Azhar cruises past 250 as Pakistan continue grind

Dinner Pakistan 530 for 3 (Azhar 272*, Misbah 10*) v West Indies
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Azhar Ali cruised past 250 by dinner on the second day © Getty Images

Confronted with bowling that was toothless at best and ragged at worst, Azhar Ali marched to his second Test double-century as Pakistan continued to build a huge first-innings total in the day-night Test in Dubai. He was well supported, first by Asad Shafiq and then by debutant Babar Azam, before Misbah-ul-Haq showed attacking intent just before dinner, as Pakistan went into the interval at 530 for 3.

Resuming the day on 146, Azhar was solid and assured right from the outset and displayed more of the lovely drives and powerful cuts and pulls that lit up the first day. He went into tea at 194, but got to his milestone within two balls of the resumption of play – a leg-side delivery from Gabriel was tucked fine for four, after which a wide one was cut past backward square for the four that took him past 200. A salute and a set of nine push-ups followed; by that stage, West Indies’ fielders looked too ragged to follow suit.

Azhar and Shafiq had added 73 runs to the overnight total of 279 for 1, taking their second-wicket partnership to 137. The pair built on their solid platform with relative ease, facing little pressure either from West Indies’ bowlers or from a pink ball that did not do much in the air. While Shafiq played the odd false shot, including a full-blooded sweep that failed to make contact with a flighted delivery from Devendra Bishoo, Azhar looked compact and sharp, quick to pounce on width and short balls. He greeted Roston Chase with successive lofted shots for four and six, and also played a number of assured sweep shots against both spinners.

The partnership ended when Shafiq drilled a return catch to Devendra Bishoo on 67. That moment of success provided only fleeting relief for an increasingly deflated West Indies side. Azam came in and settled in swiftly to provide capable support to Azhar. He glided his way to a half-century that seemed to come far too easily, before driving in the air straight to cover to give West Indies only their second breakthrough of the day.

West Indies had their moments, but were not able to capitalise on them. Bishoo had dropped short frequently in the first session. Immediately after dismissing Shafiq, his bowling perked up – temporarily. He beat Azam with a beautifully flighted ball and found the batsman’s outside edge in the next over, only for the ball to fly to the right of slip. Frustratingly, he dropped short again the next ball and was cut for another boundary. A few overs later, Chase got Azhar to nick to slip, where Jermaine Blackwood spilled a sharp chance that should have been taken.

Like on the first day, West Indies misused their reviews. Shannon Gabriel clocked up impressive speeds in the first over of the day. His fifth ball, bowled at 147 kph, seamed into Shafiq and clipped the top of his back pad on its way through to the wicketkeeper. The appeal, seemingly for a caught behind, was turned down, but replays indicated the ball would have gone on to hit enough of the top of middle for the batsman to be given lbw, if a review had been taken.

When West Indies did opt for a review – on the last ball of the 131st over – they were left red-faced and wishing they hadn’t. Jason Holder bowled an indipping low full toss at Azhar, went up in appeal for lbw and reviewed the not-out decision, evidently believing that the ball had brushed pad before bat. Replays, however, showed that the ball was nowhere near the pad and had been middled by Azhar.

These errors paled in comparison with West Indies’ shoddy bowling and often-farcical fielding. Bishoo and Miguel Cummins released the early pressure that Gabriel and Holder had created. While Bishoo bowled a number of short balls and juicy half-volleys, Cummins repeatedly drifted onto the batsmen’s pads. Gabriel struggled to find his line or length in a terrible spell after tea and bowled three big no-balls, and at least three more that were not called.

It all added up to yet another sapping session for West Indies, who are yet to taste success on their UAE tour.

Sirish Raghavan is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.


Source: ESPN Crickinfo

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