Young Pakistan square up to Smith and Warner

Published November 20, 2019
BRISBANE: Pakistan cricketers undergo physical exercises during a training session at the Gabba on Tuesday.—Courtesy PCB
BRISBANE: Pakistan cricketers undergo physical exercises during a training session at the Gabba on Tuesday.—Courtesy PCB

BRISBANE: Pakistan head into the opening Test in Brisbane on Thursday seeking a rare win on Australian soil, and could unleash a 16-year-old debutant in a teenage pace attack against seasoned stars Steve Smith and David Warner.

Pakistan have drawn a series in Australia, but have never won one, and last tasted a Test victory at Sydney in November 1995.

A handful of players, including new skipper Azhar Ali, Babar Azam and the in-form Asad Shafiq, were part of their last tour in 2016-17 when they crashed 3-0, but are better for it, said then-captain and now head coach Misbah-ul-Haq.

“Our previous record in Australia won’t put us under pressure,” he said. “If anything, it’ll be an opportunity and motivation to win because whatever we couldn’t achieve in the past, we can do now.

“It’s a young and hungry team and it means business,” the 45-year-old former captain added. “This team wants to take the challenge. We want to give our best, play good cricket and think about winning.”

They will be relying heavily on Babar and Asad, who scored a century in Brisbane three years ago and has had a perfect lead-up this time, hitting an unbeaten 119 against Australia ‘A’ then 101 not out against a Cricket Australia XI.

Australia, though, are on a roll. They retained the Ashes with a 2-2 draw in England in September and beat Pakistan 2-0 in their recent Twenty20 series.

How the bowlers fare will be key on a Gabba wicket traditionally seen as a paceman’s paradise.

Australia boast the experienced Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazelwood, however James Pattinson will be missing after being suspended this week for player abuse. But Nathan Lyon will provide Pakistan tough challenge with his probing off-spinners.

Pakistan, on the other hand, may unveil teenage fast bowler Nasim Shah, 16, for his international debut as part of a young attack boasting 19-year-olds Shaheen Shah Afridi and the uncapped Mohammad Musa Khan, alongside the impressive Mohammad Abbas and veteran Imran Khan.

Their credentials were on show in the build-up against an Australian ‘A’ team in Perth featuring Test players Joe Burns, Travis Head, Usman Khawaja, Marcus Harris and Cameron Bancroft, dismissing them for 122.

But removing Smith and Warner — in their first home Test since their ball-tampering bans last year — will likely be a different proposition.

Skipper Tim Paine said the Australia ‘A’ fixture was irrelevant.

“I saw that Pakistan are smelling blood in the water or whatever they said,” he told reporters. “What happened in Perth has got nothing to do with what is going to happen at the Gabba.”

While Warner had a miserable Ashes tour, scoring just 95 runs at an average of 9.5, he has since bounced back into form.

Smith, meanwhile, is still revelling in his remarkable series in England, where he scored 774 runs in just seven innings of four Tests, while playing a pivotal role in his side’s two victories.

Ominously for Pakistan, he hit a century when they last played in Brisbane in late 2016.

Despite his poor Ashes run, Warner’s spot at the top of the order was never in doubt, but Australia have struggled to find a suitable partner.

Burns, who scored a century in his last Test against Sri Lanka in February, is set to assume the job in Brisbane ahead of Bancroft.

Smith, Marnus Labuschagne, Travis Head and Matthew Wade round out the middle order.

The second and final Test, a day-night affair, is in Adelaide from Nov 29.

Teams (from):

AUSTRALIA: David Warner, Joe Burns, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Travis Head, Matthew Wade, Tim Paine (captain), Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood, Cameron Bancroft, Michael Neser.

PAKISTAN: Shan Masood, Azhar Ali (captain), Haris Sohail, Asad Shafiq, Babar Azam, Iftikhar Ahmed, Mohammad Rizwan, Yasir Shah, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Mohammad Abbas, Nasim Shah, Imran Khan, Mohammad Musa Khan, Imam-ul-Haq, Abid Ali, Kashif Bhatti.

Umpires: Richard Kettleborough (England) and Richard Illingworth (England).

TV umpire: Michael Gough (England).

Match referee: Jeff Crowe (New Zealand).

Published in Dawn, November 20th, 2019

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