Date-stamped : 18 Aug96 - 22:32
Tetley's Challenge Series
Essex v Pakistanis
Chelmsford
17,18,19 August 1996

====>REPORT (Day 1, 17 August 1996)

New Akram awaits call

Barrie Fairall at Chelmsford

IT was time to draw breath before the final  push,  though  there
was  no shortage of incidents here as the Pakistanis prepared for
this week`s final Test and Essex looked ahead to  a  run  at  the
Championship.  Wickets  and  runs  for the watcher, words for the
listener and all neatly packaged in a day`s play.

Pakistani fortunes were mixed, as they inevitably  are  in  these
matches away from the international arena, but spir- its are high
and there is a buzz in the camp  about  a burgeoning talent. Eng-
land  beware,  because  not   one  but  two Akrams will likely be
facing them at the Oval.

With Wasim, the captain, resting,  Mohammad  Akram burst into the
reckoning  with  seven  for  51 in the win over Leicestershire at
Grace Road. Pakistan`s  manager, Yawar Saeed, says: "He should be
there   for  the  final Test because the  Oval wicket  will  pro-
vide  a  little   more bounce."

Mohammad is 21, played League cricket  in   Bristol  last  summer
and  is looking to add to his four caps.  "Courtney Walsh said he
was a good boy and that we should keep   an   eye  on  him,"  the
manager  said.  "He has to be among the quickest in the world and
he swings and cuts the ball as  well.  I think he`s about to  be-
come a Test-class bowler."

For the moment Mohammad  had  to  bide  his   time,  while  there
were  a  few alarms in the Pakistani  dressing  room first thing.
Arriving on a high from  Leicester,  a  low point was reached  at
four  down  for 63 in the 18th over,  be- sides which Inzamam-ul-
Haq added to the  problems  by  limping off with a knee injury.

Inzamam, who had made 22, laughed off  suggestions  that  he  was
doubtful for the Test. His left knee has  been giving him trouble
for a while now, but the  Lord`s  century- maker said that he re-
tired here purely as a precaution and in any case returned at the
fall of the seventh wicket.

Elsewhere in the ranks it was pride that   was   in-  jured.  The
tourists  won  the toss and  batted  on  a  glorious morning. Not
so glorious, however, was a decline that began  in  Mark  Ilott`s
opening over.  Swinging  and  seaming  the ball, the left-armer`s
fourth delivery came  back  at  Aamir Sohail and bowled him.

Ilott brought another one back, too, in his second  over  to  ac-
count  for  Ijaz  Ahmed  leg before. Two wickets  in seven balls,
then, for the Essex man, who took a breath- er after Saeed  Anwar
escaped with a couple of streaky fours to the third man boundary.

Saeed, though, fell to Steve Andrew when he  edged to second slip
and  Salim  Malik`s  return to his former county was cut short by
Ronnie Irani, who took out  Rashid  Latif with  his  second  ball
after  lunch.  But  not before Asif  Muj- taba had struck him for
four successive boundaries in help- ing raise 64  for  the  fifth
wicket.

Asif continued  the  good  work  by   completing   a  hard-earned
half-century  during a 45-run  stand  with  Saqlain Mustaq, while
Inzamam picked up the  threads  by  reaching his 50  aided  by  a
runner,  as  the  Pakistanis eased past the  200 mark to give the
livewire Mohammad something  to  bowl  at later.

====>REPORT (Day 2, 18 August 1996)

Tour Match: Pakistan raise tempo with demolition job

By Clive Ellis at Chelmsford

FORGET sensible preparations for the final Test. The  Pakistanis`
contemptuous  demolition of the Essex attack yesterday smacked of
a side already raising the tempo for the one-day internationals.

Saeed Anwar, possessed of an almost  Lara-like   fa-  cility  for
scoring  fast  without  significant  risk,  made  a glorious hun-
dred off 90 balls, and  Salim  Malik  subjected his former  team-
mates  to  further torment with his first  cen- tury of an under-
achieving tour.

Pakistan are ideally placed to finish their county programme  to-
day with a fifth thumping victory to set against a single defeat,
by Warwickshire.

The Pakistanis, like England, have selection  puz- zles to  solve
before  gathering at the  Oval  on  Thursday, but theirs are born
of riches rather than poverty. The return of Aamir Sohail to fit-
ness  will  leave Shabab Kabir  on  the sidelines, though the 18-
year-old has done very little wrong, and the extra pace of Moham-
mad Akram is expected  to  give him the vote over Ata-ur-Rehman.

Essex, well below full  strength,  resisted  nobly for the  first
1.75 hours through Darren Robinson and Barry Hyam.  Waqar Younis,
who generated great pace to take all three Essex wickets to  fall
on Saturday, was  not  quite as lethal yesterday and Hyam, making
only his  third  first- class appearance,  gave  Robinson   stout
support  in  a fourth-wicket stand of 93.

A miscued pull off Akram  was  Robinson`s  undoing and Hyam  fell
in  the last over before lunch, caught bat and pad one short of a
maiden fifty. Ronnie  Irani,  who  took four successive fours off
Akram,  was  caught  in  the deep off Saqlain Mushtaq, whose four
wickets took his tally in the last 3.5 matches to 24.

Waqar returned to terrorise the lengthy Essex  tail  and  emerged
with his first  five-wicket  haul  of  the tour.

Anwar and Sohail played with complete  freedom  at the  start  of
Pakistan`s  second  innings,  and  though  Sohail has yet to pass
50 in a first-class innings on  the  trip  he  looked  blissfully
unconcerned when bowled for 40,  giving John Childs the charge in
the last over before tea.

Malik, who had been struggling  for  form  throughout  the  tour,
played  himself  in  cautiously  while  Anwar  wreaked havoc. The
left-hander was caught at slip immediately he  had completed  his
fourth  hundred   of   the  summer,  leaving  the stage clear for
Malik to  gather  confidence  with  every  ex- uberant stroke.

====>REPORT (Day 3, 19 August 1996)

Tour Match: Pakistan in total control

By Clive Ellis at Chelmsford

THE only note of hope for England to emerge from this  embarrass-
ingly lop-sided affair was that one of the two all-devouring Pak-
istani bowlers who shared 18 of the 19 Essex  wickets  to   fall,
Saqlain Mushtaq, is unlikely to play at the Oval.

The off-spinner could not have done more to book  a  Test  place.
He  has  taken 29 wickets  at  less  than  16 apiece - all in the
last four county matches -  and  is  adding almost daily credence
to  claims that he is already, at the  age of 19, the best bowler
of his type in the world.

The Pakistani high command are not ruling out the possibility  of
Saqlain`s   inclusion  on  Thursday, but he will not usurp senior
spinner Mushtaq Ahmed and,  given that the tourists are likely to
insist  on  some pace back-up for Wasim Akram and the rejuvenated
Waqar Younis,  the  only other  means  of  accommodating  Saqlain
would  be  to  play  five batsmen.

Four of the potential  top  six  scored  centuries here and, more
ominous still for England, Waqar zipped  back into top gear after
a stuttering performance in the  second Test at Headingley.

The Essex attack looked respectable on paper,  but still got ham-
mered on an excellent batting pitch.  The  bat- ting, on the oth-
er hand, combined inexperience in the top order with the lengthi-
est  of  tails,  and  even  lacked  captain  Paul Prichard in the
second innings because of a migraine.

Small wonder that Waqar rediscovered his  appetite  for  destruc-
tion.  His  match  figures were nine  for  68, culminating in the
spectacular removal of Mark Ilott`s  middle and Peter Such`s  off
stump.

Essex were basking in the illusory comfort  of  86 for one before
Saqlain  weaved  his  magic with  a  pre-lunch spell of three for
three in two overs.

Darren  Robinson  scored  a  second    accomplished  half-century
in the match but he was caught and  bowled,  deceived by a slower
ball from Saqlain. The off-spinner  finished  with  five  for  34
and a match return of nine for 81.

Source :: Electronic Telegraph (http://www.telegraph.co.uk)

<END> Contributed by Ravi (sista@*.latech.edu)
