Sarfraz-led Pakistan all set to hunt down troubled West Indies

Published September 23, 2016
Pakistan's T20 captain Sarfraz Ahmed poses with West Indies' T20 captain Carlos Brathwaite during a press conference in Dubai. — AFP
Pakistan's T20 captain Sarfraz Ahmed poses with West Indies' T20 captain Carlos Brathwaite during a press conference in Dubai. — AFP

DUBAI: Buoyant Pakistan face the West Indies in the first Twenty20 International of the three-match series on Friday.

The green-shirts are in good form after smashing England by nine wickets in the only Twenty20 game, which was wicket-keeper Sarfraz Ahmed’s first match as skipper, on their last tour.

On the other hand, the West Indies will hope to forget their off-field turmoil and underline their status as World Twenty20 champions.

Sarfraz, who replaced Shahid Afridi following Pakistan’s first-round exit in the World Twenty20, hopes his team won’t be overawed by the champions.

“We didn’t think England were World Twenty20 finalists when we beat them at Manchester,” said Sarfraz.

“We will do the same here, go out and play hard because the team which plays well on the ground wins a T20 match.”

He added: “Even without Gayle and Russell, West Indies is strong and a T20 match is not won with big names only.”

Fast bowler Mohammad Amir joined the squad after his wedding on Tuesday and will spearhead a spin-cum-pace attack.

Opener Mohammad Hafeez and lanky paceman Mohammad Irfan are out through injury.

Middle-order batsman Umar Akmal will be in focus after being recalled following his axing on the England tour over disciplinary issues.

Umar smashed a fiery century in a national Twenty20 event to force his comeback.

The supremely talented but troubled West Indies side have arrived in the United Arab Emirates after sacking coach Phil Simmons and without all-rounder Andre Russell, who is facing a doping hearing.

The Windies are also missing flamboyant big-hitter Chris Gayle, who complains of injury problems and makes only sporadic appearances for his country.

Gayle also missed the West Indies’ one-run Twenty20 win over India in Florida last month, while Russell will front a hearing into claims he missed three drugs tests in a 12-month period, an offence which could trigger a two-year ban.

Carlos Brathwaite stunned England when he smashed Ben Stokes for four consecutive sixes to clinch the West Indies’ second World T20 title in April.

Brathwaite will now captain the side in UAE while towering former fast bowler Joel ‘Big Bird’ Garner replaces Simmons, who repeatedly clashed with the West Indies board.

Brathwaite hopes his team will show their huge talent in the humid conditions in the United Arab Emirates, where they also trained ahead of the World Twenty20 in India.

“It wasn’t as hot early in the year, but, apparently, we’re smack dab in the middle of their summer, so it can get very, very hot,” said Brathwaite.

“It’s for the players to prepare well, manage themselves well off the field, rehydration-wise, get enough rest, and each and every one of us is a professional, and evidently performing well when the games come.”

Brathwaite’s uncapped players — including wicketkeeper-batsman Nicholas Pooran, all-rounder Rovman Powell and fast bowler Kesrick Williams — will also want to fire against a dangerous Pakistan side.

The West Indies will rely heavily on their T20 specialist spinners Samuel Badree and Sunil Narine, who shared five wickets to spark a 22-run win in a warm-up game on Tuesday.

The second match will follow at the same venue on Saturday with the third in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday. The teams will also play three One-day Internationals and three Tests.

Squads:

Pakistan: Sarfraz Ahmed (captain), Khalid Latif, Sharjeel Khan, Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Rizwan, Babar Azam, Mohammad Nawaz, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Amir, Wahab Riaz, Hasan Ali, Sohail Tanvir, Rumman Raees, Umar Akmal, Saad Nasim.

West Indies: Carlos Brathwaite (captain), Samuel Badree, Dwayne Bravo, Johnson Charles, Andre Fletcher, Jason Holder, Evin Lewis, Sunil Narine, Kieron Pollard, Nicholas Pooran, Rovman Powell, Marlon Samuels, Jerome Taylor, Chadwick Walton, Kesrick Williams.

Umpires: Ahsan Raza (Pak) and Shozab Raza (Pak)

TV umpire: Ahmed Shahab (Pak)

Match referee: Andy Pycroftt (Zim)

Published in Dawn, September 23rd, 2016

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