Australia collapse to waste Finch and Khawaja's good work

By Ronan O'Connell / Expert

A brilliant stand from Australia’s new openers, Aaron Finch and Usman Khawaja, was rendered irrelevant yesterday as their teammates imploded in the first Test against Pakistan in Dubai.

Khawaja (85) and Finch (62) adapted well to the conditions, showing fine discipline and patience as they grinded to a partnership of 142 from 51.4 overs.

They did a great job of blanketing Pakistan’s three spinners, who went wicketless across the 31 overs they bowled during the opening stand.

Then an all-too-familiar tale of woe unfolded for the tourists as they lost 10-60 to lurch from a position of dominance to one of humiliation.

The collapse began when Finch was undone by a canny Pakistan strategy and clinical execution by their star seamer, Mohammad Abbas. Sarfraz Ahmed employed both a short mid-on and a short mid-off as he instructed Abbas to bowl dead straight at Finch. The Australian batsman managed to resist the lure of playing across the line, or inside out, to get the ball past those fielders.

But when Finch lifted a forceful on-drive just centimetres above the turf it was caught by short mid-on.

That was followed soon after by a procession of wicket gifting. First Shaun Marsh aimed an optimistic off drive at a wide, loopy delivery from debutant spinner Bilal Asif and gave a catch to first slip.

Soon after, Khawaja had a brainfade, playing a half-hearted lap sweep against Asif which merely lobbed to short leg. Khawaja had been in control when playing the full-blooded, conventional sweep shot but looked vulnerable every time he tried the lap version.

That brought to the crease Travis Head, one of Australia’s three debutants for the match. The 24-year-old has a reputation for being shaky against spin and that was justified, as he completed an ugly, nine-ball duck. Head’s outside edge was beaten twice in the first over he faced from Asif, who then had him caught at slip in a near-identical manner to the dismissal of Shaun Marsh.

First-gamer Marnus Labuschagne’s stay was even shorter, out second ball, caught at short leg as he pushed with hard hands at a well-flighted delivery from Asif. Australia had lost 5-29.

Captain Tim Paine and joint vice-captain Mitchell Marsh managed to hold back the flood for nine overs before they, too, were washed away. Caught on the crease, Marsh was LBW to an in-swinger from Abbas, who bowled with relentless precision to take 4-29 from 19 overs.

Four balls later Paine became one of Asif’s six victims as he gave a catch to short leg off his inside edge before the tail was mopped up by Pakistan.

Skipper Tim Paine (Photo by Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images/Gallo Images)

Frittering away a great opening stand is familiar territory for the Australians when playing in the UAE.

The last time they toured there, David Warner and Chris Rogers took them to 0-128 in the first Test, only to then lose 10-175, suffering a 221-run defeat.

Australia appear to be headed for a similarly hefty loss here, in spite of a good finish to Day 3, when they managed to reduce Pakistan to 3-45 in their second innings. On a pitch which is offering an increasing amount of help to slow bowlers, the Australian spinners grabbed all three wickets.

After struggling badly in the first innings, Jon Holland produced a terrific spell before stumps, grabbing 2-9. Even still, Pakistan lead by a whopping 325 runs, which is already 150 more than I would back Australia to make in the fourth innings.

Amid this dense gloom, however, were two significant positives: the efforts of Khawaja and Finch.

The former has long laboured overseas, particularly in Asia, where he averaged 14 from five Tests prior to this match. While he so often looks commanding at home against spinners, Khawaja has continually appeared anxious and timid against them in Asia. Not so in this innings, however, as the 31-year-old played the Pakistan tweakers with encouraging certainty. Even when Khawaja got a let-off on 17, as Sarfraz missed an easy legside stumping from the bowling of Yasir, he did not go back into his shell.

In his next few balls from Yasir, he advanced once more and also played a powerful sweep shot. To further underscore his newfound belief against spin, Khawaja reverse-swept consecutive balls for four off Yasir just after reaching his half century.

At the other end, Finch did a good job of shackling his aggressive instincts. When the seamers bowled straight, he avoided playing across the line, and when the spinners tossed up wide tempters, he left them alone.

His dawdling strike rate of 38 proved Finch is willing to shelve his ego in the quest to become a successful Test cricketer.

Yet, by stumps, the graft of Finch and Khawaja had been well and truly wasted by their teammates. Australia are staring at a big defeat.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-10T13:01:23+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


At least Maxi might slow 30

2018-10-10T12:59:45+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


How good are the Marsh brothers? Fantastic decision to leave The Joe Burns, The Callum Ferguson’s and the Glenn Maxwell’s at home. Nothing better than giving Teat caps to blokes who average low 30’s in FC cricket, while your blokes who average mid 40’s and have test 100’s are playing hot and giggle back home when your only two true test batsmen are suspended! Great stuff CA

2018-10-10T08:18:32+00:00

FunBus

Roar Rookie


Yes, but your good players aren’t banned because they’re ‘mean.’ They’re banned because they’re cheats.

2018-10-10T07:11:30+00:00

Rob

Guest


Punching a ball straight back out of the middle of the bat to the bowler at chest height and being dropped is lucky IMO. Was it out LBW on review?

2018-10-10T07:07:30+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


Not is you read what all the members of the Aus team said. He was left out because his lack of matches/playing time.

2018-10-10T07:06:21+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


True, his record against the swinging ball isn't super either, but still good.

2018-10-10T07:04:34+00:00

Rob

Guest


Um. Smith's record playing the ball spinning away from him is questionable.

2018-10-10T06:57:30+00:00

Rob

Guest


Wasn't Renshaw overlooked because of a head knock?

2018-10-10T05:23:37+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Just say Bancroft, Warner and Smith weren't banned, I reckon Khawaja may not have been in this side at all. The whole selection policy for batsman on low, slow, spinning wickets has been a shamozzle for nearly a decade. Actually it's been a shamozzle generally but I digress. Just pick your best bats and help them work it out. Might take a few goes but eventually improvement occurs. Yet 2 blokes with test centuries, Maxi and Burns, aren't even in the squad.

2018-10-10T05:13:22+00:00

mrrexdog

Roar Guru


Pained averaged 40 since he was recalled, compare that to Nevil who averages 22 at test level and Wade who averaged 20 during his second stint in the test team. He was Australia’s best batsman in South Africa. Paine isn’t the problem, although I feel his batting may have been effected by it, but who else would you make captain? Khawaja?

2018-10-10T04:45:12+00:00

Scott Pryde

Expert


I could see exactly where this was going in the overs after lunch - maybe not as quickly as it ended up happening, but the Pakistani bowlers were putting it on better lengths and getting it to turn. Add that to Abbas tying down an end and not letting runs be scored - something was always going to happen. And once you lose one or two, they come and go like flies to... well, you know what.

2018-10-10T04:27:24+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


I don't know if his card is marked. If JL had just said we are leaving him out as a precaution no one would be having an issue with him not playing and his future. Using the justification they did use makes they whole thing a mess.

2018-10-10T04:11:19+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Tell me again why Maxwell isn't playing ahead of Head and Labusch... somebody? Please selectors don't take us for fools. His Shield form and average in last few seasons demands respect. There is clearly a personality conflict with a bloke who doesn't suck up to our esteemed cricket leaders. The leadership of Aussie cricket clearly needs to be open-minded to different views and not expect everyone to be a robot to their bullish, moronic orders ... that approach didnt end well for Bancroft. Macy is more talented than our whole middle order.

2018-10-10T04:06:51+00:00

George

Guest


Well said. Neither Marsh should be playing.

2018-10-10T04:04:46+00:00

Matt H

Roar Guru


Renshaw’s card looks marked. If he had not played enough cricket before this test, well he won’t have played any more since. I don’t see how Langer could pick him and not lose face, and Langer is not one to back down. Besides, Picking Renshaw does nothing to solve Langer’s main problem - how to ensure Bancroft is able to walk back into the side.

2018-10-10T04:01:08+00:00

Matt H

Roar Guru


So hard for the middle order to start against spin in helpful conditions. Now, who was our last middle order batsman to successfully do that and score a century in Asia? That right, the Maxwell in the room.

2018-10-10T03:42:10+00:00

Russell Neville

Roar Rookie


Rob I agree that both Marsh boys have been favourites of the selectors. However in this instance he was hit on the front pad on about middle and leg I can't see how the ball could have hit the leg stump.

2018-10-10T03:37:51+00:00

Ouch

Roar Rookie


"We’ll never know if Maxwell would have done better" He only had to score 1

2018-10-10T03:26:41+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Yep winning the toss is vital. Hopefully the Aussies will get to bat first as AD and it's a similar pitch.

2018-10-10T03:14:43+00:00

Rellum

Roar Guru


What a performance by Sandhu

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