Showing posts with label Pakistan v England 2009/10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan v England 2009/10. Show all posts

Monday, February 22, 2010

No ambition for long term captaincy

Monday, February 22, 2010
Cricket Updates


All-rounder Shoaib Malik has made it clear he does not harbor any ambitions of long term captaincy.

"I enjoyed leading the team in these last three T20 matches inShahid Afridi's absence but it is better he gets back to captaining the side in this format of the game," Malik said on returning home from Dubai.

Malik, who remained captain between 2007 and 2009 before being replaced byYounus Khan last year, said Afridi was a better choice to lead the team.

But he declined to comment when asked what would be his stance if he was pressed by the board to continue as captain in the T20 World Cup this year.

Malik also admitted that the Pakistan team had been under lot of pressure in recent matches and the win over England on Saturday had released a lot of that pressure.

"There is no doubt that when you are constantly losing matches you tend to get into a losing mentality and come under pressure. It happens to every international sportsmen and it happened to us as well.

"But now that we have finally broken this losing streak hopefully this would be a fresh start for us and will allow us to defend our title successfully in the T20 World Cup," he said.

Pakistan were whitewashed in the Test and one-day series in Australia and also lost their lone T20 international to the Australians and then the first match against England in Dubai.

Malik praised Abdul Razzaq for playing a master blaster knock to guide Pakistan home in the second match and pointed out that he had proven he was an experienced and capable performer.

"I think he played extremely well under pressure and took the game away from the English bowlers he left them helpless with his sound and well executed shots."

Malik also made it clear that the players were keen to start doing well again to bring smiles back on the face of the Pakistani people.

"We all know how disappointed the people were with our recent performances but hopefully now we can give them something to smile about," he added.


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Collingwood impressed by Razzaq

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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Friday, February 19, 2010

Impressive Morgan leads England to victory

Friday, February 19, 2010

Eoin Morgan pulls for six during his match-winning innings, England v Pakistan, 1st Twenty20, Dubai, February 19, 2010
Eoin Morgan showed all his class with a match-winning innings against Pakistan © Getty Images

Kevin Pietersen produced arguably his most composed innings since his return from Achilles surgery, while Eoin Morgan continued the improvisatory form that has made him an instant veteran of England's limited-overs squads, as Pakistan were overwhelmed by an unbeaten 112-run partnership in the first Twenty20 in Dubai.

The stand was England's highest for any wicket in Twenty20s, and fittingly it was Morgan who sealed the match with a six - a monstrous hoist over deep backward square - as England rattled to victory with nine balls to spare. It was an impressive way to bounce back after the disappointment of losing to the England Lions in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday, and the victory was on the cards from the moment that Pakistan were restricted to 129 for 8 despite winning the toss and batting first.

England being England, they made heavy weather of their run-chase at first, slumping to 18 for 3 in 4.2 overs before Pietersen and Morgan turned the tide to impressive effect. Jonathan Trott and Joe Denly strode out to form their country's 15th opening partnership in 24 Twenty20 matches, but between them they mustered five runs from 13 balls.

Denly, whose first two appearances in the format had both resulted in first-ball ducks, this time made it to his third delivery before spooning a high-elbowed drive to mid-on for 1, shortly before Trott was cramped for room by Abdul Razzaq and bowled off an inside-edge for 4. When Paul Collingwood followed 10 balls later, run out for a duck as he dived in vain after taking on a second run to deep midwicket, England were in all sorts of trouble.

But following a chastening tour of South Africa, Pietersen was arguably the most motivated man in the stadium, and with Morgan deflecting all the pressure by steaming along in his own ultra-confident bubble, he set about launching a personal quest for redemption.

A nine-ball over from Shoaib Malik gave Pietersen the leg-up he needed in his innings, as he swept powerfully through fine leg for his second four of the innings, and though the ever-impressive Umar Gul maintained a disciplined approach to keep England's momentum in check, Morgan sashayed superbly inside the line of the last ball of his second over, to hoist an effortless six over the head of fine leg.

Pietersen responded with a flick through midwicket as he advanced down the track in Malik's next over, but it was Morgan who really turned the tide of the contest with three fours in four balls from Razzaq - all from sweetly timed leg-side strokes - as the required rate plummeted from 52 in 42 balls, to 38 in 36.

From that point onwards, there was no stopping England - especially Morgan, whose only blemish came in the undignified manner in which he reached his half-century ( from 43 balls) with a sprawled dive for the crease. Gul, who is so often unplayable in this format, was creamed for five fours and a six from his last eight balls of the match, including 14 runs in three deliveries as the match was sealed at a canter.

It simply wasn't Pakistan's night. On a pitch that offered a touch of unsettling bounce, they faltered from the start of their innings, with Imran Nazir produced a fretful 2 from 15 balls before top-edging a loose pull to Denly at deep square-leg. At the other end, his opening partner, Imran Farhat, squandered a promising start with a wasteful run-out, as Pietersen swooped at mid-off to ping down the stumps at the non-striker's end with a sharp under-arm shy.

After the six Powerplay overs, Pakistan had limped along to 25 for 2, their slowest start in any Twenty20 match, and their predicament soon worsened when Khalid Latif snicked Luke Wright's third delivery through to the keeper, Matt Prior. One over later, Umar Akmal joined the procession as Graeme Swann - a man with a penchant for striking early in a spell - found some extra bounce with his third delivery, and Broad at backward point leapt impressively to his left to cling onto a top-edged cut.

Malik and Fawad Alam did their best to regroup in a 47-run stand for the fifth wicket, the highlight of which was Fawad's effortless flick off Collingwood to notch up the first six of the match in the 13th over. But just when their stand was beginning to look imposing, Swann returned for his second over of the match, and Malik obliged by clipping nonchalantly to midwicket.

Razzaq picked up the momentum by bludgeoning a Broad long-hop into the midwicket boundary boards for six, but England's bowlers held their nerves impressively as the closing overs loomed. On 12, Razzaq was dropped by Morgan on the midwicket boundary, but four balls later, Fawad's cameo came to an end for a run-a-ball 23, as Broad banged in a bouncer and Prior gathered a wafer-thin top-edge behind the stumps.

Pakistan tried to accelerate in the closing overs, but continued to lose wickets as Bresnan claimed Sarfraz Ahmed then the dangerous Razzaq, with a cunning slower-ball bouncer, to quell any late charge and England believed their target was attainable. Despite a dodgy start, it proved to be well within their capabilities.

Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo

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