Showing posts with label England in UAE 2009-10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label England in UAE 2009-10. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2010

Collingwood impressed by Razzaq

Monday, February 22, 2010
Cricket Updates


Paul Collingwood believes there is "no shame" in losing to an innings as destructive as the one Abdul Razzaq produced.

Razzaq bludgeoned five sixes as he hit an unbeaten 46 in just 18 deliveries to carry his side to a four-wicket win to square the Twenty20 series against England 1-1 in Dubai.

Until his arrival at the crease, England had looked odds on for victory afterKevin Pietersen (62no) and Graeme Swann (three for 14) had teed the side up for victory.

But with a player of Razzaq's power clearing the boundary with ease the winning target of 149 was too small.

He hit 17 off debutant Ajmal Shahzad in the penultimate over to clinch the win with six balls remaining.

England captain Collingwood was suitably impressed.

"There's no shame in losing like that, our two performances have been very, very good here," said the all-rounder. "In Twenty20 cricket it only takes one batsman to have an exceptional innings and that's exactly what he did tonight.

"It was pure hitting and very hard to bowl at him.

"We've done some fantastic stuff in the last few games and the boys should be very proud. They've been working on their skills and we feel we are moving forward in this format of the game."

Shahzad had earlier tasted the positive side of international cricket when he accounted for both Pakistan openers in his first over for England.

"He's come in against the world's best Twenty20 side and it's not easy when you're bowling against guys like that," said Collingwood of the Yorkshireman.

"But he's got the talent and he certainly has the pace and the aggression to go with it.

"When you've got a combination like that you learn all the time. He'll learn a hell of a lot from this experience. I know he enjoyed it, which is a good thing. He certainly didn't shy away from it. He's got all the attributes."

Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik, who now plans to hand the reins back toShahid Afridi for the World Twenty20 at the end of April, was glad to have led his side to a confidence-boosting victory.

After a host of behind-the-scenes upheavals, injuries and the dispiriting tour whitewash at the hands of Australia, Malik believes the result can help with side's preparations.

"We needed this performance before the Twenty20 World Cup," said the all-rounder.

"We were struggling before these two matches and the way our boys played was awesome to see.

"It was all a team effort but the way Razzaq batted was awesome.

"His hitting was absolutely clean and marvellous. He's one of the best players in our team."

Razzaq himself put the explosive finale down to positive thinking in the middle.

"When I went to the crease I was very confident," he said.

"I was telling Fawad Alam we should win this one. I was saying 'you can, you will' and we did.

"The team needed that, for me to hit the ball hard. Thankfully I hit five sixes because the team needed that to get victory."


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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Captains laud Razzaq onslaught

Sunday, February 21, 2010
Abdul Razzaq's delight was evident after his explosive innings sealed a cathartic victory for Pakistan, England v Pakistan, 2nd Twenty20, Dubai, February 20, 2010
Abdul Razzaq: 'I was telling Fawad we should win this one. I was saying 'you can, you will' and we did.' © Getty Images

Spectacular scoring feats aren't exactly a novelty in Twenty20 cricket, but both England's captain, Paul Collingwood, and his opposite number, Shoaib Malik, had to concede that Abdul Razzaq's ferocious late onslaught in the second Twenty20 in Dubai had taken the breath away. From an uncompromising position of 78 for 5 after 13 overs, Razzaq turned the contest on its head with a brilliant unbeaten 46 from 18 balls, including five sweetly struck sixes that left no room for equivocation.

"There's no shame in losing like that," said Collingwood. "We're disappointed because we've lost, but sometimes players play innings that deserve to win the game for their country. [Razzaq] put his heart into the innings and struck the ball cleanly from ball one, and sometimes there's not a lot you can do as a fielding unit to stop a guy like that."

Malik, for his part, used the word "awesome" on at least six separate occasions to sum up an innings that ended Pakistan's ignominious run of 10 defeats in a row, in all formats, that stretches back to their tour of New Zealand before Christmas. "We needed this performance before the T20 World Cup, because we were struggling before these two matches," he said. "The way our boys played was awesome to see, and his hitting was absolutely clean and marvellous. He's one of the best players in our team."

"When I went to the crease I was very confident," said Razzaq, who shared in a match-turning stand of 48 in four overs with Fawad Alam. "I was telling Fawad we should win this one. I was saying 'you can, you will' and we did. The team needed that, to hit the ball hard. Thankfully I hit, I think, five sixes because the team needed that to get victory."

England now head off to Bangladesh for three ODIs and two Tests, meaning that the Twenty20 format will be put on the back-burner until the squad reconvenes in the Caribbean for the World Twenty20. With consecutive shared series against South Africa in November and now Pakistan in February, Collingwood is confident that they are ready to put on a decent performance in April and May, starting with a tricky group that includes Ireland and West Indies.

"We've done some great stuff, and there's a lot of positives to take out of the game," he said. "Kevin Pietersen looked at his best again, which is crucial for England, and we've done some fantastic stuff in the last few games so the boys should be very proud. They've been working on their skills and we feel we are moving forward in this format of the game, but it just took that last five or six overs for one batsman to turn it around, and you take your hat off to him. It was pure hitting and it was very hard to bowl at him."

One man who bore the brunt of Razzaq's onslaught was England's debutant, Ajmal Shahzad, who had a night to remember, for all manner of reasons. His first over was the stuff of schoolboy dreams, as he rebounded from a first-ball boundary to scalp both of Pakistan's openers in the space of three balls, but the denouement was disappointing, as Razzaq smoked him into the stands for two match-sealing sixes.

"He's come in against the world's best Twenty side, and it's not easy when you're bowling against guys like that," said Collingwood. "But he's got the talent, he's certainly got the pace, and also the aggression to go with it. When you've got a combination like that you learn all the time, and he'll learn a hell of a lot from this experience tonight. I know he enjoyed it, which is a good thing. He certainly didn't shy away from it, and he's got all the attributes."

Joe Denly, on the other hand, is looking like a man in need of a break from the front line, after adding a torturous 5 from 10 balls to a Twenty20 tally that now reads 20 runs in five innings. With Somerset's hard-hitting Craig Kieswetter now competing for a place in the ODIs in Bangladesh, it's highly possible that England will have themselves another new opening combination in place by the time the World Twenty20 gets underway.

"I'm sure he's disappointed with his form," said Collingwood, when asked about Denly. "We've seen what he can do in county cricket, and his domestic record is very good. Batting at the top of the order is a confidence thing, and [he needs] one innings when he gets it away, to get the ball rolling. But Joe is a three-dimensional cricketer. He bowls useful legspin, and he's a great lad to have in the dressing room. Let's hope his form turns around.


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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Two teams looking to the World Twenty20

Thursday, February 18, 2010
Umar Akmal rocks back to cut, Australia v Pakistan, 5th ODI, Perth, January 31, 2010
Umar Akmal has the bold approach to perfectly suit the Twenty20 generation © Getty Images

Big Picture

While the tentacles of Twenty20 cricket wrap ever more firmly around the world game, Pakistan meet England in a hastily arranged two-match series that will show just where the two sides lie ahead of the World Twenty20 which starts at the end of April in the Caribbean.

Coming off the back of success in the 50-over series against South Africa, there are flickering signs that England's new gung-ho approach to the shorter format can bear fruit. Yet there is a lingering suspicion that, while their batting has depth, it lacks the match-winning class of someone like Yuvraj Singh in this format. However, Kevin Pietersen possesses an ability that can inspire and frustrate in equal measure and in Eoin Morgan they have one of the brightest prospects in limited-overs cricket.

It's their bowling that looks more vulnerable, lacking decisive pace for the slower wickets in Dubai. You feel Stuart Broad, Ryan Sidebottom, Tim Bresnan and Luke Wright may lack the variety and bite to threaten a free-hitting Pakistan team. It's the spinners, however, who have proved crucial in Twenty20 cricket and Graeme Swann is one of the best in the business.

For their part, Pakistan desperately need a positive result from these games after their drubbing in Australia. With the World Twenty20 just over two months away, the repercussions of the disastrous Australian tour are still being felt. Kamran Akmal, vice-captain in Australia, has been dropped, and his comments to the press ahead of the Hobart Test are being investigated by a board evaluation committee.

They are also currently without a chief selector, Iqbal Qasim having stood down, and travelled to Dubai without Coach Intikhab Alam, who has been summoned instead to answer questions over the rout in Australia. Their captain, Shahid Afridi, is in the midst of a two-match ban for ball tampering, and significant changes have been made to the squad which toured Australia.

Obviously, there is a great deal of work to do if Pakistan are to successfully defend their World Twenty20 title in the West Indies, and though their form in this format has been good in recent times, these games provide a vital chance to build stability and find some confidence ahead of the tournament. Much will depend on how quickly the squad can get past the squabbles which arose in Australia, and gel as a unit.

Form guide (last 5 T20Is, most recent first)

Pakistan LWWWW

England LWLWL

Watch out for

Umar Akmal, still not yet 20, is a precocious talent whose rapidly-rising stock has already given an indication of his importance to the future of Pakistan's batting. Possessed with aggression, fearlessness, and good technique, he has constructed significant innings in all three formats, and it is hard to believe he has only been playing international cricket for less than eight months. Akmal was the leading run-scorer in the one-day series whitewash in Australia, with 187 runs at 37.40, including two half-centuries. He was last man out as Pakistan choked in the solitary Twenty20 of that series, but the last time he played at Dubai's International Cricket Stadium he made a match-winning 56 not out against New Zealand on a difficult pitch.

If England's new-found flair for limited-over batting could be attributed to a single factor, Eoin Morgan is probably it. Known for dexterous flicks and reverse sweeps, it's his crisp hitting and uncluttered approach that has impressed most in his short England career. On the slower pitches in Dubai, his ability to find the boundary will be crucial for an England side that has a history of choking against good spin bowlers. His most dominating performances have come while setting a total but England may also need him to deliver in a run chase if they are to overcome the World Champions.

Team news

Pakistan are a side in turmoil. In addition to the dropping of Kamran Akmal and Intikhab Alam's absence on this tour, Shahid Afridi is serving a two-match ban for the 'ball-biting' incident during the fifth ODI in Perth, which will keep him out of the first match. With Mohammad Asif still banned from entering the UAE, and uncertainty over Mohammad Aamer's recovery from the groin injury that ruled him out of the last three ODIs and the Twenty20 in Australia, one of either Yasir Arafat, Wahab Riaz or Mohammad Talha could play.

Pakistan: (probable) 1 Imran Nazir, 2 Imran Farhat, 3 Umar Akmal, 4 Shoaib Malik (capt), 5 Khalid Latif/Shahid Afridi, 6 Fawad Alam, 7 Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), 8 Abdul Razzaq, 9 Yasir Arafat, 10 Umar Gul, 11 Saeed Ajmal

Having watched Joe Denly falter again against the Lions, England would have been tempted to test Craig Kieswetter at the top of the order, after he completed a four-year qualification period on Tuesday. Yet it would be too much of a snub to the selected squad and captain Paul Collingwood confirmed he was backing Denly to come good with Jonathan Trott in the opening berth. With James Anderson resting his knee in Lancashire England's pace bowling will be led by Stuart Broad and Ryan Sidebottom but Graeme Swann will remain their linchpin.

England: (probable) 1 Jonathan Trott, 2 Joe Denly, 3 Kevin Pietersen, 4 Paul Collingwood, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Luke Wright, 7 Matt Prior (wk), 8 Tim Bresnan, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 Graeme Swann, 11 Ryan Sidebottom.

Pitch and conditions

With both of these games day-night fixtures the players will at least avoid competing in the desert city at its hottest. Nevertheless we can expect shirt-soaking temperatures and a dry surface unlikely to offer much interest to the fast bowlers.

Stats and Trivia

  • Paul Collingwood has a perfectly inconsistent record as Twenty20 captain, winning eight and losing eight from 16 completed matches in charge.

  • Pakistan have an unblemished record in Twenty20s at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium, having beaten Australia and New Zealand at the venue last year. Afridi, who will miss the first game against England, was Player of the Series against new Zealand.

  • England and Pakistan have only played each other twice in Twenty20s, with both games played in England. Pakistan overcame England at Bristol in 2006, but England pulled one back in the midst of Pakistan's successful run at the World Twenty20 last year, racking up an impressive 185 for 5 at The Oval to progress to the Super Eights.

Quotes

"It's an opportunity to utilise the time before the World Twenty20. We have two matches against England and they are a good side. We have in our team some youngsters who are very talented and they are getting their opportunity. I'm hoping and I'm sure they will do well."

Shoaib Malik, Pakistan's stand-in captain, is hoping the new generation of players perform, with their side desparate for a win after a string of defeats to Australia.

"Pakistan are a very strong Twenty20 side and we're going to have to be right on our game to beat them. It might be a good time to play them, but you never quite know what you're going to get on the day so I think we've just got to concentrate on our own game and see what we get on the day."

England captain Paul Collingwood tries his best to avoid the 'mercurial' cliché.

Sahil Dutta and Liam Brickhill are assistant editors of Cricinfo

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