Yasir doubt can't dent Pakistan confidence

Match facts

October 13-17, 2015
Start time 10am local (0600 GMT)

Big Picture

In January 2012, England travelled to play Pakistan as the No. 1 Test nation in the world, armed with what they believed was as well balanced a team as they could muster to compete in the heat of the United Arab Emirates. They had grinders and flair players in their batting ranks, a stable of impressive and varied quicks and, in Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar, a spin duo to rival any that the game could then offer.And yet, the Test squad departed, little more than a month later, wiser and humbler for the experience. They created opportunities to compete throughout the series, particularly in the second and third Tests, but ended up losing all three matches, thanks largely to the wiles of Saeed Ajmal. His flight, guile and movement both ways chained a tentative line-up to their creases and, with DRS offering little respite to anyone using their pads as a second line of defence, England accumulated the lion’s share of a world record-equalling 43 lbws in the series.Three-and-a-half years later, there’s no Ajmal – the ICC’s biomechanists have seen to that – but there’s little expectation either. For all that they travel as Ashes winners, the erratic nature of England’s recent record (see below) coupled with Pakistan’s formidable record in their home-from-home means that a stern lesson in desert warfare is most likely on the cards this time around.James Anderson, the leader of a seam attack that could hardly have done more to keep England competitive in the 2012 series, has warned of the need to eliminate looseners in the ferocious temperatures. Short spells on flat tracks with a dog-eared Kookaburra ball, against a Pakistan line-up adept at exhausting their opponents through crease occupation before flogging their bowlers with often stunning injections of tempo (see Misbah-ul-Haq’s 56-ball century against Australia last year). It’s not going to be a challenge for faint hearts.

Form guide

(last five completed matches, most recent first)
Pakistan WLWWD
England LWWLW

In the spotlight

Opinion is divided as to the wisdom of promoting a spin-bowling No. 8 to open the batting in a Test match, but where England’s selection in the past has tended towards the dogmatic, the unique challenges of the UAE have encouraged Trevor Bayliss and his think-tank to embrace the pragmatic this time around. And so it is that Moeen Ali, a luxury presence during the Ashes, has been handed the ultimate uber-promotion.Quite how he’ll cope if required to bowl 40 overs in 50-degree heat then strap on his pads minutes later is anyone’s guess, but suffice to say he’ll take it all in his phlegmatic stride. Besides, with the ball likely to ping off the bat for ten overs at the start of each innings before sinking to shin height thereafter, an injection of his insouciant strokeplay could be just what England need to set the tempo of each innings. Moeen is also the one batsman who is sure to keep using his feet when the spinners come into play. Given the manner in which they capitulated on the last UAE tour, leading out with such positive intent might not be the worst idea of all time.For whatever reason (and it possibly relates to a certain misplaced stroke in the World Twenty20 final in 2007) Misbah will never succeed in winning over all of his detractors. But, as is often the case with sportsmen whom the public love to hate, they’ll miss him when he’s gone and, at the age of 41, he’s already dropped a hint that this series could be his swansong. And where better to kick things off than in Abu Dhabi, where his record of five hundreds at 120.57 in seven Tests borders on the preposterous? Three of those came in his last two appearances at the ground, against New Zealand and Australia in November 2014, when he capped the rare achievement of two hundreds in the same Test against the Aussies by equalling Viv Richards’ record for the fastest hundred of all time.Moeen Ali and Ian Bell pad up for batting practice•AFP

Team news

With Moeen seeing off the challenge of Alex Hales to become Alastair Cook’s latest opening partner, the path is cleared in the middle-order for a new spin-bowling No. 8. Adil Rashid’s arrival in Test cricket has been some six years in the making but there could be few more tailor-made situations for a debutant legspinner to bed into the side.Rashid takes his place in a rarely seen six-man attack and does so in the knowledge that his ability to produce late-order runs will be every bit as vital to the cause as a three-wicket burst to lop off Pakistan’s tail. The pressure will be on but, equally, he’ll never have a better chance to play his natural game in the knowledge that his team-mates are on hand if the ball doesn’t quite come out right.Steven Finn’s foot injury has shelved the one remaining debate about the balance of England’s attack. Though the man himself disputes that he counts as a genuine 90mph bowler, Finn’s rare ability to extract lift in all conditions made him a genuine contender for selection, as his four-wicket haul in the second warm-up confirmed. Instead, Mark Wood’s reverse-swinging allsorts will complete the sextet.The only remaining issue, and one that Cook chose not to clarify, is the identity of England’s wicketkeeper. Jos Buttler’s form tailed off alarmingly during the Ashes and his technique against spin remains a cause for concern. Jonny Bairstow could augment his selection by taking over behind the stumps, which would in turn create a vacancy at No. 5 for the in-form James Taylor.England (possible) 1 Alastair Cook (capt), 2 Moeen Ali, 3 Ian Bell, 4 Joe Root, 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Ben Stokes, 7 Jos Buttler (wk), 8 Adil Rashid, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 Mark Wood, 11 James AndersonTwo significant injuries have hampered Pakistan’s build-up. Azhar Ali, whose century in the second innings at Dubai in 2012 was instrumental in sealing the whitewash, had already been ruled out of the first Test with an infected toe. And now Yasir Shah, whose legspin has reaped 61 wickets in ten Tests, has succumbed to a back spasm after snagging his spikes in the nets. A decision on his fitness will be taken in the morning, but his emergence has been one of the key reasons why Ajmal’s mystery has not been missed since his run-in with the police.Two remarkable comebacks are also on the cards. Shoaib Malik has not played a Test for Pakistan since their defeat at Edgbaston on the infamous 2010 tour of England. However, Azhar’s absence, coupled with a likely need for auxiliary spin options, means his return is all but guaranteed. An average of 33.45 from 32 Tests is little to write home about, but Shoaib seized his chance after being recalled to the ODI squad, and has averaged exactly 100 in 11 matches in 2015.Fawad Alam has been on the outside looking in for even longer than that. His century on debut against Sri Lanka in 2009 was followed by two more Tests and six years of exile. His return to the squad is the first step towards a second coming. With Misbah and Younis nearing the end of their illustrious careers, further opportunities for veteran batsmen may materialise in the coming months.Pakistan (possible) 1 Shan Masood, 2 Ahmed Shehzad, 3 Shoaib Malik, 4 Younis Khan, 5 Misbah-ul-Haq (capt), 6 Asad Shafiq, 7 Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), 8 Wahab Riaz, 9 Yasir Shah/Imran Khan, 10 Zulfiqar Babar, 11 Rahat Ali

Pitch and conditions

As the ‘s Poula Fisch might put it, “meteorologicos mañana … scorchio!” Which is to say it will be hot. As for the pitch itself, the prospect is of a decent batting track with maybe a touch of life for the quick bowlers on the first morning of the match. Thereafter, the spinners will doubtless come to the fore as the seamers rotate in short and sharp bursts.

Stats and trivia

  • Pakistan are undefeated in the seven Tests played at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi since its inauguration in November 2010. Of those they have won four and drawn three.
  • Younis Khan, with 8814 Test runs to his name, needs another 19 to overhaul Javed Miandad’s all-time Pakistan record of 8832. Inzamam-ul-Haq nearly broke it in 2007 but fell three runs short.
  • England are likely to pick six frontline bowlers for the first time in a Test since February 1978, when Bob Willis, Mike Hendrick, Chris Old, Phil Edmonds, Ian Botham and Geoff Miller all played at Wellington against New Zealand. Ironically, Miller batted at No. 3 and did not bowl.

Quotes

“Moeen Ali has done well against teams who play spin well, he did well against India who play spin well so you need to be focused. We know they are good bowlers and we have to respect them.”
Misbah-ul-Haq, Pakistan’s captain, is counting no chickens ahead of the first Test“When you’re forced to play a little bit positively, you can put the pressure back on the opposition. That’s the way we want to play – it’s not going to be crash, bang, wallop like it was in the summer, because of the natural pace of the game.”

West Ham United: Irons interested in signing Timo Hubers

West Ham United have joined a whole host of Premier League teams in the race to sign FC Koln centre-back Timo Hubers in the summer.

The Lowdown: Huber’s situation

The 25-year-old has made 15 appearances in the Bundesliga this season after forcing his way into the starting XI, following a period on the bench.

Ever since his inclusion he has been an absolute colossus for Steffen Baumgart’s defence, with WhoScored ranking him as Koln’s best player this season, averaging a 7.13 rating.

However, at the end of the season, Hubers will enter the final 12 months of his current contract. Consequently, a number of Premier League sides have been eyeing a cheap deal for the defender.

[web_stories_embed url=”https://www.footballtransfertavern.com/web-stories/west-ham-latest-developments-4/” title=”West Ham latest developments!” poster=”” width=”360″ height=”600″ align=”none”]

The Latest: West Ham now interested

According to a fresh report by the Daily Mail, West Ham are among a bunch of Premier League sides who are interested in signing Hubers in the summer.

It is said that Newcastle, Leeds and Crystal Palace are all understood to be tracking the 6 foot 2 centre-back, while West Ham, Southampton and Championship promotion favourites Fulham are also monitoring his situation.

The Daily Mail have reported that it will take a £6 million transfer fee to coax Hubers away from the German top-flight.

The Verdict: Good back-up option

David Moyes’ side have struggled at times this season with a lack of options in the central defender position.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

This issue was exacerbated by the serious injury sustained in November by Angelo Ogbonna, who is now hoping to make his return before the end of the season.

Therefore, a player like Hubers, with experience in a competitive top-flight division, could provide West Ham’s Kurt Zouma and Craig Dawson with much-needed cover.

In other news: West Ham United: Antonio, Soucek and Dawson struggle against Everton

Hussey in a 'different class'

Another assured hundred from David Hussey © Getty Images

David Hussey is ‘batting beautifully’ and is in a ‘different class’ to his Victoria team-mates according to Cameron White, his state captain.Hussey stroked 104 and 74 not out to lead Victoria’s 270-run win over South Australia yesterday. In their second innings, South Australia folded for just 77.”David, he’s in a different class to the rest of us I think, batting beautifully,” White told the . “One of the things we want at Victoria is to produce Australian players so hopefully he gets an opportunity.”Everyone knows that he’s good enough and he’s in really good form – if you’ve been watching this game you’ll see he’s been on a different level to anyone really.”White attributes Hussey’s success to county cricket in which he has represented Nottinghamshire for the past four seasons. He has been in prolific form, compiling 7259 runs at 48.39 with a bristling strike-rate.”I’ve no doubt county cricket has definitely helped his game,” White said. “Over the last four winters he’s been [playing county cricket] he’s probably facing a couple of thousand balls out in the middle while everyone else who’s not playing cricket is hitting indoor bowling machine balls.”There’s no doubt I think that makes you a better player over there, batting all that time.”

Last-ball win for England

It may have been for all intents and purposes a picnic game to open the Australian tour, but England were probably looking for a more decisive victory than the one they scored yesterday. England defeated the ACB Chairman’s XI by one run on the final ball of a match watched at the Lilac Hill ground in outer Perth by a capacity crowd of about 11000.Simon Katich, captain of the Chairman’s XI, which included retired Test players Dennis Lillee, Bruce Reid and Graeme Wood alongside Victorian batsman Matthew Elliott and eight Western Australian players, won the toss and sent England into bat. Mike Atherton showed that does still have some value as a limited-over batsman, scoring 88 before falling to a brilliant diving catch by an airborne Katich at extra cover. Alec Stewart made 74 on a ground where he played club cricket for Midland-Guildford in the eighties. Another ex-Midland-Guildford batsman, John Crawley scored 64 from 50 balls. England’s innings ended at 296 for 5.Forty-nine year-old Dennis Lillee conceded 0/22 from his six overs. Bruce Reid, carrying more weight than in his playing days, dismissed Mark Butcher to take 1/19 from his seven overs.Ryan Campbell (74) and Mike Hussey (32), both fringe players for Australian selection, got the Chairman’s XI off to a brisk start. Campbell’s runs came from just 60 balls including eight fours and three sixes. While the run rate remained high throughout the Chairman’s XI innings, wickets fell regularly. With one ball of the 50th over remaining, the ACB side needed two runs for victory, tailender Jo Angel facing Darren Gough. Angel was short of his ground attempting a quick single as Gough removed the bails at the bowlers end and England had won the game.Gough was best of England’s bowlers, taking 2/40 from his ten overs. Alex Tudor, playing his first game for a senior England side, took 3/62 from his ten.England have named a Test-strength team for the opening first-class match of the tour, against Western Australia beginning on Saturday.The team is:Alec Stewart (capt), Nasser Hussain, Mark Butcher, Michael Atherton, Graham Thorpe, Mark Ramprakash, John Crawley, Dominic Cork, Robert Croft, Darren Gough, Angus Fraser, Alan Mullally

Smith and Collymore star in Barbados win

Scorecard

Corey Collymore: his five-for ensured a Barbados win © Getty Images

Dwayne Smith and Corey Collymore were the heroes for Barbados as they beat Leeward Islands by 17 runs to register their third win in four matches in the KFC Cup.Smith, who has been included in the West Indian squad for the tour to Australia, made 75, easily the highest score for their side, to help Barbados to 229 at the Police Sports Cub Ground. Collymore then stole the show with a superb bowling performance, taking 5 for 27 from ten over to endure that Leeward Islands fell short despite two fine batting performances from Sylvester Joseph, who made 73, and Omari Banks, who remained undefeated on 55.Smith spanked eight fours and four sixes in his knock, which came off just 65 balls, an was involved in an excellent 99-run stand for the third wicket with Floyd Reifer, who made 25. However, Barbados lost their way momentarily after the pair was separated and slid to 143 to 6, before Alcindo Holder (31), Courtney Browne (25) and Ian Bradshaw (19 not out) chipped in with handy contributions towards the end of the innings.Leewards struggled at the start of their run-chase, collapsing to 27 for 4 before Joseph and Tonito Willett put the innings back on track with an 88-run stand for the fifth wicket. Once that partnership was broken, the innings crumbled again, and at 139 for 8, Leewards were staring at a huge defeat. However, Banks revived their hopes, adding 47 for the ninth wicket with Gavin Tonge, but it wasn’t enough to stave off defeat.The loss was the first one for Leewards in the competition, but at 11 points, they are third in the table, and are almost certain to make it to the semi-finals.

Mortaza and Jubair back in squad

Mashrafe Mortaza: back in the Bangladesh side© Getty Images

Bangladesh have brought back Mashrafe Mortaza and Talha Jubair into their 13-man squad for the forthcoming two-Test series against India. Habibul Bashar has been retained as captain but Alok Kapali has been dropped after some weak performances against New Zealand.Mortaza last played a Test in November 2003, when he took 4 for 83 against England, before being ruled out by a knee injury. He has since recovered completely, and has been impressive in domestic games this season. Jubair’s inclusion was more surprising as he hasn’t made much of an impact since returning from a back injury. However, Faruque Ahmed, Bangladesh’s chief selector, indicated the reasoning behind the move: “We have considered our opponents’ strengths and the condition of the pitch. We thought pacers could be more effective than the spinners against the Indian batting line-up,” he told the , a Bangladesh newspaper. “We have also asked for a hard and bouncy track which also influenced our decision to keep three quick bowlers. Talha is a good Test bowler and we believe he can be effective in this series.”Faruque cautioned, though, that the team management was anxious to avoid more injuries to those two bowlers: “We don’t want to see another prolonged injury absence of these two. We are very careful about them.” If Bangladesh decide to play only two seamers, Mortaza and Tapash Baisya, then Mohammad Rafique and Manjural Islam Rana, the left-arm spinners, will both get an opportunity.The selectors also decided to name Khaled Mashud as Bashar’s deputy. Mashud, the wicketkeeper, had been removed from captaincy after Bangladesh’s disastrous 2003 World Cup, but has won back the selectors’ favour after impressive displays of late. Talking about the decision, Reazuddin Al Mamun, the chairman of the Bangladesh Cricket Board’s media committee, said: “The board had removed him as captain after the World Cup and he had some disciplinary problems at that time. But we are not rigid. We have observed Mashud and he seems to have overcome his negative traits. We also considered his bright performances in recent time.”There was also a rap on the knuckles for Rajin Saleh, the previous vice-captain. “We had high expectations regarding Rajin’s leadership quality but unfortunately he failed to deliver,” Faruque explained. Saleh retains his place in the squad, though.The first Test starts at Dhaka on Thursday.Squad Nafis Iqbal, Javed Omar, Habibul Bashar (capt), Mohammad Ashraful, Rajin Saleh, Aftab Ahmed, Mushfiqur Rahman, Khaled Mashud (wk), Mohammad Rafique, Tapash Baisya, Mashrafe Mortaza, Talha Jubair, Manjural Islam Rana.

Das hundred puts India A in control against Durham

Day 1 Close India A 275 for 3 (Das 125) v DurhamIndia A ended the first day of their four-day match against Durham at Chester-le-Street on 275 for 3, thanks to a century from Shiv Sunder Das and some substandard bowling from Durham’s depleted attack.The crowd was barely sufficient to constitute a quorum, and the closest they got to seeing a big-name player was when Durham’s new signing Shoaib Akhtar was introduced to them at tea-time. Durham chose to rest several front-line players, and it was decision they were left to rue as India A made largely untroubled progress.Das was in superb form, driving and cutting with ease, and with Wasim Jaffer (43) put on 122 for the first wicket. Das then added 80 for the second wicket with Gautam Gambhir, the only batsman in the top five without Test experience. Gambhir played some exquisite leg-side strokes in making 35.Das’s confidence only wobbled briefly when he survived a good shout for leg-before from Mark Davies on 96. Durham’s hopes of pressurising Das while he was in the nervous nineties were dashed when they gifted him his hundred with a careless overthrow.Das chanced his arm after passing three figures, eventually falling for 125 to a slip catch from Vince Wells off Ian Hunter (212 for 3), but Hemang Badhani (43*) and Parthiv Patel (21*) put on an unbroken of 63 in almost two hours to ensure that India A ended the day in a commanding position.

India Cements clinch the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup

It was more of anti-climax at the Gymkhana ground in Hyderabad onSunday in the finals of the Moin-ud_Dowlah Gold Cup Invitationtournament. India Cements overpowered MRF XI by seven wickets andregistered and emphatic victory. Chasing a modest target of 209 runsfor a win, India Cements knocked off the runs with 16.3 overs tospare. The highlight of the day was the brilliant all round perfomanceby the India international player Virender Shewag.Earlier in the day Sridharan Sriram won the toss for MRF XI and didnot hesitate to have a bat first. With just nine runs on the board MRFXI lost their opening batsman Aashish Kapoor (5) in the fourth over.India discards Vikram Rathour and Hrishikesh Kanitkar (22) took thescore to 55 in the fifteenth over. Kanitkar was caught by Sunil Oasisoff the bowling of skipper S Suresh.Rajat Batia (19) was caught behind by Padmanabhan Raju off the bowlingof Gokulakrishnan and MRF XI slipped to 86/3 in the 22nd over. VikramRathour and Hemang Badani steadied the innings and put together adecent partnership of 51 runs off 11.3 overs. Rathour made the onlyhalf century of the MRF XI innings, scoring 55 runs off 84 balls withthe help of half a dozen boundaries.It was Verender Shewag who claimed the valuable wicket of Rathour,trapping the batsman in front of the wicket. Shewag tasted moresuccess when he had Badani (27) stumped by wicket-keeper Raju. TanveerJabbar (19) and Sriram (19) were the other batsmen to get to doublefigures. The MRF XI innings wound up at 208 all out in 48.2 overs.Shewag with his off spin was the pick of the bowlers, finishing withthe figures of 10-0-38-3. Vidyut Sivaramakrishnan and Suresh claimedtwo wickets apiece.India Cements lost the skipper Suresh early in their run chase, caughtby Kapoor off the bowling of Kumaran in the fifth over after makingjust six runs. Shewag who opened with Suresh was in brilliant form,knocking the ball all around the park. Vidyut was promoted up thebatting order and cracked 22 runs off 23 balls, before being caught byMahesh off the bowling of Gautam in the 12th over.Rahul Dravid walked in and along with Shewag smashed the MRF XIbowlers for runs. They added 106 runs for the third wicket off just15.2 overs, taking the score to 158 in the 27th over. Shewagbludgeoned 92 runs off 91 balls before being bowled by Kumaran. Hisinnings was decorated with two majestic blows over the ropes and 11glorious boundaries.Sridharan Sharath came out to bat and did not waste any time, strikingsix boundaries to make an unbeaten 26 off 28 balls to take the IndiaCements past the target. Rahul Dravid remained unbeaten on 51 off 56balls with the help of four boundaries. MRF XI bowlers were completelydominated by the India Cements batsmen, only exception being Kumaran(10-1-35-2). Hemang Badani injured his back while fielding and laterwas found out that he a stress fracture. India Cements were the worthychampions and took home the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup.

Taijul given break after being diagnosed with jaundice

Bangladesh left-arm spinner Taijul Islam has been given a break from training for one week after he was diagnosed with jaundice. Medical reports confirmed the ailment on Monday after he complained of weakness during the ongoing conditioning camp in Mirpur.”We have asked him to stay back in his hometown Natore during this break,” Bangladesh physio Bayjedul Islam Khan told ESPNcricinfo on Wednesday. “He will do another bilirubin level test there and let us know and if it is higher than the accepted level (0.3 -1 mg/dl), we will tell him what to do next. Right now he needs to rest properly.”Taijul was hopeful that the level would remain normal and he could return to training soon.”I was told that the level is not severe and hopefully proper rest will cure the disease soon. I will be spending few days with family in Natore,” Taijul told .

Asian Test Championship final from today

Jayasuria
&copy AFP

LAHORE – In a repeat of the Asian Test Championship final two years ago at Dhaka, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are to commence the fight for continental supremacy here at the Gaddafi Stadium. In this second version of the ATC, the Lankans, tamed in 1999 by a whopping innings and 175 runs, are keen to make amends this time round and inscribe their name on the trophy. But the Pakistanis are equally resolute in not letting the Asian title out of their grasp.Despite watertight security, which both Waqar Younis and Sanath Jayasuriya said they weren’t really concerned about, Pakistan and Sri Lanka are arguably the two form teams of the sub-continent. And that reflects in the demeanour of Waqar and Jayasuriya. They sounded coolly confident of having resources to outgun the other. Both had reasons to be upbeat, their confidence stemming from the string of victories each of the sides had notched.After an unsteady spell, the Lankans are going through a purple patch, They have won eight back to back Tests, and by heavy margins to boot. At home, they’ve not just beaten their opponents, they’ve indeed humiliated them, none able to negotiate with Muttiah Muralitharan with any measure of confidence. And when rarely Murali didn’t get amongst the wickets in a big way, it was Chaminda Vaas or Dilhara Fernando who did the opposition in.It’s not just Murali’s bowling that has alone spelt doom on the opponents. It is the Lankan stroke makers who have made 500 or more in the first innings of almost every encounter in this remarkable winning sequence. And the Lankan stroke makers haven’t just been piling up runs, they made them at a brisk rate too and then to let loose their bowlers on the opposition with plenty of time at their disposal.

Waqar Younis
&copy CricInfo

However, venturing out, this is going to be a real Test for the Lankans. And the Pakistanis aren’t making things easier for them. To ‘defang’ Muralitharan, the chief architect of many a Lankan win (and also as part of an effort to make wickets at home which afford seam, pace and bounce), the wicket here is green and is certain to assist Pakistan’s pace attack, which despite Akram’s absence remains potent enough.Pakistan is thus likely to go into the match with a pace battery of four, in skipper Younis, Shoaib Akhtar, Mohammad Sami and Abdul Razzaq, the all-rounder who is in equally fine fettle with the bat these days. In the circumstances, off-spinning ace Saqlain Mushtaq may be left out, with his understudy Shoaib Malik edging his way in. Somehow the Pakistani think tank is enthused with the idea that Malik can bolster the upper order, where there is a vacancy with Anwar still nursing his injured right wrist.So in all probability, Malik would accompany Taufeeq Umar to open the innings with Shahid Afridi batting down the order.Despite Saqlain not playing, Pakistan’s bowling attack is really good enough to probe the Lankans with pace and venom, with Malik and Afridi providing variety in spin.Actually it is not the Pakistan bowling which remains a cause for concern to the team management. It is the batting, which has a tendency to be brittle. Yet, while the bowlers deserve all credit for the revival in their fortunes, the batting too has tried to pull its weight by contributing well over 400 runs in each of the first innings of the last six Tests, all of which were won by Pakistan, five of them quite convincingly.Pakistan would be looking up to their mainstay in batting, vice-captain Inzamam-ul-Haq to rediscover his touch. Not having fired for a couple of series, he indeed is overdue for runs.Even otherwise, Pakistan’s batting doesn’t lack much in terms of talent and class; it is the application that has been a gray area.All said and done, with both sides fiercely determined to maintain their respective winning sprees, and both having enough resources at their disposal to follow their dream, this Asian final is likely to be a highly absorbing contest.Teams (from):
Pakistan TeamSri Lanka Team

Game
Register
Service
Bonus