A day before the World Twenty20 begins in Sri Lanka, India's bowlers
failed to defend 185 in a warm-up game after R Ashwin had reduced
Pakistan to 91 for 5. Kamran Akmal's sustained assault finished the game
with nearly an over left. Barring Ashwin, Kamran toyed with India's
bowling as he swung six after meaty six in the company of Shoaib Malik,
who bettered even Kamran with a strike-rate over 200 for his 37. What
will worry India further is that they lost despite the use of five
frontline bowlers, the warm-up game effectively allowing them the
Supersub.
Pakistan won't be complaining, though. after an indisciplined show from
their bowlers, they had their task cut out when they came out to bat.
They started in belligerent fashion, but lost two wickets in Ashwin's
first over. Kamran, though, made sure the momentum was not lost. He
began with a good-looking cover-drive for a couple first ball, and
lofted the second ball he faced for a six.
Harbhajan Singh and Yuvraj Singh then suffered at Kamran's hands before
Ashwin came back to turn it around it with a mid-innings spell. In the
10th over he had Hafeez and Shahid Afridi caught at the boundary, before
diving full length to his right to catch Umar Akmal off his own
bowling. At that stage it seemed Pakistan had messed the chase up by
playing around too much with the batting order, but Malik and Kamran had
other ideas.
Sensible batting followed before the turnaround started in the 15th over
when Kamran swung Zaheer Khan for successive sixes over long-on, and
Malik drove him for four over mid-off. While runs seemed all too easy,
the key over remained Ashwin's. All Indian eggs seemed to be in his
basket as Kamran and Malik basically had their way with the others. By
the time Ashwin came on to bowl the 18th over, the equation had changed
completely.
Pakistan needed 29 now, and they could afford to take it easy in
Ashwin's over. They were content with risk-free seven runs off his over,
knowing well they could hit the others. And hit others they did. Kamran
walked way across to Balaji in the 19th over to sweep a low full toss
for a square leg over six, and Malik matched it with a loft over
long-off to leave only six to get off the last over. Irfan conceded it
through one loopy full toss.
It wasn't all doom and gloom for India, though, as one of their main
batsmen extended his golden form, and another found some much-needed
form. Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma powered to fifties in a century
partnership that seemed to have given India enough. While Kohli's was
just an extension of an incredible run, Rohit's showing in both warm-up
matches - he made 37 against Sri Lanka on Saturday - will be a big
relief for the management. The only downside of Kohli and Rohit's
dominance was that Yuvraj Singh has now faced just 17 deliveries in both
warm-up games put together.
Kohli's supreme touch was evident when he nonchalantly clipped his first
delivery through midwicket for four in the fifth over. His confidence
spurred him to step out consistently to the Pakistan spinners. Rohit
found confidence as his innings grew, and even overtook Kohli on the
scoreboard briefly. Their partnership of 127 came at close to 10 runs an
over. Like Ashwin for India, the Pakistan bowling unit had Saeed Ajmal
fighting a lone, losing battle. He went at under a run a ball while
others bowled poorly under pressure.
Kohli and Rohit found a way around Ajmal quite appreciably, but they
were to find out the same done to their bowling unit, only much more
emphatically.
Courtesy: ESPNcricinfo
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