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Thursday 19 March 2015

AUSTRALIA V PAKISTAN PREVIEW, THIRD QUARTER-FINAL AT ADELAIDE


AUSTRALIA V PAKISTAN PREVIEW, THIRD QUARTER-FINAL AT ADELAIDE

The mercurial Pakistanis are on a roll, but will still need a mighty performance to fell the well-oiled Australian machine
Australia v Pakistan Preview, third Quarter-final at Adelaide - Cricket News
Michael Clarke’s team are past masters at doing the front-running, and with Mitchell Starc in such stunning form, the team fancy itself to make early inroads.
This is quite the irresistible force against the immovable object, a potential humdinger if there was one.Australia, a potent mix of flair and substance, style and method, against Pakistan, effervescent and explosive, emotional and prone to swings. This has all the trappings of a classic; whether it does unspool into one depends on which Pakistan turns up at the Adelaide Oval on Friday (March 20).

On the face of it, the ‘which Pakistan’ reference might appear unfair and unjustified. After all, Misbah-ul-Haq’s men have strung together four wins on the bounce after beginning the tournament with successive losses to India and the West Indies. With elimination staring in the face, it has managed to rouse itself into playing a brand of cricket that makes for such compelling viewing when the side gets it all together. The batting has been steadily efficient rather than spectacularly outrageous, and the bowling has been aggressive and relentless, pacy and probing.

And yet, with Pakistan, you always wonder. Its unpredictability demands attention. You can’t take your eye off the action because every second is entertainment guaranteed, there are no boring or meandering passages of play.


Pakistan knows it will have to be totally switched on, come Friday. It is up against a fearsome unit, a beautifully oiled machine with each part functioning at optimum efficiency. Australia is a team with seemingly no chinks, but if anyone can unearth and then hammer away at those chinks, it has to be Misbah’s side.

Almost by accident, Pakistan has hit upon a functioning opening pair. Sarfraz Ahmed came in after Nasir Jamshed’s poor run, for the penultimate league game against South Africa, a match Pakistan had to win to stay in the hunt for a quarterfinal place. Sarfraz made 49, Pakistan won the rain-interrupted fixture by 29 runs. In the next game against Ireland, a virtual pre-quarterfinal, Sarfraz made a hundred.








Sarfraz and Ahmed Shehzad hold the key to Pakistan’s fortunes as much as Wahab Riaz, Rahat Ali and Sohail Khan do with the ball. Australia is a side that loves nothing more than getting stuck into the opposition early, and then feeding off the momentum. Michael Clarke’s team are past masters at doing the front-running, and with Mitchell Starc in such stunning form, the team fancy itself to make early inroads every single time. Sarfraz and Shehzad will have to recalibrate their approach to the new ball if they are to set the platform from which Misbah, Umar Akmal and Sohaib Maqsood can dictate terms.

There is a lightness to the Pakistani batting that wouldn’t have escaped Australia’s keen eye. Younis Khan’s continued poor run means it will be a gamble to field him in a match with so much riding on the result. Does Misbah go for his former captain’s experience and hope that it is put to good use in a big match? Or does he pin his faith in a younger man, say Haris Sohail, who is unfettered by failure and who can also offer handy overs of left-arm spin?

Pakistan has played twice before in Adelaide in this World Cup, and has been in the South Australian capital for nearly 10 days now. Even though it is up against the host nation, it will not be short of support from either its travelling fans or from the expats who have now made Australia their home. The team knows the surface as well as any other team, but then again, so does Australia, of course.

Australia has had just one poor half-game – when it was blown away by Trent Boult for 151 in Auckland – and even then, it only lost by one wicket. Otherwise, it has been an impressive unit, intimidating even. The conquests of England in the opening game and of Sri Lanka in a high-scoring contest in Sydney are suggestive of a team that is not only powerful, but that also knows that it is powerful. There is power in the batting from one to eight, there is power in the bowling. Starc has been the leading light with 16 sticks, but Australia is far from a one-man army. Mitchell Johnson is always a lurking danger, capable of exploding without warning. James Faulkner’s availability adds a whole new dimension, especially at the death where his changes of pace make him almost impossible to put away. Australia has alternated between Josh Hazlewood and the quicker Pat Cummins as the right-arm option; whoever gets a look-in on the morrow will look to prove a point.


Australia has by and large been a pace-oriented attack, Xavier Doherty’s left-arm spin summoned only for the clash against Sri Lanka in the belief that the SCG surface might assist the spinners. It’s almost a given that Doherty will sit on the bench for this game too, with Glenn Maxwell donning the spinning shoes. Too many pacers might suggest a one-dimensional mode of attack, but each of Australia’s quicks, left or right, brings a different skill, a different dimension.

Matches against Afghanistan and Scotland, in particular, allowed Australia to give all the top-order batsmen decent game time before the quarterfinals. The biggest gains in the last few days have been Clarke’s occupation of the crease, and Shane Watson rediscovering the runs on the SCG belter against Sri Lanka. At 5 or 6, Watson provides great muscle to the batting; at 3, Steven Smith provides steel and stability. It’s an awe-inspiring line-up with Brad Haddin at No. 8. For all its bowling wealth, Pakistan will rest a little uneasy.

And, make no mistake, Pakistan has a plethora of bowling riches, even though Mohammad Irfan has been ruled out of the rest of the competition with a pelvis injury. Wahab has been the enforcer with Rahat and Sohail playing able foils; Shahid Afridi hasn’t hit wicket-taking mode but has been his usual pressure-building self, allowing the quicks to feed off his parsimony. If Misbah can work his combination around to bring back Yasir Shah, the legspinner, it will make the attack more menacing but might end up weakening the batting. A tricky call, that.

As Sri Lanka bowed out of the World Cup on Wednesday, ODI cricket bid goodbye to Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene. Misbah and Shahid Afridi have also said they intend retiring from ODI cricket at the end of the World Cup. It is unlikely that they, or the rest of the team, will settle for a quarterfinal exit. But for that, Australia must be felled. Even for mercurial, unpredictable Pakistan, that will be quite a challenge.
Teams (from):
Australia: David Warner, Aaron Finch, Steven Smith, Michael Clarke (capt), Shane Watson, Glenn Maxwell, James Faulkner, Brad Haddin (wk), Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Johnson, Josh Hazlewood, George Bailey, Mitchell Marsh, Xavier Doherty.

Pakistan: Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), Ahmed Shehzad, Haris Sohail, Misbah-ul-Haq (capt), Umar Akmal, Sohaib Maqsood, Shahid Afridi, Wahab Riaz, Rahat Ali, Sohail Khan, Ehsan Adil, Younis Khan, Yasir Shah, Nasir Jamshed.
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