took wouldn't
actually get them a wicket. Hauritz was just beginning to cut loose
after lunch when he smacked Saeed Ajmal high back over his head towards
the sightscreen. Mohammad Aamer came running round from long-on and took
an extremely well-judged catch, only for the momentum to carry him
comfortably across the boundary.
PM puts the heat on Warne
Australia's prime minister Kevin Rudd enjoyed a stint in the Channel Nine
commentary box and told Shane Warne it was his national responsibility to
make a comeback. The prime minister cited the example of Colin Cowdrey,
inflating his yarn a little by having Cowdrey make his comeback at 43
rather than 41. That gave Warne his out clause: I've got three years to
think about it then?
Dry spell
The MCG is a big ground and boundaries aren't always easily to come by,
but 36.2 overs without one was stretching it. Pakistan's batsmen were solid
after Australia's early declaration, but never spectacular. There were
three threes and 12 doubles in their 50 - brought up in the 28th over -
but no boundaries, though there was a rare all-run four. Finally, in the
innings' 32nd over, it took a typically elegant dance down the pitch from
Mohammad Yousuf to break the rot with a maximum. And to think we live in
the age of Twenty20.
Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo, Brydon Coverdale is a staff writer of Cricinfo
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