England lacked dedication and sensibility
Daniel Laidlaw
A courageous century by Marcus Trescothick went in vain as England collapsed
to lose the fourth NatWest series one-day game against Pakistan in a
last-ball thriller at Lord's.
Trescothick made 137 but only had support from
second-gamer Owais Shah (62) as Pakistan stormed to victory by claiming
England's last seven wickets for 44 runs.
The loss effectively ends England's
NatWest series campaign after it crashed to a third consecutive defeat.
Pakistan completed one of its trademark comebacks and now has two wins from
three matches to lie second on the table behind Australia. Fielding was the
difference, as Pakistan effected three run-outs to England's none including
the telling one that broke the 170-run fourth-wicket partnership between
Trescothick and Shah.
Andrew Caddick and Michael Vaughan returned to the England side at the
expense of Robert Croft and Alistair Brown, while Pakistan were forced to
omit key bowlers Wasim Akram and Shoaib Akhtar through injury and illness,
with Saeed Anwar also replaced by Saleem Elahi.
England won the toss and bowled, hoping to take advantage of early swing and
seam, although there was little of either. Shahid Afridi survived the odd
extravagant swoosh and several play-and-misses, while Saleem Elahi applied
himself concertedly with a couple of lovely on-drives. Pakistan were
travelling safely if unconvincingly when after driving Darren Gough through
mid on for four, Elahi played a dreadful shot, trying to pull a good length
delivery that kept fractionally low from outside off.
Outside off was the
key - the ball seamed in and struck him on the pad, but still outside the
line. Umpire Neil Mallender gave the appeal the kind of inordinate
deliberation that would have made Steve Bucknor proud before raising the
deadly digit to leave Pakistan 1/28.
Yousuf Youhana was promoted to No. 3 in place of the ineffective Abdur
Razzaq and it soon became apparent that there were communication
difficulties between he and Afridi. Afridi played his natural game, which is
to say he premidatedly selected the occasional ball to attempt to flay to
the boundary in between sedate periods of defence against the new ball.
Afridi evidently liked the way Andrew Symonds had played Mullally so when
the left-armer relived Gough in the 12th over, Shahid leapt down the pitch
and smacked him over long. The responsible Youhana disapproved, however, and
seemed to take issue with some of Afridi's wilder strokes between balls.
Probably promoted to oversee the avoidance of early wickets like the ones
lost against Australia, Youhana urged discretion while Afridi seemed to say
"Why? I'm only playing the bowling on its merits."
Well, Afridi should have listened to his partner. On 30 and with the score
at 59, Afridi tried to cut a short Caddick delivery, it seamed in, and the
predictable edge went to slip. He immediately gave Youhana a reproachful
glance before trudging off to sort it out with Waqar.
Inzamam-ul-Haq's dismissal in that same Caddick over was astonishing.
Inzamam's first delivery was a spiteful no-ball that rose viciously off a
length, striking him on the glove as he tried to evade it. Wary of the
bounce, Inzamam completely lost sight of the next ball out of the hand,
moving into line of off and ducking fearfully. The only problem was that it
was not a bouncer but a low full toss, which ignominiously bowled him behind
his legs for a golden duck, his second nought in succession. It deprived us
of the chance to see him run with the hesitant Youhana, who should have been
involved in at least one run-out that did not eventuate only due to a
succession of England misses.
Perhaps wanting to protect his back, Caddick bowled his ten overs in
succession, finishing with 2/37 -- ironically his most expensive over (11)
also containing the two wickets. Younis Khan immediately began experiencing
the same kind of running difficulties that Afridi had with Youhana.
Television commentator David Gower called Pakistan's running between the
wickets "a matter of negotiation and re-negotiation", but it was Youhana who
seemed to do all the dictating.
Recovering from that one over of Caddick madness, Youhana and Younis
compiled a steady consolidating partnership of 80. Younis made an efficient
41 by working the ball around until he sliced a low catch to cover off
Dominic Cork, the ball dipping in late and causing him to drive in the air.
Never likely to reach a big total, Pakistan were assured of a competitive
score thanks to Youhana's patient innings of 81 that laid the foundation for
a solid score.
Rashid Latif helped turn up the intensity before he was bowled for 23
backing away to Mark Ealham, the partnership of 50 with the anchoring
Youhana boosting the momentum of the innings. After Razzaq lofted Mullally
to Gough at long on, Youhana finally departed when deceived by a Mullally
slower ball, getting too much elevation under his hoist to mid wicket.
Restricted by the fall of wickets, Pakistan stumbled in the final overs with
66 scored from the last ten but still managed to scramble a competitive
242/8.
Throughout the Pakistan innings England squandered numerous run out chances,
as time and again throws missed the stumps. It took all of three overs for
Shoaib Malik to show them how it was done. Racing in from cover to make an
athletic pickup and underarm hit at the keeper's end, Malik ran out Nick
Knight for 1 as the batsmen attempted a quick single. Two balls later,
Youhana made what could have been the blunder that cost Pakistan the game.
Trescothick, on five, attempted to pull Razzaq away but only got a top edge
to third man, where Youhana spilt the catch trying to take it far too low.
That miss aside, Pakistan's new ball attack of Waqar Younis and Razzaq took
control of the game. After taking 17 balls to score, Alec Stewart flicked
Razzaq straight to point in one of those strange one-day dismissals that
makes you wonder what the batsman was attempting, before an inspired Waqar
struck by having Michael Vaughan caught at second slip trying to drive to
leave England 26/3, well behind the run rate, and apparently sliding to
defeat. But that did not take Marcus Trescothick into consideration.
For his first fifty runs, he barely was a consideration. Forced onto the
defensive, England were 36/3 after fifteen overs and had improved little at
79/3 after 25. Although the loss of wickets had been stemmed, Trescothick
and Owais Shah struggled to score above three per over against the
penetrative bowling of Waqar and Razzaq. When Saqlain came on, all they
could manage were a series of uninspiring premeditated reverse sweeps.
Pakistan were defending the boundaries and apparently sentencing England to
death by suffocation.
That all changed once Trescothick had carved out his fifty, which also
coincided with the introduction of Shoaib Malik. Realising the run rate was
in need of rectifying, Trescothick began to open up and find the boundaries
against Mahmood and Malik. At first it was not pretty, with ugly
premeditated sweeps and slogs, but it gradually got Pakistan on the
defensive as England's innings finally picked up momentum.
The face-saving partnership England craved had arrived. Trescothick, after
righting the ship, began sailing it towards victory. The assault on the
off-spin of Malik was the key. For whatever reason he had the confidence to
go after the young offie, belting him over mid wicket for consecutive sixes
as his innings moved from patient to plundering, the exact opposite of the
way a one-day opener's innings usually unfolds. Trescothick's first 50 runs
took 77 deliveries, his second fifty just 27. As the ascendancy switched
emphatically, England scored 85 runs between overs 25 and 35, an abnormally
high number for that stage of the innings. But not much was normal about
England's innings except, perhaps, its conclusion.
The fourth-wicket partnership of 170 would not have been possible without
Owais Shah. Playing only his second game, Shah contributed a fine supporting
hand of 62. As always, though, Pakistan only needed one wicket to become
inspired and Shah was that wicket.
If England were not exactly cruising towards victory, they were as close as
it gets before the result is a foregone conclusion. Fielding was the
difference and the only way the wicket was going to arrive was via run out.
Pakistan's fielding was not high quality by any stretch of the imagination
but they hit the stumps when it mattered. At 196/3, with England requiring
only 47 from 60 balls, it mattered.
Backing up so far at the non-striker's end in search of a non-existent run
that he was reconciled to accuracy of the throw, Shah was fired by a direct
hit from Younis Khan at point. Immediately, Pakistan knew they had an
opening, as memories of England's collapse in the second Test at Old
Trafford were undoubtedly revisited.
Waqar Younis, who left the field after 20 overs with what appeared to be a
serious leg injury, returned to the bowling crease showing no ill affects
and proceeded to dismiss Ben Hollioake first ball. Hollioake played the ball
down into the crease and looked for the run instead of protecting his
wicket, turning just in time to see the ball bounce back onto leg stump. At
197/5, Pakistan knew right there they could win.
Dominic Cork ran himself out in suicidal fashion, pushing back past the
bowler and hopelessly trying to scramble a run to mid on. Youhana could
hardly have missed from that range and did not disappoint, leaving England 6
down. The loss of wickets took precedence over run rate equations because
the differential favoured England comfortably. For Pakistan to win they
needed a succession of wickets, thus bringing the runs required-balls
remaining differential into their favour.
Waqar bowled himself out, finishing with an outstanding 2/20 from 10 overs
(including just four runs conceded from his first 6), leaving Razzaq and
Shahid Afridi to take over with seven overs remaining. Afridi pinned Mark
Ealham leg-before for a duck as he played for a leg-break to a ball that
held its line and was drifting down leg, leaving England 7/205 as another
batsman deserted Trescothick.
With the tail thus exposed the ascendancy shifted to Pakistan, as 34 were
required from the last five overs. Gough went plumb lbw to a Razzaq straight
one, playing across the line, with England needing 24 off 18, then 19 off
12, with only two wickets remaining. It stood at 15 from 9 when Trescothick
finally got the strike from Andy Caddick and flicked Razzaq for a boundary
to fine leg, with the fielder up in the circle. Caddick was able to flick
two and give Trescothick the strike for the final over; England required 9
runs and Waqar had a huge decision to make: Persist with Afridi, whose 7
overs had cost 35, or risk bringing back Saqlain? He opted to recall his
match-winning off-spinner, who proceeded to clinch another match, but not
before some last-over drama.
With 6 off 5 needed for the home side, Trescothick swept and got a top edge
to mid-wicket, where Malik and Afridi both converged on the ball and
collided, somehow leaving an ecstatic Afridi standing with ball in hand.
Malik had gone flying across Afridi, tripped, and went shoulder-first into
the Lord's turf, leaving the field injured. The next ball was down the leg
side and called wide, to the fury of the Pakistanis who clearly saw that it
deflected off Mullally's glove. Umpire Palmer was accosted by four angry
Pakistanis but the game continued and with three needed from the final ball,
Caddick came down the pitch, missed, and was stumped.
Justice of a sort had prevailed, but not to Marcus Trescothick. His
courageous 137, his first one-day international century, was wasted by the
ineptitude of his team-mates. As familiar as Pakistan's ferocious comeback
was England's collapse, which saw them lose 7/44 in 10 overs to lose by 2
runs. England's scorecard was a sorry sight. After Trescothick and Shah,
third highest score was Caddick's with 10, if you don't count the extras
tally of 16.
The loss was England's eighth consecutive defeat in one-day internationals
and third in the NatWest series, which effectively ends their chances of
contesting the final and makes the remaining preliminaries fairly
insignificant.
For all the claims of inexperience, when a match is there to
be won and all it requires is support for the established batsman,
dedication and sensibility are needed. England could not produce it - again.