Two firsts and a faulty speed gun
Faras Ghani presents the Plays of the Day from the fourth ODI between Pakistan and Zimbabwe in Faisalabad
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Firsts for two
There were wonderful firsts for a couple of Karachi youngsters when Elton Chigumbura was stumped by Sarfraz Ahmed off Fawad Alam. It was Alam's maiden ODI wicket in his third match, while Sarfraz made his first stumping in his second game. (He took two catches on debut.) Both Fawad and Sarfraz were members of Pakistan's U-19 World Cup winning squads, in 2004 and 2006 respectively.
Pace isn't everything
There was plenty of talk of Sohail Khan's pace prior to the match, and he didn't take long to prove a point. Bending his back, he complemented pace with bounce and Tatenda
Taibu was left flashing at a rising delivery as Sohail's exaggerated
followthrough took him right next to the batsman. However, the debutant
was delivered a telling lesson off the very next ball as a similar delivery was
ferociously cut past point for a four. No one moved bar Sohail, who
quickly retreated to his bowling mark.
Speed gun under the scanner
Players and umpires are known to have bad days, but today the speed gun - under constant watch due to Sohail's debut - had a day to forget. Sohail was firing it in with grunts audible all over the stadium, but the speed gun obviously wasn't impressed. And as a lethal yorker went through Ray Price's defences for Sohail's maiden ODI wicket, a mere 119kph flashed on the screens.
Asoka's errors
Watching it all from the dressing room was a rather unlucky Vusi
Sibanda. Given out leg-before with a big stride forward to a Kamran Hussain
in-cutter, Sibanda's walk back to the pavilion depicted his
disappointment aptly. A poor start for Asoka de Silva, the umpire, became
worse when Gary Brent was given marching orders despite replays showing Shahid Afridi's delayed reaction might have reprieved Brent. de Silva, however, decided against using replays and Zimbabwe's faltering innings suffered another setback.
Planning for success
Nasir Jamshed's heroics in the first two ODIs have been encouraging for
Pakistan. However, his predictable strokeplay - with lofted drives over mid-on - prompted Hamilton Masakadza to place a long-on right from the start. Due to the fielding restrictions, fine leg had to come inside the circle, and the move paid off. Chigumbura pitched on the shorter side and the flick was taken inches off the ground at short fine leg.
Faras Ghani is an editorial assistant at Cricinfo
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