The new Pakistani quick who could roll Australia

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

Pakistan’s three biggest threats in the Test series against Australia starting today are leg spinner Yasir Shah, opening batsman Azhar Ali and new seamer Mohammad Abbas.

Australian fans should be familiar with the first two players who have had generous success against the men in baggy greens.

Yasir befuddled the Australian batsmen the last they played a Test series in the UAE, taking 12 wickets as 17 as Pakistan humiliated the tourists.

Azhar Ali, meanwhile, has piled up 837 runs at 70 from seven Tests against Australia, including a magnificent 205no in the Boxing Day Test two years ago.

Yet the comparatively unknown Abbas could have just as big an impact in this two-Test series as either Yasir or Azhar.

He is the kind of precise and relentless seamer who often prospers against Australia, who will field an extremely vulnerable batting lineup missing Steve Smith, David Warner, Cameron Bancroft and Matthew Renshaw.

In the past three years, Abbas incredibly has taken 265 wickets at 15 in first-class cricket. Granted, about two-thirds of those wickets have been secured in Pakistan domestic cricket, which is of fairly low quality compared to Tests or English county cricket.

But Abbas has also run amok at those latter two levels. In eight Tests to date he has grabbed 42 wickets at 17, and in the just-completed county season, he hoarded 62 wickets at 17.

Crucially, Abbas has shown an ability to remain effective on a wide variety of surfaces, performing similarly well on the dry pitches of the UAE and the West Indies as on the far moister decks in England.

That’s because Abbas’ style is the sort which tends to challenge batsmen regardless of pitch conditions. Similar to South Africa’s Vernon Philander and former Pakistani quick Mohammad Asif, Abbas does not rely on helpful conditions to take wickets.

Just like them, or Australian legend Glenn McGrath, he simply lands an exceptionally-high number of deliveries on a testing line and length.

Now, that’s not to suggest Abbas is in the same class as that trio or that he ever will be.

Rather the point is that, to this early stage of his Test career, the Pakistani seamer has shown a level of accuracy and subtle skill which evokes memories of those champions.

He doesn’t have startling pace like Kagiso Rabada, gain steepling bounce like Josh Hazlewood or swing the ball around corners like James Anderson.

Abbas doesn’t seek to bulldoze batsman but instead to asphyxiate them. He bowls delivery after delivery on or just outside off stump on that in-between length which leaves batsmen unsure as to whether to step forward or back.

Abbas moves the ball just enough through the air and off the seam to punish batsman who are caught in two minds, stuck on the crease.

He is also a fine bowler against left-handers, as he showed in Pakistan’s recent 1-1 drawn series in England, where he tormented lefties Alastair Cook and Mark Stoneman. That is significant given Australia will have three left-handers in their top five – Usman Khawaja, Shaun Marsh and Travis Head.

(AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File)

Against left-handers, Abbas looks equally comfortable bowling either over or around the wicket. From over the wicket he curls the new ball back into left-handers, looking for a bowled or LBW, or setting them up for the off cutter than angles across them and catches the edge.

When around the wicket he continually forces these batsmen to play by bowling from wide of the crease, angling the ball in towards off stump and then getting it to straighten off the seam.

This has helped him to have remarkable success against left-handers thus far in Tests, with 20 wickets at 11. Regardless of whether he is over the wicket or around, Abbas challenges both edges of the bat.

In this way he again is reminiscent of Philander, who has had huge success against Australia’s left-handers doing just this. Philander has taken 53 wickets at 24 against Australia and played a major role in South Africa’s 3-1 victory against them earlier this year.

Abbas won’t have the same generous conditions that Philander enjoyed in that series. But he should ask vexing questions of a makeshift Australian batting lineup this month.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-09T23:09:51+00:00

Stuckbetweenindopak

Roar Rookie


Hopefully abbas will add few more miles to his bowling speed in time to come...on warner and smith i think aussie board have gone overboard particularly with world cup just around the corner. They should look at bcci how it shamelessly and openly takes undue advantages in every aspect of the game due to their power. So other big cricketing nations should try to match this bully cricketing nation to the best of their abilities. Pak and aus boards are simply playing into indias hands...e,g mishandling asif, amir case, then sharjeel khan case, razzaq, imran nazir,and mohammad yousuf destroyed prematurely, saeed ajmal bowling action case, now icc has a problem with every new talent from pakistan and we know why. Similarly aussies destroyed andrew symonds, they suspended warne just before 2003 world cup,and now two of their best players suspended. My point is cricketing boards should help their cricketers and warn them on their first fault rather than punish them straightaway so as to compete with other big cricket teams. I can tell you all teams are secretly laughung at the stupidity of CA to create a possibilty where they dont have to deal with warner in the next edition of icc world cup

2018-10-07T09:46:22+00:00

Tyler

Roar Guru


He will have to dig deep into that bag of tricks to find wickets on this lifeless pitch! Good opportunity for him to demonstrate what he is capable of.

2018-10-07T07:23:38+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Well I doubt Australia are missing Bancroft or Renshaw at this stage of their careers. But Smith and Warner are world class players and so will be missed. Fancy playing a plonker like Siddle in UAE. Surely blooding a new bowler would be a smarter option. We'll see how his figures stack up compared to Abbas but he has always proved to be best at 12th man duties at test level.

2018-10-06T22:19:50+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I take from this that Abbas will probably average 17 in this series.

2018-10-06T22:09:13+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


I watched some of this guys bowling against England and you're right Ronan, he's a seriously good bowler. Pakistan has a very underrated fast attack as England found out earlier this year.

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