Pakistan and Zimbabwe look to build one-day future

Published May 25, 2015
Shahid Afridi and teammate Sarfraz Ahmed shakes hands with Zimbabwean captain Elton Chigumbura at the end of the first T20 match at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. — AFP/File
Shahid Afridi and teammate Sarfraz Ahmed shakes hands with Zimbabwean captain Elton Chigumbura at the end of the first T20 match at the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. — AFP/File

LAHORE: After two nail-biting finishes in the Twenty20 series marking the return of international cricket to Pakistan, the hosts and Zimbabwe move to the three-match one-day series on Tuesday aiming to build for the future.

Pakistan won the Twenty20 series 2-0 Sunday in front of a packed audience of 27,000 at Lahore's Gaddafi stadium, but will be far from happy over the manner of both wins which saw them nearly snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

The matches were played under massive security with 4,000 policemen guarding the stadium and another 2,000 deployed on the route from the team hotel to the venue.

Security has been ratcheted up to avoid a a repeat of the 2009 attacks on the Sri Lankan team bus, which killed eight people and cast Pakistan into sporting exile for six years.

Pakistan's one-day captain Azhar Ali, who did not feature in the Twenty20s, said the huge excitement surrounding the tour had helped the team forget its disastrous 3-0 ODI drubbing in Bangladesh last month.

“The excitement on the return of international cricket was so big that it helped us put our Bangladesh defeat in the back of our minds,” said Azhar who took over after Misbah-ul-Haq retired following the 2015 World Cup in April.

“It was disappointing to lose in Bangladesh but we will look to build a team for the future and improve on what we did wrong in Bangladesh.”

The 30-year-old middle order batsman said replacing players like Misbah and Shahid Afridi — who also retired from one-day after the World Cup — would require time.

“When you lose players of that calibre it takes time to get their replacement,” he said, adding his team would not take Zimbabwe lightly.

Pakistan have persisted with spinning allrounder Shoaib Malik and paceman Mohammad Sami, both of whom featured in the Twenty20s, in the one-day squad after a break of two and three years respectively.

Opener Ahmed Shehzad also returns after being left out of the Bangladesh tour over what was termed an attitude problem.

For Zimbabwe, the series represents another shot at ruining Pakistan's homecoming party after they threatened to close out both Twenty20s but eventually lost in crucial passages of play at the death.

Zimbabwe will miss the services of ace batsman Brendan Taylor who quit international cricket to take a three-year contract with England county Nottinghamshire.

He was Zimbabwe's best batsman in the 2015 World Cup with 433 runs at an excellent average of 72.16.

Captain Elton Chigumbura admitted Taylor and paceman Tendai Chatara — not on the tour with a broken leg — will be missed but said his team will try to overcome the loss.

“That's the good thing about life, players come and go and get opportunity and players came here to grab those opportunities,” he said.

“We just want to try and carry that momentum from the World Cup and obviously improve one or two per cent on the thing that we didn't do well,” added Chigumbura, whose team lost five of the six matches in the mega event.

Middle-order batsman Craig Ervine is likely to play after missing both the Twenty20 matches due to flu.

Pakistan have won 43 of the 48 one-day matches between the two sides with Zimbabwe winning three while one match each ended in a tie and no result.

The matches will be held on on May 26, 29 and 31.

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