Bangkok Post

Australia acid test awaits Cup minnows Afghanista­n

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PERTH: Afghanista­n face their toughest test of the World Cup so far when they play fourtime champions Australia in Perth today.

Afghanista­n have been the ‘Cinderella’ story of this World Cup, with their maiden win Australia acid test awaits Afghanista­n — a thrilling one-wicket victory over Scotland in Dunedin last time out — one of the highlights of the competitio­n so far.

But the pace and bounce of the WACA pitch is unlike any surface Afghanista­n have experience­d before and, in such fast bowlers as Mitchell Johnson and Mitchell Starc, Australia have the attack to exploit the conditions.

It may well have been with this match in mind that Internatio­nal Cricket Council chief executive David Richardson told AFP on Friday: “I’m pleased with the performanc­es of the qualifiers so far, but the bigger tests are still to come.”

The following day the amateurs from the UAE were skittled out for just 102 at the WACA by defending champions India, whose pace attack is nothing like as intimidati­ng as that of Australia.

“As everyone knows the UAE has been our home ground due to security reasons and the pitches in UAE are slow and favour spin,” said Afghanista­n captain Mohammad Nabi.

“Whereas tracks in Australia and New Zealand are very different, there is much more pace and bounce.”

However, Afghanista­n’s last Pool A match against a Test nation saw them reduce Sri Lanka to 51 for four before Mahela Jayawarden­e’s hundred restored the status quo.

Furthermor­e, the likes of fast bowler Hamid Hassan and left-arm quick Shapoor Zadran, who starred with bat and ball against Scotland, could find the WACA to their liking.

The more concerning issue is how Afghanista­n’s batsmen will cope, although Samiullah Shenwari was in bullish mood about the prospect of playing Australia after his superb 96 set up up the win over Scotland.

“Hopefully we’ll give them a tough time and we will not give up easy,” he said. “So we’re looking forward to giving them a tough time and looking forward to winning the match.”

Afghanista­n still have a chance of gatecrashi­ng the quarter-finals, standing just a point behind Australia after losing to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka before beating the Scots.

Yet were Afghanista­n to win today it would arguably be the greatest upset in the history of one-day internatio­nal cricket.

For Australia, it is the classic ‘no-win’ situation in that anything less than a huge victory, never mind a defeat, will be regarded with dismay by their supporters.

Australia need points on the board after their 111-run opening win over England was followed by a no-result washout against Bangladesh and last weekend’s thrilling one-wicket defeat by New Zealand in Auckland.

FIXTURE

Pool A: Australia v Afghanista­n (1.30pm)

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REUTERS

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