Cummins cleans up again but Pakistan recover from collapse with wagging tail frustrating Aussies

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Pat Cummins tore through Pakistan for the third straight innings as Australia took an early stranglehold of the Third Test at the SCG but the tourists fought hard with a wagging tail not only preventing a total collapse but putting up a decent score.

Cummins made it a trifecta of five-wicket hauls after taking 5-61 from 18 top-class overs following on from his 10-97 match haul at the MCG last week but after being bowled out late in the day for 313, it could have been much worse for Pakistan after both openers went without scoring.

They slumped to 4-47 and were teetering at 5-96 when skipper Shan Masood departed but wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan smacked 88 from 103 deliveries and tailender Aamer Jamal followed his lead with his maiden Test half-century as Pakistan’s lower order more than tripled the output from the top half.

Jamal at one stage produced a barely believable reverse sweep to smash Nathan Lyon for six as the last-wicket partnership with noted bunny Mir Hamza surged past 70.

The 27-year-old, in just his third Test, looked like he could even get to a century before he finally holed out at long on off Lyon for a belligerent 82.

Australia will resume at 0-6 on day two with retiring opener David Warner (six) at the crease and intent on finishing his career with a bang but the hosts have a lot more work to do than they would have expected after dominating the first couple of sessions.

Cummins now has 18 wickets for the series at a Scott Boland-esque average of 11.33, striking every 27.3 deliveries. He became the first Australian since Merv Hughes in 1988 to rack up three five-wicket hauls in successive innings on home soil.

Pakistan were on the back foot early when Abdullah Shafique followed up his forgettable MCG Test by nicking the second ball of the match to Steve Smith at second slip off Mitchell Starc.

Aamer Jamal plays a shot during day one of the Third Test between Australia and Pakistan in Sydney. (Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

Debutant opening partner Saim Ayub suffered a similar fate when he snicked Josh Hazlewood’s second delivery from the next over and Alex Carey’s gloves did the rest.

Cummins’ stranglehold over Babar Azam continued when he produced another in-ducker, this time through the air with swing rather than vicious bite off the pitch, which bamboozled Pakistan’s premier batter and he was trapped in front for 26.

The Australian captain made quick work of Saud Shakeel, who hung his bat out at a ball he could have left alone and only hung himself out to dry by nicking through to Carey on five.

Mitchell Marsh should have had Masood out for 32 in the 25th over when he edged to Steve Smith at second slip but the third umpire called the visiting captain back after replays showed the Australian all-rounder overstepped the mark.

Marsh made up for it a short time later by removing Masood for 35 with another deflection to Smith in the same position.

Agha Salman steadied the ship while Rizwan showed why he is a fixture at the top of the order for Pakistan in the white-ball arena by belting 10 fours and two sixes in his 103-ball innings.

He scooped Hazlewood with exceptional skill to clear the rope and then slogged Lyon a similar distance.

But just when it looked like he would reach triple figures, Rizwan was brought undone by being too measured.

He checked a hook shot off Cummins rather than trying to clear the boundary rope and only succeeded in offering Hazlewood a sharp chance in the deep.

“He’s an incredible bowler and I think if you look back at all the best bowlers in the history of cricket, they’ve always had that in them,” Marsh said of his skipper. 

“The ability to come on and take a wicket when the team needs to. There’s always going to be spells where he’s got his tail up and the ball’s swinging and nipping. 

“But I think the best part about Patty is that he always finds a way for us.” 

After Salman and Rizwan put on 94 for the sixth wicket, the all-rounder (53), fellow spinner Sajid Khan (15) and fast bowler Hasan Ali (duck) were dismissed in quick succession and the end looked nigh with Pakistan at 9-227.

But the crowd of 33,905 were treated to a daytime pyrotechnic display of hitting from Jamal, who slashed his way to nine fours and four sixes.

The Australians had a poor day in the field by their lofty standards with Lyon spilling a tough chance off his own bowling, Usmam Khawaja shelling a chance in the cordon which should have been taken and Travis Head another at bat-pad while a couple of misfields gave Pakistan more of a helping hand.

Hamza played his role in holding up an end for seven runs (also his top score) from 43 deliveries, wearing a couple of bruises for his trouble as the Australian quicks tried to unsettle him with a bumper barrage.

“The discussion in our camp has been that as soon as our batters from No.7 and eight onward walk out to bat, they start targeting us with bouncers,” Aamer said. 

“I had told the guys in the dressing-room that whatever they do and however often I get hit or wherever I get hit, I will go out and take on the bouncer today.”

It’s a pity the Pakistani brains trust didn’t show similar intent to fight when they selected their XI for this Test with pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi rested after the team lost the first two matches of the series.

“I’ve played two games [this series], and a lot of overs to be honest,” Shaheen said during an in-game interview with Seven. “They’re just managing my workload, the medical team and team management decided to take a rest for this [Test].”

It’s even worse that Shaheen seems to believe that it’s the right option to rest up before a five-match T20 series against New Zealand.

Even though this is a dead rubber, the plague of Test cricketers putting T20 matches – both international and franchise affairs – ahead of the traditional format is spreading, putting yet another chink in the armour of the five-day game.

Pakistan’s surprising late resistance presented Warner with a tricky situation in his final Test – they batted long enough so that one over needed to be bowled in the shortest session possible before stumps.

Warner looked full of energy in the field after walking onto the field with his three daughters before the start of play but unfortunately for him, the baggy green cap that was lost in transit between Melbourne and Sydney has still not been located.

He caressed the opening ball from Sajid through the covers for a boundary and added a couple more before nearly getting bowled when a defensive prod bounced millimetres over his bails.

Warner walked off the pitch with a steely resolve as he has now set himself up nicely for a farewell knock to remember on his beloved home turf on day two of his final Test.

Despite Pakistan’s top-order wobbles, the pitch looks to be a runs-friendly surface and with the best visiting bowler putting his feet up in the pavilion, the stage is set for Warner and the Australian batters to send the 37-year-old out on a winning note.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-04T06:16:43+00:00

The Barry

Roar Guru


I was at the ground yesterday and the over rated stuck out like a sore thumb In between every over runners are coming out for batting or bowling teams. Drinks, gloves, messages… it’s completely out of control DRS reviews don’t help In the last session, every time the batsmen scored a single, two Aussie fielders were swapping caps for helmets or vice versa… that was when they were trying to pick up the over rate

2024-01-04T05:26:55+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


This is a dead rubber and they decided to play the best team. So no free spots for wannabes. These bumper barrages to tailenders is plain dumb. It like our quicks want to demonstrate that they're big and tough and dumb. And they get hit all over the shop. They did a similar job with similar results during the last Ashes in England. One wicket to win the second test and they spend half an hour bowling everywhere except at the stumps. Good on Afridi for prioritizing T20 as Harris Rauf did before him. And he is captain. Trying to pander to washed up has beens never worked for any cricketer. Our limited author a bit out of his depth yet again.

2024-01-04T05:06:03+00:00

ant

Roar Rookie


agree that Joel Paris is good, really good. “Better than Richardson & Morris”… well…. tough to call….

2024-01-04T02:09:08+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


It’s one thing putting everyone on the boundary with the number 11 and Ben Stokes, but Jamal bats at 9 and averages 20 in 30 FC games. Very poor tactics. ” I think the best part about Patty is that he always finds a way for us.” Except when he doesn’t. E.g. before this series in 7 Tests Babar had faced him for 200+ deliveries without getting out and scoring a pile of runs. Don’t tell me Pat wasn’t trying. It’s just an illusion created by great bowlers getting people out more often than others, and commentators needing to impose meaning on often random events.

2024-01-04T02:05:17+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Looked like it was hitting leg stump pretty much in the middle to me.

2024-01-04T02:04:41+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


With the amount of cricket being played these days a rest should not be misconstrued by a player as being dropped or semi dropped. Players today are more prone to physical and mental burnout and as a preventative measure a rest is a very good strategy.

2024-01-04T01:31:36+00:00

U

Roar Rookie


Joel Paris is better than those two.

2024-01-03T23:36:11+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Yep, full and straight usually gets the job done.

2024-01-03T23:24:04+00:00

hilsnz

Roar Rookie


I've got three suggestions...off, middle or leg.

2024-01-03T22:57:34+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


There's been plenty of media space to Jamal's innings and rightly so, but for mine, Mir Hamza's innings was equally impressive. Here's a genuine number 11 batsman, playing in only his 4th Test against the best attack in world cricket in their country yet he hangs around for well over an hour and actually played pretty well. The big concern for the Aussies is the lack of a Plan B. For all the nice words about Cummins "being able to come on and take wickets when we need it", he couldn't get out a number 10 or 11 batsman, so reverted to the sort of tactic we saw in England - short pitched bowling. This is not the first time this has failed, so surely they need to come up with something better?

2024-01-03T22:49:38+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


I made the comment a few days ago about resting players and got absolutely hammered by certain people on this forum. If you go by their comments, nobody can be dropped unless they're injured or out of form. Tiredness doesn't count

2024-01-03T18:59:12+00:00

Omnitrader

Roar Rookie


The technology is more accurate now, I think something similar happened in Melbourne and a commentator questioned it, the response was that it is more accurate now.

2024-01-03T18:58:16+00:00

Vicboy

Roar Rookie


Deserves a hundred. Gets starts, but doesn’t have a way to drop back a gear - eg leave a few balls that he can’t score from, but not going to get him out. He should watch some of Gilly in his pomp, or Smith.

2024-01-03T18:50:35+00:00

Vicboy

Roar Rookie


Excellent idea! Update every session

2024-01-03T14:02:16+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


I know I'm getting a bit old but why was Babar out? The on field umpire gave him not out and the ball tracking showed less than half the ball hitting the stumps. As far as I'm aware, that's "umpire's call" and the review should have been dismissed. Am I missing something?

2024-01-03T13:59:51+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


Me too and their best batsman has hardly fired a shot!

2024-01-03T13:55:44+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


I wrote this article for the Roar just over 2 years ago. https://www.theroar.com.au/2021/12/15/how-do-we-fix-slow-over-rates-in-test-cricket/

2024-01-03T13:37:27+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Seeing Morris get 5/24 from four overs for the Scorchers, (yes,I know,I know, meaningless BBL blah blah blah,) suggests he might be handy at some point.

2024-01-03T12:44:33+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Gee Pakistan have been entertaining this series. What an effort from their lower order.

2024-01-03T11:35:37+00:00

Steele

Roar Rookie


At the very least give them a go in a meaningless match. It serves the team better if they are exposed to Test cricket rather than waiting for an injury or a retirement. Get the feeling the NSW quartet all wanted to be a part of Davey’s last game.

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