Sunrisers take lead in playoff race, Royals miss out on top two

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
File photo: Amit Mishra took big middle-order wickets•BCCI

Sunrisers Hyderabad gave themselves a lead over Royal Challengers Bangalore in the race for the final spot in the IPL playoffs, with a comprehensive win over the troubled Rajasthan Royals, their sixth win out of seven home games. Both Sunrisers and Royal Challengers have a game left, but Sunrisers play the easier opposition in Kolkata Knight Riders. Royal Challengers go up against Chennai Super Kings in their last match.Royals, who have qualified for the playoffs but have also been rocked by an alleged spot-fixing scandal, began the game needing a big win to give themselves a chance of finishing in the top two. For a long time they looked like they could do so, thanks largely to James Faulkner’s second five-for of the season – both against Sunrisers – but they let Sunrisers back in followed by an indifferent batting display in the chase of 137.Royals will rue a seemingly innocuous moment in the sixth over. Sunrisers had gone against their winning formula of chasing at home and were in deep trouble when Biplab Samantray took two instinctive steps down the wicket and went back a little lazily. The ball had gone towards point, Ajinkya Rahane swooped in, and had actually run Samantray out. Except that nobody appealed.Had Rahane appealed, Sunrisers would have been reduced to 21 for 4. Instead Samantray – 8 off 12 then – went on to score his first IPL fifty, which took Sunrisers to a fighting total. With Darren Sammy, Samantray added 56 runs in 5.5 overs. Sammy scored 23 off 19. Sunrisers didn’t even manage a big push towards the end, because Faulkner came back to undo the rebuilding work, but Sunrisers’ bowlers have defended worse than 136.Their two big bowlers – Dale Steyn and Amit Mishra – set the tone of the defence. Steyn bowled fast, accurate and with swing, and conceded just four runs in his first two overs. Royals had surprisingly still opened with Rahul Dravid and Ajinkya Rahane because they needed a huge-win-or-nothing approach: they couldn’t have missed out on the playoffs but needed a win and a big net-run-rate boost to compete for the top two slots.The pressure exerted by Steyn was too much on the openers, and Mishra didn’t let up at all. He returned the joint-most economical figures of this season: 4-0-8-2. In between, Rahane and Shane Watson holed out, effectively ending the chase. Mumbai and Super Kings now finish in the top two, and Royals await either Sunrisers or Royal Challengers in the eliminator.

SNGPL win President's Cup One-Day tournament

ScorecardA strong performance from the Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited top order, combined with Asad Ali’s incisive bowling, helped SNGPL take the President’s Cup One-Day tournament against Water and Power Development Authority with a 32-run victory in Karachi.SNGPL were put in to bat and the openers put on a commanding 125-run stand. Once Mohammad Hafeez fell for 58, Azhar Ali came on to score 33 in a 40-run partnership with Taufeeq Umar. Umar Akmal failed again, finishing a dismal tournament where he scored only 79 runs in 6 innings. Further contributions from the captain Misbah ul-Haq (34) and Khurram Shehzad (42) helped SNGPL to an imposing 283 for 8 at the end of their fifty overs. This finished Misbah’s glorious run in the tournament, where he averaged 64 and a strike-rate touching 120. WAPDA’s Nasir Malik was the most effective of the bowlers, taking 3 for 45.WAPDA struggled initially in their reply, losing two wickets with just 8 on the board. Rafatullah Mohmand, who had starred in the tournament with three centuries on the trot and an unbeaten 91, was only able to make 7, as WAPDA were on the back foot early on. Sohaib Maqsood (57) and Ali Azmat (39) put on a 100-run stand to help steady the innings. Mohammad Ayub’s unbeaten 66 helped keep the team afloat, but wickets continued to tumble around him. Ultimately the required rate got out of hand as they faced 10-11 an over going into the final ten.Asad Ali took 4 for 37, all of which were bowled, to keep WAPDA under check. WAPDA ended their innings on 251 for 9, giving SNGPL a 32-run victory. Asad Ali finished as the highest wicket-takers list, with 14 wickets in 6 matches at 17.07.This title marks the third for Misbah ul-Haq this season, where he has also won the Faysal Bank Super Eight T20 and President’s Trophy.

Samaraweera aims for county success

Thilan Samaraweera, the Sri Lanka batsman who announced his international retirement earlier this week, is looking to make a career with English county Worcestershire before he eventually quits the game.Samaraweera decided to quit Tests and ODIs after he was left out of the 15-member squad named for the first Test against Bangladesh but will continue to play first-class cricket.”I want to do well for Worcestershire so that it will open the doors for other younger players from Sri Lanka to play county cricket,” Samaraweera said. “I tried to get into the county circuit for the last five years but I couldn’t because every county is focusing on signing up Australians and South Africans. I had a chat with coach Graham Ford in 2012 and it was largely due to his efforts that I got the county contract. I want to make the most of it.”Samaraweera said that it was former India batsman VVS Laxman who first got him interested in playing county cricket. Laxman played a couple of seasons for Lancashire, in 2007 and 2009. “When I met Laxman in Sri Lanka some years ago I spoke about getting to play for Lancashire. He told me that I should play county cricket because it improves your game as a professional and teaches you to take pressure and so on. Unfortunately I didn’t get a break at that time. Now at this stage of my career I want to do well and pave the way for the youngsters.”Samaraweera, who leaves for England this week, said that he had no regrets quitting international cricket at the age of 36.”I am happy the way I am leaving cricket although I have so many sad memories also. I was dropped three-four times in my career and every time they dropped me the selectors would say they want to bring a youngster in. They moved me around in the batting order often and the first player to get the chop from the selectors was always Thilan Samaraweera. I can’t control that. But at the end of the day I am really happy with what I’ve achieved.”I could have done better if I had scored 18-20 Test hundreds but when I started people never thought that I will end up playing 81 Tests and score over 5000 runs average nearly 50 and play in a World Cup final. When I started there were a lot of better players than me but I came to the top through sheer hard work and sacrifice. Hard work is the key word for me.”One of the blots on Samaraweera’s career was the failure in his final international series, managing only 79 runs in six Test innings in Australia. “When the country needed me as a batsman in Test cricket I delivered but unfortunately people only remember the shot I played in my last innings at Sydney. It was a bad shot. When people meet me they always remind me about that shot. I was a bit disappointed playing that stroke. If we had another 70-80 runs it would have been another historical moment in our cricket. My dismissal and Angelo’s (Mathews) run out was the turning point in that Test. But it happens in international cricket. You can go through bad patches in a series which you cannot help.”

Teams set to continue World Cup bid

The World Cricket League Championship resumes this week with a crucial round five of matches for Associate nations that will go a long way to deciding who qualifies for the 2015 World Cup.Two automatic places are available at the World Cup for the top-two finishers in the Championship table and with six matches to play, Ireland and Scotland are currently leading the race.Just four points separate the top four teams in the table and teams will be eager to add to their tally with 12 points available from the remaining matches.Leaders Ireland currently top the table with 13 points and will hope to extend their two-point advantage over second-placed Scotland. Ireland and Scotland both take on Asian countries in conditions more familiar to their opposition.Ireland face the UAE without fast-bowler Boyd Rankin for the first time. Rankin has ended his Ireland career to concentrate on playing county cricket and has ambitions to play Test cricket for England.Scotland have more changes to their squad with several current county players, and Neil Carter who ended his Warwickshire career last season, included for the first time. They play Afghanistan, whose strong showing in recent years has made them the fairytale story of Associate cricket. But they have never appeared at a World Cup before.Netherlands could be the big winners of round five. They play Namibia and are firm favorites for maximum points. They will be looking for Afghanistan to beat Scotland and hope UAE can take at least one victory from Ireland. That would put Netherlands into a strong position in the final two rounds of matches.Four games from round five will be streamed live by the ICC with both matches between Afghanistan and Scotland, and Ireland and UAE forming part of up to 18 matches that the ICC will stream live before the end of the World Cricket League Championship.Teams that don’t make it through to the world cup automatically can still qualify for the 2015 World Cup through the qualifying tournament next year.Alongside the World Cricket League, nations will be back in Intercontinental Cup action hoping to climb the table with the top two teams reaching the final at the end of the season.Fixtures
March 6, Afghanistan v Scotland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 8, Afghanistan v Scotland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 11, Kenya v Canada, World Cricket League, Dubai
March 12-15, Afghanistan v Scotland, Intercontinental Cup, Abu Dhabi
March 12-15, UAE v Ireland, Intercontinental Cup, Sharjah
March 13, Kenya v Canada, World Cricket League, Dubai
March 18-21 Kenya v Canada, Intercontinental Cup, Dubai
March 18, UAE v Ireland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
March 20, UAE v Ireland, World Cricket League, Sharjah, *Streamed Live
April 11-14, Namibia v Netherlands, Intercontinental Cup, Windhoek
April 16, Namibia v Netherlands, World Cricket League, Windhoek
April 18, Namibia v Netherlands, World Cricket League, Windhoek

Odisha XI upset Pakistan Women

Pakistan Women lost their second warm-up match against Odisha XI by four wickets in Cuttack.Pakistan were bowled out for a low total of 154 after they chose to bat. The start was not ideal as they lost both their openers with only two runs on the board, both dismissed by Sujata Mallik (2 for 13). But Sana Mir (25) and Nain Abidi (29) stabilised the innings with a 50-run stand. This was followed by Bismah Maroof’s knock of 44 who held one end together but saw regular wickets fall at the other end. When she fell in the 42nd over, Pakistan were 143 for 7 and Odisha XI wrapped up their innings on 154. Sushree Pradhan took 3 for 41 runs in her nine overs.Odisha’s chase was not smooth as they scored at a slow pace and were 50 for 3 in the 20th over. But a 61-ball 50 from Swagatika Rath and an unbeaten knock from Pragyan Mohanty (28 off 82) helped them reach the target with four wickets in hand.

Sairaj Bahutule quits first-class cricket

Sairaj Bahutule, the former India legspinner who played two Tests and eight ODIs, has called time on his 21-year first-class career. Bahutule, 39, who took over the Vidarbha captaincy last season, had made up his mind after Vidarbha finished their Group B campaign in Nagpur on Tuesday.”It was on my mind for a while but I was waiting for the right time. I feel this is the right time since Vidarbha’s Ranji season is over,” Bahutule told ESPNcricinfo.Since his debut for Mumbai in December 1991, Bahutule has emerged as one of the most successful spinners in the domestic circuit. Though his international career lasted only ten games, earlier this season, Bahutule became only the ninth bowler in Ranji Trophy history to surpass the 400-wicket mark.”It has been an enjoyable ride over the last so many years. I have surprised myself by playing 21 years of first-class cricket. God has been kind in many ways. Not only have I been able to play for India but also the body has remained fit over these years. Obviously, the rigours of two decades were reflecting in the body, so I had to take a call with regards to that as well.”Bahutule featured in six Ranji finals, all for Mumbai, victorious on all occasions. While the first Ranji final he featured in was in 1993-94 against Bengal, the last one was in 2008-09 when he played his final game for Mumbai, against Uttar Pradesh. The most special of those finals was the one in 2003-04 when he led Mumbai to the title, scoring a useful 92 lower down the order.Bahutule has always been a handy lower-order batsman. This helped him in many ways during his short stints with a host of weaker sides over the last eight seasons. After moving from Mumbai to neighbouring Maharashtra in 2005-06, Bahutule also had stints with Assam and Andhra before moving to Vidarbha.”It’s been a very good experience. When you play for Mumbai, you always go in with the attitude of being a winner. Whereas, with the developing teams, it is about how you can inculcate that attitude into those teams. They don’t really know the process of winning. So I had to perform with the bat and the ball, besides trying to make sure that the team plays as a unit. For that, I avoided making too many changes and backing players despite initial failures,” Bahutule said.His only grudge was the inability to make the cut for an IPL franchise. “Because that is the only form of cricket I haven’t played in. I have played Ranji, I have played international cricket, I played club cricket in England for 14 years, but somehow couldn’t feature in the IPL. It came at a time when I feel I had it in me to succeed in the first two seasons, but chalta hai (it’s okay),”he said.He will still be involved with Vidarbha this season, as a coach for the upcoming zonal one-dayers and Twenty20 competitions. “Since I was contracted with them for the whole season and having decided to stop playing, they have asked me to be responsible for the team’s performance in the shorter formats. I am looking forward to it,” he said.

AB de Villiers pulls out of New Zealand T20s

AB de Villiers has pulled out of South Africa’s Twenty20 internationals at home against New Zealand in December, citing the need for extra rest before the Tests in January. Justin Ontong, the Cape Cobras captain, has been called into the squad.”It’s been an exhausting few months and I feel that I need some extra rest before the Test series,” De Villiers said. “It’s for this reason that I have put in the request and I’m grateful to the team management for supporting this decision.”When the squad was announced on December 13, South Africa’s selectors had named Faf du Plessis as captain in order to reduce the workload on de Villiers, who was included as a player. Quinton de Kock, who was part of South Africa’s Under-19 squad for the 2012 World Cup, had been designated as wicketkeeper for the T20s, and ESPNCricinfo understands he will also keep in the one-dayers after the Tests, although the ODI squad has not been named yet.De Villiers has a history of back problems that have worsened because of wicketkeeping, and this request for a break will fuel speculation that he is in trouble again. After the World Twenty20 in September, de Villiers needed three weeks of rehabilitation for his back, and South Africa’s management denied the injury has recurred again.”There is nothing imminently wrong with his back, it is just about managing workload,” Mohammed Moosajee said, the team manager, told ESPNcricinfo. “The plan is to rotate players like Morne Morkel, Dale Steyn, Jacques Kallis and Hashim Amla because of the schedule. Morne and Dale will probably only play one or two matches each. With AB, it’s about getting his mindset right and getting him energised. It’s physical and mental.”De Villiers had complained of stiffness and fatigue after playing in the domestic one-day cup playoff match on December 9. Moosajee said that could be a result of jetlag, as the team had only arrived from Australia four days before. De Villiers’ role in the game could also have contributed to the fatigue. He scored a century and fielded for the entire duration of Cobras’ innings because Heino Kuhn kept wicket.Three days after that match, De Villiers said the game was “hard on my body,” and that he was glad he was a wicketkeeper for South Africa “because the time in the field was tiring.”However, ESPNcricinfo understands wicketkeeping is partly responsible for de Villiers’ back injuries. He became the permanent Test wicketkeeper after Mark Boucher retired and wants to continue in the role. A source close to Cricket South Africa said de Villiers had been initially reluctant to take on the job but had “changed his mind” since. With Tests the focus for de Villiers, despite his role as limited-overs captain, he will be rested when the schedule allows, although he will play the IPL.De Villiers’ replacement Ontong captained Cobras to the final of the domestic one-day cup. He scored 268 runs in 12 matches at an average of 44.66. He was part of South Africa’s squad at the World T20, although he did not play, and will lead the A side in a practice match against New Zealand this afternoon.”Justin has been in our limited-overs plans for some time now and he has underlined his worth during the recent one-day cup, when he excelled as a finisher,” Andrew Hudson, the convenor of selectors, said. “As we all know he is also an outstanding fielder with his direct hits and a more than useful spin bowler. We are fortunate to have a player of his calibre to replace AB and the loss of one is certainly an opportunity for the other.”Revised Twenty20 squad: Faf du Plessis (capt), Farhaan Behardien, Henry Davids, Quinton de Kock, Justin Ontong, Rory Kleinveldt, Richard Levi, David Miller, Morne Morkel, Chris Morris, Wayne Parnell, Robin Peterson, Aaron Phangiso, Dale Steyn, Lonwabo Tsotsobe.

Confident England want series win – Gooch

Graham Gooch has hailed England’s back-to-back Test wins in India as a “monumental achievement”. Gooch, the highest run-scorer in England’s Test history and the side’s current batting coach, claimed England were now “in the ascendancy”, but warned that with one Test remaining, plenty of hard work lay ahead if they were to claim their first series win in India since 1984-85.After losing the first Test in Ahmedabad, England won in Mumbai and Kolkata to take a 2-1 lead with one match to play. While Gooch praised the team for their fightback, he also suggested India might prepare a “result pitch” for the last Test in Nagpur, starting on Thursday, to maximise their chances of securing a result to draw the series.”It was a monumental achievement,” Gooch said. “We know these conditions are sometimes alien to English players. We lost the first Test, we took a bit of a beating there, and in their conditions – India have set up the conditions in Mumbai and Kolkata – our guys have responded magnificently. Let’s be fair, they’ve outplayed India in both the last two Tests.”When you go 1-0 down against hosts who have a very good record in their own conditions, it’s very satisfying when you can turn it round and use the skills you have practised long and hard to outplay the opposition.”But I don’t think for one minute that the guys think the job is done. We’re 2-1 up with one to play. We want a positive result in Nagpur. I don’t think I’m giving anything away by saying it’s going to be a result pitch in Nagpur. If I was India I would want a result pitch to take my chances.”The things MS Dhoni has said after Mumbai I totally agree with – he wants to play on pitches that produce results and I don’t have a problem with that. I’d rather have a pitch that produces a result that one that produces 600 plays 600. So we know it’s likely to be a pitch where it will be tough for the batsmen, with the ball turning. But after our last two performances we can go there with confidence and we’ve got to make sure we bring our A game to Nagpur.”Gooch was particularly keen to credit Alastair Cook for England’s revival. Cook scored his third century of the series and the 23rd of his Test career to set up the victory in Kolkata and has also impressed as a new captain in helping his side come from behind in a series in conditions where many expected them to struggle.”He’s always been an impressive young man, mature beyond his years,” Gooch said. “He works hard at his game. We’ve spent hours and hours in the nets over a long period of time and credit to him, he’s the one who deserves to take the plaudits. He’s worked hard at all types of his technique against spin, pace and swing bowling and he’s had some low moments – as you do as a player – and now he’s reaping the rewards for that hard work.”We showed lots of character coming back, but Alastair is a character who tried to keep his feet on the ground in defeat or in success and when he does well or has a bad day. It’s a good way to approach it. He’s very level-headed. From the time he first came into the Essex professional set-up to the time he scored his first Test hundred, he has been very mature about his cricket. He knows exactly what he wants and he knows how to go about it. He works very hard and, generally, that’s a winning combination.”He has led this team really well. He’s still learning as a captain and he’ll continue to develop. He’s only new to captaincy. He’s had a good start, there’ll be highs and lows along the way but he’ll take them equally and move forward. English cricket is lucky to have a player like him at the head of their team.”Gooch also praised the desire and commitment of England’s other batsmen. “The guys have worked hard at their game,” he said. “Our guys have a good work ethic. They’ve taken on board all the help they’ve been given about playing the turning ball and how to shape their technique. Credit to them, they’ve worked hard since the first training camp in Mumbai. All the work they’ve put in over a long period of time has now started to show rewards. We’ve got to make sure we carry that on in the next game and perform well there and come away from this country with our supporters being proud of the England cricket team.”

Zaheer centre of attention on attritional day

For a moment, it seemed from afar as déjà vu for Zaheer Khan. In July 2011, when India took on England at Lord’s, he made an early impact with the ball but walked off the field due to what was later revealed as a hamstring injury. He subsequently underwent an ankle surgery and did not play competitive cricket for more than four months. Now, a day before India’s squad for the first Test against England is to be picked, he ran in to bowl the fifth ball of his 21st over, got the ball on target but, terminated his follow-through abruptly, clutched his groin, walked back to the umpire to pick up his cap, had a brief chat with a couple of players and returned to the dressing room.However, Ajit Agarkar, the Mumbai captain, said later that Zaheer had been cramping but was expected to take the field on Monday. “He was just cramping badly. It suddenly got a little humid, the last couple of days, probably dehydrated a little bit,” he told reporters at the end of the day’s play. “He should be okay, he should be on the field tomorrow morning.”On a day that he bowled almost 12 overs, looked in rhythm and also probed the batsmen, questions over Zaheer’s fitness took centre stage during the final session, and for a while overshadowed a fight put up by Railways in response to an intimidating score. They finished on 380 for 8, with three batsmen hitting half-centuries; the lower order also made Mumbai work hard for their wickets, and got to within striking distance of avoiding the follow-on.Agarkar said Zaheer was in good shape and that 20 overs bowled across a day and a half were good preparation for someone about to play a major Test series. “There is a Test match at the back of his mind, you want to get yourself ready, bowl as many overs,” he said. “Sure he would have liked a few more wickets but I think 20 overs is a fair workout under your belt as a bowler. You need overs going into big games. Not that he was just turning his arm over. He was obviously trying to get his lines, lengths and rhythm right for the coming Test series. Over the course of the Tests, conditions weather-wise are going to get better so this is probably the toughest workout he’ll have.”The trigger for the uncertainty over his fitness was his absence for five overs after the tea break. But he made his way onto the ground and fielded inside the circle, mostly at extra cover against the two left-hand batsmen in the middle and waited six more overs before being called on to bowl. When given the ball, he asked a few questions, even rapping the batsman on the gloves off a delivery he held back. But at the point of bowling the fifth ball, he prompted further curiosity with his immediate decision to retire to the dressing room.Zaheer, who had bowled nine overs on the second day and had a catch dropped off his bowling, kicked things off on the third. After bowling a few in the channel outside off, he moved to round the wicket, banged the ball in hard, occasionally got it to nip away but Sanjay Bangar and Nitin Bhille, both of whom hit fifties, played him patiently. Zaheer’s first spell of five overs cost just nine runs, and included a boundary driven through mid-off by Bhille.Zaheer returned for his second spell of the day immediately after Abhishek Nayar had broken through to remove Bangar, who was involved in a century stand with Bhille for the third wicket but fell playing a loose drive to extra cover. The pair had again targeted Ramesh Powar, who for the bulk of his bowling spells over two days went for more than six runs per over. Zaheer was called on to bowl the 51st over, for a short spell of 12 deliveries. He got Bhille to edge one towards Rohit Sharma at slip, only for the ball to drop short, but was also driven, again, through mid-off. Mumbai, with Bangar dismissed, opted for spin from both ends during the hour before lunch.Zaheer didn’t have to run too much on the field on the third day, fielding at fine leg, at times at long-off and even inside the circle. As Mumbai shuffled their bowlers, using Powar, Iqbal Abdulla, Nayar, and Agarkar, who had Bhille caught at slip, it wasn’t until the 81st over, when the second new ball was taken, that Zaheer was brought back on.Though he was negotiated well by the Railways batsmen, he got his way past Mahesh Rawat in the third over of his third spell. With the new ball deviating slightly, Rawat tried to drive through extra cover but was caught behind for 68.Against the new man Murali Kartik, who came in at 263 for 6, Zaheer had four slips and a gully, but was counter-attacked. Kartik pulled and then punched him through extra cover for boundaries. But Zaheer bowled through to tea, completed a four-over spell that cost 13 and produced a wicket.Kartik and Ashish Yadav combined for a half-century stand of their own. They, too, scored off Powar and by the time Zaheer was asked to bowl the 99th over, the offspinner had gone for 126 runs in 24 overs. A small Sunday crowd at the Wankhede had much reason to celebrate when Sachin Tendulkar took two catches, one a well-judged skier at mid-off, to dismiss Kartik and Yadav. This, before Agarkar emerged from the dressing room following the close to answer questions that pertained more to the condition of a fellow fast bowler than his own – Agarkar himself had been off the field for a while due to a calf strain.

Past record not a worry for Pakistan – Hafeez

Mohammad Hafeez, Pakistan’s vice-captain, has said his side is “professional” enough to adapt to the UAE heat. Pakistan haven’t won an ODI series against Australia since 2002 but Hafeez said he wasn’t looking too much into past records.”We always try not to keep the past in mind and we’re thinking [about this] as a new series,” Hafeez said. “Pakistan have been playing away for the last three years and every time we come to this part of the world we always have to adjust. As professionals, we have to adjust according to the situation and conditions. Pakistan have been a better side in last one-and-a-half years and hopefully we’ll give our best shot.”Captain Misbah-ul-Haq said the fact that they have not beaten Australia in so long could inspire his team. “Whenever there is such an [instance], it charges the team up extra, [and that helps because] it needs an extra effort to combine and beat an opponent who we have not beaten for some time.”Pressure is always there, because we are going to play against a top team. But if we win, then we have an advantage and it will help us in future. It helps us improve when we play a top team.”Pakistan have left out Umar Gul and Younis Khan for this series and dealing with their absence could be a challenge. The middle order includes captain Misbah-ul-Haq, while the spinners – Shahid Afridi, Saeed Ajmal and Hafeez – are likely to be relied on heavily.”Our spinners got some success here against Sri Lanka and England… Ajmal is one of the best in the world and [we have] Afridi. So we have got good spinners for the conditions,” Hafeez said. Hafeez, recently, replaced South Africa seamer Lonwabo Tsotsobe as the No.1-ranked bowler in the ICC ODI rankings.Pakistan’s players didn’t get a chance to watch the one-off ODI between Australia and Afghanistan in Sharjah but the contest was on their minds when discussing tactics. “Seven or eight wickets fell to quick bowlers, but maybe they [Australia] will be playing more spin on Tuesday,” Dav Whatmore, Pakistan’s coach, said.”Pakistan’s attack won’t revolve around spin, but it’s a fairly decent component of our attack and that will certainly be true for us. We are going to bowl more spin than the quicks and it’s important that we do that well. In return, whatever they deliver we need to be on our toes to ensure we are good enough to chase totals or set good totals.”Whatmore suggested his team would have the upper hand against Australia, who are without the injured Shane Watson and fast bowler Brett Lee, who retired last month. “Australia have had a retirement or two and an injury so I suppose we can have an edge to start with,” said Whatmore. “The timings are different, but it’s interesting given the time of the year and the exhausting schedules.”The opposition is licking their wounds a little bit from their recent performances, Watson is not in the ODIs and Brett Lee has retired and results are not going their way but they can come back pretty hard and try reverse that.”

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