Pakistan will struggle in Adelaide despite their resurgence at the Gabba

By Giri Subramanian / Roar Guru

We can all agree that the pink-ball Test in Adelaide is probably Pakistan’s best chance to compete against Australia in Australia.

The ball swings a lot under lights, and it will be ideal conditions for bowlers like Mohammad Abbas and Imran Khan who don’t have the pace or the height to trouble the Aussie batters. The biggest concern for Pakistan for sure is their batting against the Australian bowling attack despite their improved showing in the second innings of the first Test.

Mohammad Rizwan and Babar Azam played brilliantly in the second innings at the Gabba, making the Australian attack work hard for their wickets. Even though it bodes well for the visitors, the rest of the batting is still a concern.

Captain Azhar Ali got out cheaply in both innings and the middle order is far from consistent. Haris Sohail and Ifthikar Ahmed looked out of depth in the little time they spent in the middle. While the bowling is still a concern with the lack of experience, the batting has become a bigger headache after the first Test.

The wicket at the Gabba was a good one to bat. Apart from the initial overs with the new ball, there was hardly anything for the bowlers and the Pakistan top order really struggled to counter the extra bounce. Haris Sohail repeated the same mistakes in both the innings and has shown to be vulnerable against pace and bounce.

Ifthikar Ahmed, who looked like a million bucks in the T20I series which preceded the Test series, looked to be troubled with the extra bounce as well. Except for Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan, all the Pakistan batters have been guilty of going hard at the ball.

While that would have been a great tactic in UAE or Pakistan, the extra bounce in Australia means that you cannot drive away from your body with no feet movement. Azam was clever enough to learn from his mistake in the first innings and showed exemplary skill to score a brilliant hundred.

Pakistan has some batting issues to iron out. (Harry Trump-IDI/IDI via Getty Images)

Rizwan as well seemed to enjoy the pace and bounce on these pitches to cut and pull his way to an attractive 95, but again the rest of the batting is still under scrutiny.

Coach Mishbah-ul-Haq said that his young team lacks consistency and that was evident in their patchy performance in the first Test. The Adelaide Test will be a completely different kettle of fish and it is not going to be easy for the Pakistan batters.

Even though the pink ball will give the ordinary Pakistan bowling attack some breathing space, their batters will face increased scrutiny from the in-form Aussie pacers as well under lights. While Pakistan will be hoping to draw some inspiration from their last pink-ball Test in Australia, the Adelaide track will be completely different from what they faced three years ago.

Things aren’t going to get better for the visitors and the selection headaches in both batting and bowling combinations increase another layer of complication for an already struggling team. While the Pakistan camp and fans alike are elated with the great fightback in the second innings, I would tread with caution as things aren’t as rosy as it seems.

The Adelaide Test will be an interesting one and it will for sure give the Pakistan bowling attack better chance of troubling the Australian batters, but again, I still expect the latter to win the game convincingly.

The Crowd Says:

2019-11-25T22:04:25+00:00

dungerBob

Roar Rookie


Babar and Rizwan can't do it all themselves. They need some decent runs from one or two others. The day/night aspect might help to even things up a bit but only if it's Oz that does most of the batting when the lights come on. If Pakistan get caught in the lights it could get ugly unless they can somehow stiffen that top/middle order up.

AUTHOR

2019-11-25T21:51:57+00:00

Giri Subramanian

Roar Guru


I think Waqar Younis said that he hasn't been in great rhythm recently. It begs the question why was he even in the squad if the bowling coach thought he wasn't in great rhythm to even feature in the X1. Pakistan team selections are always full of contradictions. They never seem to get the right people in the XI.

2019-11-25T19:34:01+00:00

dat

Roar Rookie


I think it had more to do with his rhythm.Despite his career avg of 18 he avg 46 in his last 4 tests,which is still a big drop in a relatively short career(dropped from 3rd to 12th cause of that). Some blamed it on him not recovering well from previous injury ,for his form in the 2 test in south africa,but the kiwis prior to his injury also managed to play him out in UAE. Even in the recent domestic QEA trophy he was averaging 50 odd in the 3 games he played. Waqar mentioned his pace has dropped off as well ,so if he wasn't in rhythm or is still carrying some minor niggle or what not and under performed in Brisbane the fans back home would have opted to blame misbah and co for not picking imran in the team despite his form in the warmup game. But i did see some home fans,a couple of writers for cricinfo from pakistan and even some reporters being happy with how the match played out as they enjoyed the mini fight back from babar even if the final outcome didn't change. With a few of the more delusional fans suggesting replacing 3-4 players, is all that's needed to win the next test.

2019-11-25T17:33:26+00:00

John

Guest


Pakistan have to pick Abbas first. He is ranked no 12 in the world with a bowling average of 18 however the Pakistan selectors thought he wasn't good enough and decided to go with an untried 16 and 19 year old. Also good to hear Pakistan fans are delighted with an innings defeat they are clearly easily pleased.

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