Source: Gulf Times
KOLKATA: Kamran Akmal and Misbah-ul-Haq cracked impressive centuries under pressure to sustain Pakistan’s hopes of avoiding the follow-on in the second Test against India here yesterday.
Akmal scored a solid 119 for his fifth hundred and Misbah 108 not out for his maiden ton, as Pakistan recovered from 150-5 to post 358-6 in their first innings at stumps on the third day in reply to India’s 616-5 declared.
The tourists, trailing 1-0 in the three-Test series, now require 59 more runs with four wickets in hand to make India bat again in the match.
In-form Misbah and wicket-keeper Akmal counter-attacked to put on 207 for the sixth wicket. They kept the Indian attack at bay for more than two sessions with their responsible knocks.
Pakistan found the right pair just when they looked like conceding a huge advantage to India.
They were in trouble in the morning after losing four big wickets in the space of 73 runs in a poor batting display on a good track.
Akmal, 25, was more aggressive and was the first to reach three figures — his fourth ton against India — when he cut paceman Munaf Patel for a four. He then removed his helmet and touched the ground with his forehead.
“It was tough when I went in to bat as we had lost four wickets. It was the toughest of my centuries. I was under pressure to perform. The instruction from the coach and captain was to bat as long as possible,” said Akmal. “I am disappointed that I got out at the wrong time. I should have batted out the day. Our aim now is to save the follow-on tomorrow morning.”
The 33-year-old Misbah, playing only his ninth Test, reached his hundred when he turned leg-spinner Anil Kumble to square-leg for a four.
He has so far struck 10 boundaries in his 204-ball knock. The pair required both luck and pluck to pull their team out of trouble, with Misbah offering a chance on 22 and Akmal on 87.
Kumble was the bowler to suffer in the morning when Sachin Tendulkar dropped Misbah at mid-wicket and then left-arm seamer Zaheer Khan saw Patel floor a catch at long-leg to let off Akmal.
The lapses proved costly as both Misbah and Akmal went on to dominate the Indian attack with their attractive strokeplay.
Akmal was bowled by off-spinner Harbhajan Singh in the day’s penultimate over after hitting 20 fours.
India struggled after claiming four wickets in the first session, with Harbhajan taking two, and Kumble and Patel one apiece.
“Misbah and Akmal batted well. Misbah is a quality batsman and plays spin very well. We all know that Akmal is a gutsy batsman and has scored centuries against us in similar circumstances,” said Harbhajan.
“We can still win the match and seal the series. The first session tomorrow will be very important. We need to get four wickets early and then decide what to do. A result has to come in this match.” (AFP)
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Tags: Cricket, India, Kamran Akmal, Misbah ul Haq, Test, Younis





4 responses so far ↓
1 Shan // Dec 5, 2007 at 4:52 pm
This is something to be really proud of! For the first time after the 1992 world cup I feel that we have a good mature team who knows how to play a team game, not a one-man-show like Afridi!
2 Hassan // Dec 5, 2007 at 4:59 pm
This was just a stroke of luck… Pakistani team can never be mature!
3 Ali // Dec 5, 2007 at 5:03 pm
Hassan you can at least try to appreciate the sincere efforts of our team to save the day successfully! Pakistani’s love to sit back and criticize everyone and never appreciate the good things that our leaders/sportsmen/etc deliver!
4 ahmad saeed // Dec 7, 2007 at 6:36 pm
couldnt find any news other than cricket…
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