Sarfraz keeps nerves
2017-06-13
CARDIFF: Sarfraz Ahmed produced a superb captain`s innings to help Pakistan overcome a f amiliar attack of batting nerves and take his side into the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy with a threewicket win over Sri Lanka at Cardiff on Monday.
Pakistan will take on hosts and Group Aleaders Englandin the first semi-final at Cardiff on Wednesday while the other semi-final will pit Group B winners India againstGroup A runners-up Bangladesh at Edgbaston on Thursday.
The final will be played at the Oval on Sunday (June 18).
Pakistan, chasing a seemingly modest 237 to win, collapsed to 162for seven in the see-saw game.
But an unbroken stand of 75 between Sarfraz, dropped twice on his way to 61 not out, and Mohammad Amir (28 not out) saw Pakistan complete a thrilling win.
Man-of-the-matchSarfrazended the contest when he uppercut L asith Malinga for four.It was his fifth boundary in 79 balls and led the joyous wicketkeeper to run a semi-circle round the ground.
Both Pakistan and Sri Lanka had to win on Monday to join already qualified title-holders India from Group B in the knockout stages of a tournament featuring the world`s top eight one-day international sides.
Pakistan started their group campaign with a woeful 124-run defeat by India, but bounced back to defeat top-ranked South Africa before this success against Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka were dismissed for 236 well below the modern-day ODI par total of 300.
And it seemed like it wasn`t going to be their day when Pakistan opener Azhar Ali was dropped on nought by Asela Gunaratne at point.
But fellow opener Fakhar Zaman was far more dynamic, hitting three fours in as many balls off the unorthodox Malinga.
In just his second match at this level, the left-handed Fakhar completed a 34-ball fif ty. But, two balls later, he fell for exactly 50 when a top-edged hook off Nuwan Pradeep was caught by Gunaratne at fine leg.
Pakistan, then 92 for one, saw three wickets go down in a hurry.
Babar Azam and Mohammad Hafeezboth fell to tame legside catches before Azhar`s painstaking 34 ended when he fended at paceman Suranga Lakmal and Kusal Mendis held an awkward catch at a wide slip position.
Shoaib Malik (11) then feathered a catch behind following an attempted pull of f Malinga.
Fahim Ashraf thrillingly hooked Malinga over long leg for six, but the ODI debutant was run out for a run-aball 15 when bowler Thisara Perera deflected a Sarfraz drive onto the stumps at the non-striker`s end.
Perera drop: Sarfraz was now the key man, but Sri Lanka dropped him on 38, when with Pakistan 194 for seven, Thisara Perera at mid-on floored the simplest of catches. And he was missed again, on 40, when substitute Seekkuge Prasanna dropped a far more difficult chance running in from deep square leg.
In the end, Sri Lanka were made to pay for a poor batting display.
Sent in by Sarfraz, they were making steady progress at 161 for three while top-scorers Dickwella (73) and captain Angelo Mathews (39) were together at the crease. But the loss of Mathews sparked a middle-order collapse that saw four wickets lost for just six runs as Sri Lanka slumped to 167 for seven.
Only same late tail-order hitting, including Suranga Lakmal`s ODI best 26,gotSriLanka past200in aninnings where Pakistan pacemen Junaid Khan (three for 40) and Hasan Ali (three for 43) did the bulk of the damage.
All-rounder Mathews, fresh from an unbeaten fifty in Sri Lanka`s shock seven-wicket victory over India, drove off-spinner Mohammad Hafeez for six, while Dickwella ended a sequence of 54 balls without a boundary by cover-driving left-arm spinner Imad Wasim for four. Mathews, however, fell when an inside edge off Mohammad Amir gave the elated left-arm paceman his first wicket of the tournament.
In what turned out to be a brilliant allround match for wicket-keeper Sarfraz, he held a superb low one-handed catch to dismiss Dickwella after the batsman got an inside edge to Amir.-Agencies