The personality of
Pakistan's batting line-up is a gripping study and the chapter that was added
in Sharjah could well be a blueprint of how to build an ODI innings. The
primary ingredient was a firm century from Ahmed Shehzad and it was
supplemented by a stroke-filled fifty from stand-in captain Shahid Afridi as Pakistan rocketed
to 364 for 7 - their third-highest total in 50-over cricket and the highest in Sharjah in 218 matches. New Zealand slipped and slid
and finally succumbed for 217, beaten with almost 12 overs left.
Pakistan's batsmen
were intent on warding off those loose shots that frustrate them and their fans
so badly. There was a determined effort to collect singles, which hindered the
bowlers' chances of building pressure. Each of the first three partnerships
added more than 50 runs to the score with Shehzad being the common denominator.
But whatever Pakistan do, there just has to be a see-sawing of fortunes.
Birthday boy Matt
Henry took out Shehzad for 113 and Asad Shafiq the very next ball with the
score on 210 in the 38th over, but Pakistan managed to circumvent those
setbacks thanks to an enterprising partnership between Afridi and Haris Sohail.
They added 89 runs in 46 balls and on that steam Pakistan made 125 runs in the
last 10 overs.
The only period of
play when New Zealand managed to threaten the target was when Ross Taylor and
Kane Williamson were together. Both batsmen seemed highly conscious of not
letting scoreboard pressure dictate their strokeplay and they trusted their
strength - Taylor his power and Williamson his footwork - to collect their
runs. But the end of their union was rather symbolic of how things had been for
New Zealand all day.
Taylor, who had showed
immense skill cutting from the stumps, was bowled while attempted to do so by
an Afridi slider. Tom Latham, too, added to the imagery when his beloved slog
sweep found deep square leg to gift Shehzad his first ODI wicket. Pakistan
gambled with Sohail's part-time left-arm spin and got three wickets, including
Williamson.
No batsman could reach
fifty. No partnership could reach fifty. New Zealand had been run over by a
stampede in the first innings and just could not recover. Afridi could not hide
his smile as it became apparent that victory was only a matter of time. He
barely put a foot wrong, right from the toss which he won and watched his
batsmen take full advantage.
Having been ruffled by
pace previously in the series, Pakistan's strategy was to take on the short
ball and an easy-paced pitched helped their endeavor. They also did not need to
deal with Adam Milne, the fastest of New Zealand's bowlers and also one of the
more injury-prone, rested. Every batsman was keen to pull and Shehzad managed
to find the middle of the bat even off the front foot. Midwicket was his most
productive area and the pull, his most productive shot.
Shehzad's poise at the
crease was striking, so much that at times he was able to hit a selection of
his 14 boundaries without much footwork. The four he drilled through point to
reach his fifty was set up by shifting his weight onto a rather stationary back
foot. He showed off his balance when he ran down the pitch as well, and on one
such occasion he heaved a length ball clean out of the stadium in the 20th
over. Nathan McCullum, who was brought in place of Daniel Vettori, could only
watch.
His constant search
for singles - he found 41 of them - facilitated a strike rate just under
a-run-a-ball. At times, he wanted a single where there wasn't one and did have
a couple of run-out scares. On other occasions he would question his partner
when they refused. It almost seemed like he would not accept anything less than
a century, judging by how he stole two runs to a dab that barely went past the
30-yard circle at midwicket to move to 99. There are only three Pakistan
openers - Saeed Anwar, Salman Butt and Rameez Raja - who have more hundreds
than Shehzad's six.
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