The Asian Age

STARC LEADS AUSTRALIAN ROUT OF PAK

-

Captains will now need to use their fast bowlers differentl­y. — Gautam Gambhir, former Indian cricketer, on pacers being more effective under lights

Brisbane: Australia seized the advantage on the opening day of the first Test when they bowled Pakistan out for 240 just before stumps at the Gabba in Brisbane on Thursday. After the visitors resisted stubbornly in the first session, reaching 57 for no wicket at lunch, pace trio Mitchell Starc (4/52), Josh Hazlewood (2/46) and Pat Cummins (3/60) tore through the Pakistan batting order to put the home side in charge at the close of play. Australia seized the initiative after lunch when they reduced Pakistan from 75 for none to 78 for four, then 94 for five. Pakistan were rescued from disaster by Asad Shafiq, who played a lone hand, scoring 76 well-made runs. Shafiq came to the crease with his side 75 for two, then saw Haris Sohail (1) and Baba Azar (1) fall for the addition of only two runs. But good partnershi­ps of 49 between Shafiq and Mohammed Rizwan, who made 37, and then 84 with Yasir Shah (26) enabled the visitors to achieve a respectabl­e score. Rizwan, who was counteratt­acking fearlessly, fell controvers­ially with Cummins appearing to have just oversteppe­d the mark, only for TV umpire Michael Gough to give the benefit of the doubt to the bowler. The visitors had frustrated the Australian pace attack in the first session, going into lunch at 57-0 with openers Azhar Ali and Shan Masood unbeaten on 28 and 21 respective­ly. Pakistan had caused a major surprise when they left out experience­d seamer Mohammad Abbas, for pacemen Shaheen Afridi, Imran Khan and 16-year-old Naseem Shah — AFP Brief scores: Pakistan 240 (Shafiq 76, Azhar 39, Rizwan 37, Starc 4/52, Cummins 3/60, Hazlewood 2/46) vs Australia

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India