The day of the nightwatchmen
Plays of the day for the third day of the second Test between Australia and Pakistan at the MCG

First impressions
First impressions last, especially on Australian crowds, and there are few
better ways to do it than what Umar Akmal pulled off. Pakistan's big batting
hope came here with a big reputation and he had been quietly solid towards
the close of play yesterday. He started off cautiously this morning, but a
brutal wake-up call from Peter Siddle, who pinged him square on the
helmet, brought about an audacious response. A couple of Siddle overs
later, he drove and pulled him for 19 runs, including a monstrous
six over long-on. Impetuosity got him soon after a fourth half-century, but the
announcement had been made.
Practice makes perfect?
Pakistan's catching has been poor in this Test, though it doesn't seem to
be for want of trying. Intikhab Alam said they are trying to resolve the
problem at the grassroots level and they held a catching session during the
tea interval on the third afternoon. Salman Butt dropped three catches in
a row during practice, which clearly helped him take the one at deep square leg
to send back Ricky Ponting a little while later.
The day of the night(watchmen)
What Australian nightwatchmen can do, Pakistan's can do better? Maybe not.
Nathan Hauritz frustrated Pakistan yesterday morning for an entire
session, having come in before the end of the first day. Mohammad
Aamer came in to face the last ball of day two and lasted the entire first
session this morning as well. Hauritz, of course, helped himself to an
unusually free-spirited half century in that time, while Aamer did a fair
latter-day impersonation of Hanif Mohammad, grinding out ten runs in two
hours. Both innings say something about the pitch though.
Not the season's greetings Hauritz wanted
Pakistan have felt Hauritz could be vulnerable to aggressive
batting and Misbah-ul-Haq wasted no time doing just that. Hauritz's first
ball on the third day was slogged mercilessly over midwicket before the
following delivery was smashed to the same region for four. The assault
was all the more memorable because Pakistan looked like they'd fallen
asleep for the previous ten overs, which had brought 13 runs. The captain
Mohammad Yousuf had set the precedent on the second day, when he came to
the crease and within three balls launched Hauritz high over his head for
six.
Hussey's review deja vu
Michael Hussey asked for a review when he was adjudged lbw to
Aamer and Hawkeye showed the impact in line with off
stump and indicated the ball would clip the bails. The line-ball nature
meant that Billy Doctrove's on-field decision of out remained, and there
was a distinct sense of deja vu for Hussey. In the first innings he had
also questioned Doctrove's lbw decision when he was out sweeping Saeed
Ajmal, and, on that occasion, too, Hawkeye showed the ball striking him marginally in line and probably clipping the bails. But on neither occasion was Doctrove's decision shown to be wrong, implying the system had worked.
Kiss of the day
Aamer bowled a fiery spell to a sturdy Shane Watson to liven up
the final session. He peppered him with bouncers from round the wicket,
clocking over 150kmph on a couple of occasions. Still he found time to
show Watson some love, following a particularly brutal short-pitched
delivery with a delicate air kiss in his follow-through. Much to
everyone's disappointment, Watson didn't return the favour, though it would've made for a nice PR gesture given his antics against West Indies.
Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo
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