Day4: Pakistanis seal win as SA is delivered some home truths
Having conceived easily their most consistent performance of their visit to date, Pakistan's cricketers have today secured their first win on their current tour of Australia with an innings and 26 run success over South Australia at the Adelaide Oval. Although they were courageously resisted through the morning by David Fitzgerald, bowlers Waqar Younis, Mushtaq Ahmed and Saqlain Mushtaq put the finishing touches on their team's triumph satisfactorily enough and they wrapped the match up around forty-five minutes before lunch on the fourth and final day.
For most of this contest, the Pakistanis captured exactly the kind of form that they found so elusive in last week's First Test in Brisbane and the win will undoubtedly prove an excellent morale-booster in the lead up to the Second Test which starts in three days' time in Hobart. It opened with an even team bowling performance on the first day as they dismissed the home team for a total of 250 on an excellent batting surface in an exhibition which provided them with a firm platform for success. Although they were unable at any stage to contain the typically forceful strokeplay of rival captain Darren Lehmann (136*), Mohammad Akram (3/64), Waqar (also 3/64) and Mushtaq (3/46) all stood out as they initiated a regular flow of wickets around the burly left hander.
Again consistency was the key word when it came the tourists' turn to bat. Statistically, Ijaz Ahmed (141) proved the most successful but each of five players surpassed fifty in a wonderful exercise in batting practice. Happiest when clubbing the ball through the off side, Ijaz struck twenty-two boundaries in a 323 minute long innings which grew significantly in quality the further it progressed and which almost certainly saved his place in the Test lineup. The rapidly maturing Yousuf Youhana (90) also crafted a glorious innings, although his annoyance at again finding a way to get himself out when a century was his for the taking was palpable as he left the crease. Opener Wajahatullah Wasti (74) ignited hopes of a Test recall; Moin Khan (66) was characteristically punishing; and the elegant Mohammad Wasim (50) constructed another correct half century.
While Fitzgerald (111*) battled extremely bravely, and in company with Chris Davies (38) and Ben Johnson (32), weathered the storm for a while, the home team was again little match for the Pakistani bowling in the second innings and it was no surprise, especially once Lehmann (11) made an unlucky early departure, to see them dismissed for a mere 250 for the second time in the game. Fitzgerald's capacity to become the first South Australian to carry his bat in a first class match since Andrew Hilditch achieved the feat seven seasons ago should not be diminished in any way for his was a great fighting hand, but the story of the innings was again largely one of batsmen foundering against the Pakistani bowlers' talents. Waqar (4/61) was hostile throughout and almost certainly booked his berth in the Test eleven, while spinners Mushtaq (4/74) and Saqlain (2/59) also confounded their opponents. Only paceman Akram (0/50) struggled to find rhythm.
For the South Australians, this was another tame effort in what has been a generally lacklustre opening to the new Australian season. They were without three of their better players (Greg Blewett, Jamie Siddons and Jason Gillespie), it is true, but again they failed badly to provide sufficient support to batsmen Lehmann and Fitzgerald and bowler Paul Wilson (whose effort in capturing 6/106 was typical of his never say die attitude for his State). Also of increasing concern is the form of new wicketkeeper Graham Manou, whose pair with the bat in this game has left him pondering the fact that he has failed to score in four of his five first class innings to date. And probably most worrying of all is the notion that the team has now played three matches at home this season and been comprehensively defeated in each.