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| I agree here Shaka, you need pace bowlers, thats why I was not pleased when England dumped Devon Malcolm, ok he could be expensive, but he took good wickets, and had a good strike rate. I agree a selection team should give a pace bowlong time to settle in.
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| I should qualify that when I say specialist quicks, they don't have to be necessarily fast. Umar Gul and Shabbir Ahmed aren't any quicker than Rana, but they get bounce and movement off the seam. Rana And Razzaq are both very limited bowlers without much variety. Rana has a decent away swinger with the new ball but it's his only weapon. Razzaq cuts the ball in to right-handers, but rarely gets it to go the other way which makes him very predictable. |
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| But who is there? Gul, Shabbir and Shoiab are all injured plus Khalil and Anjum didn't exactly impress in Australia. Is there any fast bowler in Pakistani dometic cricket that Pakistan can rely on to bowl well in India? |
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Incidentally, I watched both Sami and Rana bowling with the new ball today and they were both banging the ball in so short I was amazed Inzimam didn't go up to Sami and boot him up the ****. Both Razzaq and Rana did well with the bat though. If this is called a successful strategy then I would suggest they get Afridi in the side as well and go for three draws then win the ODI's. |
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| If you noticed Shaka, Sami bowling short actually kept Sehwag quite, he didn't score that many boundaries until rather strangley Younis Khan was introduced into the attack to gift the Indian opening pair a chance to get some easy test runs and boast their test averages when clearly Inzi's aim should have been to try and win as many mental battles ahead of the second test as possible, Abdul Razzaq should have bowled in my opinion. In anycase the short bowling tactic was seeminly aimed to try and prevent Sehwag from scoring quickly. I can see that working to some extent on day 5 when a result is not a realistic posssibility as was the case today but come India have won the toss and decided to bat first on a placid surface at the Eden Gardens I don't presume Sehwag or any other Indian batsmen for that matter would be as kind. They'd probably dispatch all of those half trackers to which ever boundary of the ground they please. So you're right, Pakistan need to sort their tactics out and be realistic. Very rarely have I seen fast bowlers taking a lot of wickets in the sub continent banging the ball in short, on the slower lower surfaces here you are best advised to stick to the more orthodox mode of attack and bowl either good line and length or full of length fast inswinging yorkers. The actual make up of the bowling attack of the Pakistan is debateable, but for me what has been the continued disapointing feature of our subsequent bowling performances since the injuries to Umar Gul and Shabbir Ahmed is the inability of the likes of Sami, Razzaq and even Rana Naved ul Hasan in this test match to get any sort of swing or seam movement, either off the pitch or in the air. Laxmipathy Balaji, who bowled admirably in both innings for India and also picked up 9 wickets in the process consistenty got the ball to swing (both conventionally as well as reverse swing) and so was Irfan Pathan able to get some seam movement early on the match with the new ball but with the Pakistani bowlers there was no evidence of swing what so ever. I understand as such that some one like Sami in particular bowls at a considerably brisker pace then say Pathan and Balaji and that isn't exactly conducive for swing bowling but the pace at which Razzaq and Rana bowl is more or less the same as the the Indian attack, the only difference here is that our bowlers for some bizarly obsecure reason don't bowl with an upright seam. That totally bemuzes me. Surely some one here who has played cricket with a proper seam bowl will be able to highlight this factor for me. Is bowling with an upright seam really that difficult a task? From all that I've heard, especially from the likes of Michael Holding, it apparently isn't. Then why the hell do our bowlers not bowl with an upright seam???!!!??? |
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Only thing is... you could do with a couple of senior bowlers to take the heat whilst the novices find their feet... and I'm not sure that's an option. |
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| You're right Rachael, Gul and Ahmed really were a handful, and we realised just how much we could do with them in our team since they've been injured. What I'm concerned about though is the fact that both have suffered serious (potentially career threatening injuries, especially Umar Gul, who has suffered a stress facture in his back at only age 20) I'm not sure if they will be just as affective as they were before their respective injuries, although I'm extremely hopeful they will be. Quote:
In principle you're right, an attack of Ahmed, Akhtar, Gul, Razzaq and Kaneria would be wonderful to have. With Kamran Akmal's batting developing at impressive rates and Razzaq also slowly finding his feat batting wise at test level I'm not too concerned about out the length of the tail (and Shoaib can bat by the way) what we will need though is for our top three to be more consistent., much more consistent as a matter of fact then they have been in recent times. |
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