Pakistan puzzle, Dhaka squib

Australia may find themselves in occasional strife and at the receiving end of jibes that have long waited for the moment, but they are not in decline.

The Ashes may have been lost, and remember, there was a generation that didn't know what that meant, and India and South Africa may have moved ahead on a slightly dodgy ranking system, but there is still much fight in the dog, as Pakistan have discovered. Shorn of match-winners and with a captain currently not matching the high standards he has set, Australia must seem vulnerable. But they have gone back to doing what they do best: scrapping for every run and putting a price on their wicket. At any time these are admirable virtues.

These are also qualities that define Australian sport. When you have a solid system, when work ethic is largely non-negotiable, when athletes follow a fairly robust process, decline is unlikely to be as dramatic as the one West Indies suffered. Pakistan, on the other hand, must be kicking themselves for letting a great opportunity go by. You beat good teams when you compete over the entire duration of the match; Pakistan discovered that you can be ahead on points but still lose on a knockout.

Admittedly their tactics against Michael Hussey and Peter Siddle were hugely inexplicable, but 176 should have been achievable against a rookie quick, a spinner still finding his way in international cricket and not destined for greatness, a promising but underachieving new-ball bowler, and a genuine quick only just back in form. But Pakistan have always been more about talent than about steel and it was the latter quality that was needed here. You sensed that the result that eventually arrived was round the corner.

About a year ago there were indications that, for the first time, Pakistan weren't throwing up the kind of explosive talent they seem to store in their belly. Since then Mohammad Aamer has arrived, and he is here to stay for a long time, and Umar Akmal will be one of the better players in their history. Only six matches old, he is already the second best batsman in this team. But when talent is not backed by a reverence towards work ethic, it loses its way pretty rapidly, as another fine player, Mohammad Asif, discovered before he was hauled back from the precipice. One day I want to know what players from Pakistan seek from the game, because a lot of them sell themselves very short. I sometimes fear too that the Pakistan Cricket Board is a bit like the Indian Hockey Federation - happier with the perks of the job than an intense desire for the greater good of the game.

Hopefully there are a couple of opening batsmen among the many uncut diamonds that are strewn there, who they can stick with. Every great team in world cricket has used a top pair of openers as the base from which to mount an attack. West Indies, with Greenidge and Haynes; Australia, first with Taylor and Slater and then with Hayden and Langer; and if you want to go further back, with Lawry and Simpson, Barnes and Morris, Woodfull and Ponsford. Perhaps only the fine West Indies team of the mid-sixties, which had 10 excellent players and someone to open with Conrad Hunte, would be an exception.

Meanwhile in Bangladesh, where the home side has made definite gains in 50-over cricket, a one-day series rather weak in conception is battling along. For a start, India play Sri Lanka for the zillionth time - the players must start thinking they are old classmates now, but worse, the matches are being played in an atmosphere where the conditions dominate the game. That can never be good. I know cricket is all about overcoming conditions, but those must be similar for both teams. Where the toss is half the match, you cannot have good cricket.

Indeed, this series would have been the perfect experiment for a one-day game played over two innings of 25 overs each. Both sides would have bowled in dry conditions and then both would have had to bear the brunt of the dew. And since, ideally, an innings must resume from the score at the break, the wet ball would probably have been used against lesser batsmen, thereby further minimising the effect of the dew.

And so, chances are the cricket is going to be more interesting in Australia and South Africa than in Dhaka.

 

 
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Team Matches Points Rating Ranking
Australia 51 6577
129 1
India 53
6433 121
2
Sri Lanka 42 4966
118 3
South Africa 37
4307 116 4
England
42
4430
105
5
Team Matches Points Rating Ranking
Pakistan 41 4245 104 6
New Zealand 41 3842 94 7
Bangladesh 41 2745 67 8
West Indies 29 1937 67 9

Ireland 17 712 42 10
Team Matches Points Rating Ranking

India
42 5357
128 1
South Africa 36
4228
117
2
England 45 5165 115 3
Srilanka 27 2951
109 4
Australia 43 4583 107 5
Team Matches Points Rating Ranking
Pakistan 29 2615 90 6
West Indies 25 2128 85 7
New Zealand 32 2482 78 8
Bangladesh 19 131
7 9







Name Rating Ranking
H Amla 867
1
A B De Villiers 804
2
T Dilshan 761
3
S Watson
758
4
K Sangakkara 753
5

Name Rating Ranking
M Hussey
748
6
J Trott
737 7
V Kohli 733
8
MS Dhoni 729
9
S Tendulkar 712 10
Name Rating Ranking

D Vettori 701
1
R W Price 678
2
G Swann 667
3
D Steyn 663
4
M Morkel 661
5
Name Rating Ranking
M Johnson
654
6
L Tsotsobe
652 7
AMendis 644
8
Shahid Afridi
643
9
N Kulasekara 642 10
Name Rating Ranking
S Tendulkar 883
1
J Kallis 883
2
K Sangakkara 882
3
IJL Trott
826
4
A N Cook
803
Name Rating Ranking
V Sehwag 790
6
M Jayavardene 781
7
S Chanderpaul 779 8
VVS Laxman
774
9
T T Samaraweera
763 10
Name Rating Ranking

D Steyn
899
1
G Swann 793
2
J Anderson 776
3
M Morkel 751
4
Zaheer Khan 748
5
Name Rating Ranking
M Johnson 727
6
Harbhajan Singh 672
7
Shakib Al Hasan 648
8
D Vettori
623
9
S Broad
606 10

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