Morale boost for Pakistan
Daniel Laidlaw
Pakistan achieved their desired psychological advantage and will now enter
Saturday's NatWest final at Lord's having finally beaten Australia.
With only one victory over Australia in international cricket since the 1999
World Cup final, the win was an important morale boost for Pakistan as they
proved that Australia could be toppled.
The win meant a lot to an emotional Pakistan, defeating the Aussies by 36
runs at Trent Bridge in a convincing team effort but also with another
stunning individual performance by Waqar Younis.
Waqar continued where he left off with seven wickets against England, rocking the Australian top
order with three early wickets before returning in the 32nd over to dismiss
both Steve Waugh and Andrew Symonds in a match-winning over.
Pakistan won the toss and batted, evidently wanting to avoid having to bat
under lights. Damien Fleming, seeking to make a big impression in a bid for
a final berth, put too much pressure on himself and consequently lacked
control, bowling seven wides. The erratic start made by Fleming and Jason
Gillespie was seized upon by Saeed Anwar and Saleem Elahi, often beaten one
ball only to put away a poor one for four the next.
Having helped Pakistan make a boundary-laden start to reach 61 without loss,
Anwar departed for 34 in Brett Lee's first over. Anwar, to whom Australia
had reinforced the point region with three fielders in order to prevent him
from carving balls through that area, walked across his stumps to play to
leg and was trapped in front of off by a straight one.
Lee, who like Gillespie produced excellent deliveries followed by ones short and wide that
were hit for four, had two in two overs when he dismissed Abdur Razzaq for
5. Trying to hit over the top, Razzaq did not quite connect cleanly and
Fleming, back-pedalling at mid off, made a difficult jumping catch.
Elahi, who began with near-fatal uncertainty when he was caught in the slips
off a Fleming no-ball, was trapped plumb lbw in Shane Warne's first over,
propping onto the front foot to a straight one, but umpire Mallender ruled
not out. Australia, who had stated their intentions to experiment and "try
something different", gambled more than usual with the opposition in
control, seeking wickets with attacking fields but bowling too many 'four'
balls to support it.
With Youhana, Elahi grew in confidence, playing very straight and correct.
After 15 overs Pakistan were 75/2 and after 20 100/2, a clear indication
even by that stage that the positive start had them on track for a total
well in excess of 250. Elahi batted deceptively well, often presenting a
seemingly dead bat to with no follow-through whatsoever, only for the ball
to speed away through latent timing.
Youhana and Elahi were able to maintain a run rate of approximately 5 per
over, as at no stage were the inconsistent Australians able to restrict the
scoring to any significant degree, lacking sharpness both with the ball and
in the field.
With Youhana and Elahi laying the foundation of a Pakistan score around 300,
Warne was re-introduced and asked to turn the game. Although he captured a
couple of wickets, his bowling did not meet the standard required by the
field and he suffered. An inventive and aggressive Youhana shouldered the
responsibility of lifting the run rate until stumped off Warne for 44.
Youhana overbalanced to a ball pushed down the leg side and was stumped as
he switched his weight from one leg to the other.
Australia took wides at regular intervals but ultimately it made no
difference as each new batsman continued where the last left off. Elahi fell
to Warne for 79 in identical fashion to the appeal that was turned down 20
overs earlier, the same umpire ruling in the bowler's favour as Elahi came
forward to a quicker straight ball. Although he played a fine innings, Elahi
would have felt he got out too early considering he was anchoring the
innings.
It was obvious Australia were in trouble when the fifth bowler had to bowl 6
of the last 11 overs. Damien Martyn was given the duty and dismissed Younis
Khan in his first over, a slow full toss lobbed to mid on. Pakistan were
233/6 when Mark Waugh caused Faisal Iqbal to be run out, making a wonderful
one-handed save at mid wicket and flicking the ball to Gilchrist with Faisal
and Latif both at bowler's end.
At 250/6 after 45 overs play was halted for 18 minutes after a firework was
thrown onto the field near Brett Lee and the Australians walked off in
protest. Steve Waugh had warned that Australia would not hesitate to forfeit
the game if his team's safety was in any way threatened and was good to his
word. Persuaded to continue, the Australian camp had reportedly stated that
if another incident occurred the game would be off, but the remaining five
overs passed without alarm.
Pakistan were boosted to a total of 290/9 thanks to an explosive cameo by
Wasim Akram, who hoisted part-timers Symonds and Martyn for a couple of
sixes over square leg in finishing 28 not out from 15 balls, Australia's
'fifth bowler' costing a combined 90 runs from 11 overs.
Pakistan made a sensational start with the ball when Waqar Younis dismissed
Mark Waugh and Matthew Hayden for ducks in his first over in what was to
become a thrilling display of attacking fast bowling and equally
counter-attacking batting. Waugh followed a wide ball with his hands as it
swung out and kept going, tentatively feeling for it and getting an edge
that Latif held superbly in line with the right hand of first slip. Holding
nothing back, Waqar got Hayden with a brilliant ball, a dramatically
inswinging yorker that deflected to the keeper. Although given out caught
behind, it looked more like lbw. Hayden is yet to make a run in two innings
in the series.
Striving for ultimate damage, Waqar was prepared to continually pitch the
ball full and Gilchrist, also needing runs, was likewise prepared to throw
the bat at everything. In the midst of spraying wides, no-balls and being
slammed to the boundary, Waqar cleaned up Michael Bevan for 5, following a
short ball with another full one that bowled Bevan through the gate as he
drove. It had reached a point where it seemed every ball was either going to
be a wicket or a boundary. In 3 overs, Waqar had figures of 3/27, while
Wasim was just as expensive but without the wickets.
At the other end, Gilchrist was batting like a hurricane. Sick of being
slammed down the ground, Waqar began dropping short and was quickly
dispatched for boundary after boundary as Gilchrist pulled, cut or drove at
anything off target. Gilchrist reached his half-century from 29 balls and
after just eight overs the score was an amazing 75/3, with Waqar's spell of
four overs returning 3/43.
The captain understood it was time for a change and replaced himself with
Saqlain, who eventually had the desired affect. Gilchrist took too may risks
against the off-spinner, lucky to survive top-edged sweeps that fell safely
in Saqlain's first two overs. After being driven for 6 over long on Saqlain
screamed at himself and was shouting again next over when he bowled
Gilchrist for 70 off 44 balls. It had to happen, as Gilchrist came down the
pitch and missed the famed 'doosra', bowled between bat and pad when he
would have been comfortably stumped had the ball not hit.
If Saqlain thought that was good, his dismissal of Damien Martyn in the same
over was stunning. Waqar attacked, installing two slips and a silly point,
and Saqlain produced an unplayable delivery to match the field. We have had
Warne's ball of the century and this must have been a candidate for best
one-day delivery of the Millennium. Saqlain produced an impeccable 'doosra,'
the mystery ball pitching on leg and turning to off to catch the edge of a
shocked Martyn on the way to slip. And to think the experts claimed it was
not possible for an off-spinner to turn the ball from leg. Try telling that
to Martyn!
At 113/5 chasing 290, under normal circumstances the game would effectively
have been over. But such was Australia's run rate, with that fifth wicket
falling in just the fifteenth over, the Aussies still retained hope.
Everything depended on Steve Waugh and Andrew Symonds and how much of a
partnership they could establish.
They settled in to accumulate against the seam of Razzaq and Mahmood, who
should have had Steve Waugh lbw with a toe-crushing yorker that was somehow
ruled not out. The situation was strange - Australia were so far ahead of
the run rate that if they kept wickets intact they could actually have won
comfortably, but conversely Pakistan had claimed so many wickets that one
more would almost have sealed it.
Having reached 190/5 after 30 overs, the partnership was typically broken by
Waqar in his return over. Tied down by a period of scorelessness against a
ball that had begun to seam around as night fell, Waugh tried to loft Waqar
over mid off but the ball held up on him, struck high on the bat, and
Saqlain held the catch running back. Symonds departed just three balls
later, flicking Waqar powerfully to deep square leg where Imran Nazir held a
juggling catch on his knees at the fourth attempt, realistically finishing
the contest.
The Australian tail fought bravely to push the total up by then all interest
centred on the crowd reaction at the end of the game and the effectiveness
of the flimsy plastic fences. Waqar, truly possessing a golden arm in the
last two matches, collected his sixth wicket when he bowled Brett Lee with a
swinging yorker and had a further two overs in which to again press for the
record, but strangely elected to remove himself from the attack. Warne skied
Mahmood to cover and when Razzaq bowled Gillespie in the 47th Gillespie over
to end it, the stewards' work began.
The plastic fences lasted a few seconds before fans began to break through
the barriers sporadically, eventually pouring on in hundreds in scenes no
different to the previous invasions in Edgbaston and Headingley. At least
the players had time to leave the field in relative safety.
Pakistan's victory sent it to the top of the table and undoubtedly provided
a renewed sense of self-belief, setting up an intriguing final at the scene
of Pakistan's World Cup final mauling two years ago.