Wills Cup: The Usual Rerun (30 November 1998)
Things were going awfully wrong for Doc Akhand
30-Oct-1998
30 November 1998
Wills Cup: The Usual Rerun
By Shakil Kasem
Beyond the boundary
Things were going awfully wrong for Doc Akhand. He was losing at
snooker the last couple of days, and wasn't looking forward to his
afternoon skirmishes with Qamrul Huda anymore. The samosas he had
ordered several overs ago were not materialising, and Syed Mahboob
who was supposed to be handling the other stuff was not being overly
co-operative. To top it all off, after the first five overs the West
Indies were none for plenty. It was not the time to make the
customary predictions. Doc and I were at a loss, albeit for different
reasons.
Philo Wallace and Stuart Williams, not your most destructive opening
pair in the world, were giving the world's best quick bowler a torrid
time. It is not often that Wasim Akram goes for 14 in the opening
over. He was quick and he got movement, perhaps a bit too much of it.
And the batsmen made merry. When Brian Lara won the toss and opted to
bat he certainly could not have been counting on the support these
two gave him. Wasim Akram was taken off after three overs to give the
other new ball bowlers a chance to suffer as well.
The writing was on the wall, this was not a wicket the fast bowlers'
union would be happy with. The story was repeated when the Pakistanis
batted. They too got off to a flying start. Only the fact that Shahid
Afridi insisted on walking across the stumps all the time meant
Pakistan lost an early wicket. But Salim Elahi was confidence
personified and paid back the Windies quickies with some rollicking
shots. But the cards were on the table. This was a wicket for the
slower bowlers.
Pakistan immediately brought on the spinners and should have had Lara
removed immediately on arrival. The captain was only a pale shadow of
his former self, and it was only a question of time before he
committed hara-kiri. But his was not a knock that promised anything
at all. The West Indies as always relied on the phlegmatic
Chanderpaul to bring sanity to their ranks, but as is increasingly
being the case, the hugely talented Hooper let his team down when it
mattered most.
Pakistan is a gritty side although unpredictable is their middle
name. But when the chips are down you can count on the Pakistanis to
come at the opposition from all corners. The bowlers brought them
back into the game.
In an obvious test of wills between two sides that are more or less
evenly matched, Pakistan got the upper hand in the war of attrition
from the mid overs till the slog overs. Thoughts of 300 plus, which
was a distinct possibility at one stage, dissipated quickly and the
Windies were fortunate to limp past the 280 mark.
True to form, the Pakistanis lived up to their reputation of living
life dangerously and to the fullest. Loose bowling at the start gave
way to discipline at the end. But they compounded matters worse with
some careless batting that lost them some early wickets, including
that of the skipper Sohail.
This was a match that never looked like reaching the heights that
some of the earlier matches did. Pakistan mourned the absence of
Saeed Anwar and Inzamam in their line-up. But the revised batting
order did not make much sense either. Azhar Mahmood came up the
ladder and Saleem Malik was pushed down, while part-timer Keith
Arthurton prodded and pried and stretched the middle order to its
limits. Although the resident expert on the West Indies, Sadaat S
Kasem, expounded on the wisdom of making the fearsome - and, more
importantly, experienced - pace duo of Ambrose and Walsh a permanent
fixture in the squad (in his own words, "Don't leave home without
them!"), captain Brian Lara was able to make the best out of the
depleted resources at his disposal. Keith Arthurton, in fact, did him
proud.
In the end it was all too confusing. The wicket, which had taken a
pasting over the week, struck back, favouring only the slow bowler.
And for a change the batsman struggled. Once again the Grameen Dream
Team failed to make the right connections, and I was wiser at the end
of the match, knowing that, of course, I was better off using
CityCell.
Source :: The Bangladesh Daily Star (https://www.dailystarnews.com)