They've been put in the toughest group in 2012, with New Zealand and
Bangladesh, and will play their first game against the stronger of those
teams. Win against New Zealand, and Pakistan are almost certain to make
it to the Super Eights; lose, and they will face a must-win against
Bangladesh.
The strength of Mohammad Hafeez's side is unquestionably its bowling. In
Saeed Ajmal, Umar Gul and Shahid Afridi, three bowlers of varied
skills, Pakistan possess the highest wicket-takers in Twenty20
internationals. Any of those bowlers can turn a Twenty20 game
single-handedly and a collective performance can be devastating. Their
batting is less formidable; it can be hot or cold. In the two warm-ups
for the World Twenty20, Pakistan chased 186 successfully against India
but failed to achieve 112 against England. The challenge, as ever, will
be for Pakistan to combine their enviable talent with discipline.
New Zealand go into this game with the opportunity to win Group D. Doing
so will make their progress to the Super Eight independent of the
result of the Pakistan-Bangladesh fixture. Their evisceration of
Bangladesh by 59 runs on Friday was almost faultless. The key battle in
that game was tipped to be between New Zealand's batsmen and
Bangladesh's spinners. They took 117 off 12 overs from the slow men. A
strong performance against a more formidable Pakistan will make people
sit up and take notice of a team that isn't considered to be a strong
contender for the 2012 title.
Form guide
(completed matches, most recent first)
Pakistan: LWWWL
New Zealand: WWLLL
New Zealand: WWLLL
0 comments:
Post a Comment