pakistan lost after smith ton in sharajah
Australia 255 for 8 (Smith 101, Afridi 3-46) beat Pakistan 162 (Umar Akmal 46, Johnson 3-24) by 93 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Australia seal first ODI win by 93 runs behind Smith century
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Steven Smith
embarked on this tour as a key Test player without a clear role in
Australia's one-day side, but his first ODI century might change that.
Smith struck 101 to set up Australia's comfortable 93-run victory over
Pakistan in the first ODI in Sharjah, where Nathan Lyon, another man
just establishing himself in the one-day team, also made an important
contribution.
Smith was the only batsman from either side who passed 50 and it was
thanks to his confident work against spin that Australia reached a
competitive 255 for 8. Still, it was a total that Pakistan would have
fancied their chances of overhauling had Lyon not struck twice in the
13th over to reduce them from 59 for 1 to 59 for 3 during an excellent
spell of off-spin bowling.
On a pitch that offered plenty of turn, few batsmen really got
themselves in for an extended period and, perhaps surprisingly, it was
the Australians who handled the conditions the better. Lyon's first ball
gripped and turned sharply and he became a different type of weapon to
Mitchell Johnson, whose pace was also causing issues for Pakistan's
batsmen.
Earlier in the day Pakistan's frontline spinner, the debutant Zulfiqar
Babar, had bowled well without having a major impact and Shahid Afridi
picked up three wickets. But the real difference between the two sides
was Smith, whose nimble footwork and ability to keep the scoreboard
ticking ensured that Australia did not get bogged down.
And there was a chance of that happening, for after an 86-run
partnership between Smith and David Warner, who pulled a catch to
midwicket off Afridi for 43, no other Australian made it past the 20s.
Afridi had two catches put down off his own bowling, both off Glenn
Maxwell, but took a pearler of his own running back from midwicket to
remove George Bailey for 18.
The drops of Maxwell, an edge behind to Sarfraz and a missed top edge by
Ahmed Shehzad running back behind the wicketkeeper, were not too costly
as he fell for 21, the 216-centimetre Mohammad Irfan his unlikely
athletic catcher at long-off. It was the first wicket for Babar, who at
35 had become Pakistan's second-oldest ODI debutant, but it was his also
his only one.
But while his partners struggled to get going, Smith kept the innings on
course at the other end. It was a well-paced innings, steady early
while batting with Warner, until Smith showed his willingness to go over
the top by launching Anwar Ali over long-off for a cleanly struck six.
He was also inventive against Irfan, walking across outside off stump to
flick a boundary through midwicket.
Smart stats |
It was an indication that his footwork is just as effective against pace
as spin. However, with captain Michael Clarke injured, Smith is clearly
the best player of spin in the side, and his quick footwork was
notable. He regularly advanced to the spinners and worked the ball
through gaps, and a second six came when he moved down the wicket and
thumped Babar straight back over the sightscreen.
Smith had never so much as scored an ODI half-century before and he
turned his first into a century, clipping a single through midwicket off
his 115th delivery. It was not only a landmark for Smith in the one-day
international side but in limited-overs cricket more generally, for his
previous highest List A score was an unbeaten 99 for New South Wales.
But the chance for a bigger score, and for pushing Australia to a more
daunting total, disappeared when Smith sent a catch to Wahab Riaz at
long off from the bowling of Afridi. That slowed Australia in their
final overs, although 17 came off the 50th from Wahab as Johnson found
three consecutive boundaries to lift the total past 250.
It was a gettable target and even after Shehzad had edged Johnson to
Smith at second slip in the third over, Pakistan looked capable.
Promoted to open on his return to the side, Sarfraz Ahmed was the key
early. He played some remarkable shots, most notably a slog-swept six
off James Faulkner, and had motored along to 34 from 41 when he
toe-edged behind off Lyon trying another sweep.
Next ball came the blow that really gave Australia confidence. The
captain Misbah-ul-Haq walked to the crease, Australia's captain George
Bailey conferred with Lyon and placed a leg slip, and first ball Misbah
obligingly tickled a catch there. It still required a terrifically sharp
catch from Warner, who thrust his right hand out while backing away,
but the plan, and Lyon's lovely flighted offbreak, was flawless.
From there, things stagnated for Pakistan. Fawad Alam crawled to 7 off
25 balls, Asad Shafiq struggled to handle Johnson's short balls and was
caught behind for 13, and Afridi gave debutant Sean Abbott his maiden
ODI wicket by sending a catch to deep midwicket. Umar Akmal was the only
Pakistani who looked capable of steering them home, but his partners
were running out.
Johnson claimed a third wicket, Maxwell chipped in with a couple, and
Umar was eventually bowled for 46 trying to smash Kane Richardson for
six. The last pair, Irfan and Babar, had some fun by launching Maxwell
for three sixes in one over, but a run-out in the next ended the ride.
It was a 93-run win; Smith's 101 meant he was more than the difference
between the teams. And for the immediate future, he might just be a hard
man to displace from No.3 in this ODI team
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