The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Pakistan elated by win

-

IT should uld have been far more comfortabl­e than it ultimately was, but given Pakistan’s records in chases such as the one they faced at Centurion, it is an achievemen­t in which they eventually overcame two distinct phases of panic after two set partnershi­ps to sneak through.

Chasing 274 in the modern ODI isn’t usually seen as problemati­c, even accounting for a slightly trickier surface, but this chase was only Pakistan’s fifth successful one of a 270plus target in a decade.

That is the same number as Ireland and fewer than every Full Member other than Zimbabwe. Chasing, all of Pakistan knows, is not a strength.

And so, as much as the win, the collapse from 186 for one to 203 for five and the unnecessar­y losses of Mohammad Rizwan and Shadab Khan after a steadying partnershi­p, was on the minds of Pakistan post-game.

“You know there is this pandemic bringing everyone down these days, and so we thought we would entertain people a little,” joked Imam-ul-Haq, whose 70 caught the mood of the win: a good enough, but it should have been much more.

“But on a serious note, it is not as if we don’t talk about this in ourmeeting­s, our meetings, it gets discussed, that if your top three get set in white-ball, then in other teams they don’t just make 100, they get 150.

“That is what we are trying to do, like Babar (Azam) and I were set today (Saturday), we should have finished the game.

“We were playing an ODI after a long time, and we want to learn from our mistakes and turn these 70s and 80s into match-winning knocks and turn a win like this into a sevenor six-wicket win.”

Imam did point out that a good quality attack and a surface with spongy bounce played a role in their eventual difficulti­es, but Pakistan and Imam’s rustiness in the format was evident too. This was only Pakistan’s sixth ODI since the 2019 World Cup and Imam himself has been a peripheral presence since that tournament — a result of no longer being in the Test XI and not getting enough ODIs to play.

“To be honest, I am very disappoint­ed (in not finishing the game),” Imam said.

“I have been waiting one and a half years since my last hundred, and I haven’t had that many opportunit­ies in the last year.

“You don’t always get what you want, but

I have got twomore two more games to make up for it,” he said.

Pakistan did also cheer Babar Azam’s hundred, his 13th in ODIs.

He hasn’t been out-of-form exactly but a little dip in the Tests against South Africa earlier this year — when Keshav Maharaj troubled him — had induced a hint of anxiety among fans. He has since responded with runs in the PSL and now this innings, soothing reassuranc­e that there are very few batsmen in the world better than him right now.

“I enjoyed that hundred quite a bit,” Azam said.

“With Imam the plan was just to stretch that partnershi­p as far as possible into the target.

“We just didn’t want to lose focus at any stage.

“We wanted to finish it but unfortunat­ely, I got out, then Imam did and we had a bit of a collapse which put pressure on us.

“However, Rizi and Shadab really had an outstandin­g partnershi­p that brought us back into the game.

“We are feeling quite confident after this win and I want to keep my form going in the next game,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe