Umar Gul and Umar Akmal pulled off a spectacular coup to bring Pakistan
back from the brink to beat South Africa. The second round of the
tournament started with two thrillers on Thursday and the fire carried
over into Friday as the match swung three times.
Pakistan put themselves in front with a strong performance in the field
as their four frontline spinners wove a web around South Africa. But
what should have been a straightforward chase for Pakistan turned into a
comedy of soft dismissals and a surprising outfoxing of the batsmen by
the South African spinners.
Then, Gul and Umar Akmal took centre stage and shared a stand of 49 in
27 balls for the eighth wicket to inflict a demoralising defeat on South
Africa. The pair stroked a series of audacious boundaries as they took
on South Africa's pace attack with Jacques Kallis and Albie Morkel the
worst hit. To add to South Africa's worries, Dale Steyn left the field
with an injured ankle after being struck in his final over.
South Africa will reflect on a number of tactical errors, rather than
simply being outplayed. Talking points will centre on be AB de Villiers
batting at No. 6, instead of higher up the order and Johan Botha and JP
Duminy only bowling two overs each on a pitch that clearly had something
in it for spinners -Kallis and Albie Morkel could have been used less.
For Pakistan the strategy may not matter. They take the points and the
advantage in the group after looking as though they would at the halfway
stage, almost giving it away and then snatching it back in some style
to ensure their early efforts did not go to waste.
Only JP Duminy had some measure of the Pakistan attack as the rest of
the line-up were troubled and tied down by turn. Raza Hasan did the
early containing job, setting the stage for the introduction of Saeed
Ajmal, who bowled Richard Levi around his as the opener attempted a
reverse sweep to the first ball he faced from Ajmal.
Mohammed Hafeez accounted for Jacques Kallis, who slapped his first ball
to cover and South Africa were in serious trouble at 28 for 3. Despite
the situation, AB de Villiers chose to hold himself back and Farhaan
Berhardien came in ahead of him.
He and Duminy shared a stand of 38 and built the platform De Villiers
may have been waiting for. Behardien played two shots in anger before he
was stumped and De Villiers finally made his entrance at No. 6. He had
seven and a half overs to make an impact but managed 25 runs while
Duminy continued to play the anchor role. He suffered from dehydration
during his innings and vomited on the field but was able to bowl later
on. Given the conditions, some may say he should have bowled more.
Pakistan were in a worse situation than South Africa early on. Imran
Nazir gloved an attempted pull to de Villiers and then Robin Peterson
found turn and bounce to have Hafeez and Nasir Jamshed stumped in the
same over. Kamran Akmal was bowled playing a cut that was not on off
Johan Botha and Pakistan were 37 for 4.
Umar Akmal played a Duminy-like innings, taking advantage of anything
loose and full and holding back for the rest of the time. He was not
shaken by Shoaib Malik handing a catch to third man, Shahid Afridi
falling for a golden duck after smashing Duminy to the long-off fielder
or Yasir Arafat fending a short ball to Duminy who took a spectacular
catch at midwicket.
The two dismissals Duminy was involved in looked to spell the end for
Pakistan but Gul was reading a different script. He made his intent
known when he clubbed Kallis for back-to-back sixes on the on-side,
picking up the length well. Umar Akmal let Gul go wild while he held up
his end and Gul obliged.
Gul holed out to Petersen on the cover boundary but he had done enough
damage. Umar Akmal's eyes lit up when Morne Morkel offered him a full
toss and he hit it flat over midwicket to leave Saeed Ajmal to seal the
win with an outside edge to third man.
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