PAKISTAN leg-spinner Yasir Shah gestures after dismissing Australia’s Steve Smith during the first Test in Brisbane.—AP
PAKISTAN leg-spinner Yasir Shah gestures after dismissing Australia’s Steve Smith during the first Test in Brisbane.—AP

ADELAIDE: A seven-digit send-off has star Australia batsman Steve Smith motivated for an improved performance against Pakistan in the second Test.

Smith was looking to extend his strong form that netted him 774 runs in seven innings when Australia retained the Ashes in England.

But in the first innings of the first Test at the Gabba in Brisbane last Saturday, Smith faced only nine balls and was bowled by Yasir Shah for four runs.

Yasir raised his thumb and four fingers one hand, and two fingers on the other, marking the number of times he has got the world’s top-ranked Test batsman out, in an act noted as ‘interesting’ by the Australian.

“It gave me a bit more motivation next game to not get out to him,” Smith said on Tuesday at Adelaide Oval, where the day-night Test begins from Friday.

“So I will probably be a little bit more disciplined against him.”

Australia didn’t need to bat again in Brisbane, winning by an innings and five runs on Sunday with more than a day to spare. Smith then inflicted some self-abuse by running the three kilometres (two miles) back to the hotel instead of catching the team bus.

That was on top of training in the batting nets not long after his dismissal.

“I always punish myself when I get no runs, just like I reward myself when I score runs with a chocolate bar at the end of the night if I get a hundred,” he said. “So yeah, if I get no runs I always like to have a run or go to the gym or do something just to give myself a bit of a punishment.”

England paceman Stuart Broad has dismissed Smith eight times in Tests the only bowler to get the former Australia captain out more than leg-spinner Yasir.

But Broad’s total has come in 24 Tests while Yasir has played in only six tests against Smith. “I feel the times he [Yasir] has got me out, I have been on a few runs,” Smith said.

“I have been slogging in a couple of second innings ones where I was playing some funky shots and stuff so I’m not too worried.

“He bowled really well at the Gabba, got some good drift and a bit of a spin on a wicket that wasn’t spinning much ... we’re going have to play him well this game [at Adelaide].”

Published in Dawn, November 27th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

Hamas’s move
08 Jul, 2026

Hamas’s move

THE decision taken by Hamas to relinquish governance of Gaza appears to be designed to put the onus on the US and...
Terrorism threat
Updated 08 Jul, 2026

Terrorism threat

THE surge in terrorist violence in Balochistan highlights the renewed threat confronting Pakistan. The martyrdom of...
Football meddling
08 Jul, 2026

Football meddling

AFTER ending co-hosts America’s World Cup run in the last-16 stage, Belgium felt justice had been served. It was...
America at 250
07 Jul, 2026

America at 250

THOUGH America’s 250th independence anniversary observed on Saturday is a significant milestone, the celebrations...
Ravi encroachments
07 Jul, 2026

Ravi encroachments

SUPARCO’S satellite imagery reveals the rapid expansion of Lahore into the floodplains of the Ravi river, with the...
Misdirected justice
07 Jul, 2026

Misdirected justice

ACHILD will be tried in a court of law over January’s deadly Gul Plaza fire that claimed 72 lives, but not, it...