Dalmiya sceptical about early resumption of bilateral ties

In an effort to revive truncated cricket ties with Pakistan, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has written to Atal Behari Vajpayee, India’s Prime Minister, requesting him for permission to play Pakistan at neutral venues. The Indian government is yet to officially respond.However, Jagmohan Dalmiya, the BCCI president, said that the revival of bilateral ties between the two countries would be delayed, despite the positive signals from the Indian government. He said: “It may take until early next year because of many reasons. Many of our cricketers are injured, while we have also allowed some of our players to play county cricket in England.”On Saturday Dalmiya met General Tauqir Zia, chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), at an Asian Cricket Foundation meeting in Dubai. But Dalmiya admitted to the Times of India that the meeting failed to find a slot for the Asia Cup – the Test championship involving India Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh – before next February.The Indian government had banned bilateral cricket with Pakistan in 2000. However, the Indian team is allowed to play Pakistan in multilateral events, as they did in the recently concluded World Cup. Direct sporting relations continue between India and Pakistan in other sports such as hockey.Earlier in March, the Indian government had overruled another request from the BCCI to resume bilateral matches with Pakistan. The BCCI claimed that it could be heavily penalized by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for failing to fulfill commitments. In an embarrassing contradiction, the ICC promptly denied such a possibility, maintaining that it will not hold individual boards accountable for governmental decisions.But with big money at stake, both the Indian and Pakistani cricket boards have increased their lobbying with the Indian government. “We want to somehow resume bilateral cricket,” said Karunakaran Nair, the BCCI secretary. Nair said that senior board members would discuss the issue by the end of May.

Inquiry Commission on alleged match-fixing in Pakistan cricket appointed

An inquiry into alleged match fixing in Pakistan cricket has been announced. Hon’ble Mr Justice Karamat Nazir Bhandari of the Lahore High Court has been appointed Commission of Inquiry and has issued the following terms of reference:Inquiry – World Cup 1999

Before Hon’ble Mr Justice Karamat Nazir Bhandari, Commission of Inquiry, Lahore High Court, Lahore.

  1. Whereas the Federal Government of Pakistan in pursuance of the power conferred by Section 3 of Pakistan Commission of Inquiry Act, 1956 and sub Section (1) of Section 5 thereof has appointed Hon’ble Mr. Justice Karamat Nazir Bhandari, Judge Lahore High Court, Lahore as commission of Inquiry to inquire into the allegations of match fixing attributed to Pakistan Cricket Team.
  2. The Terms of reference of commissions of Inquiry are as under:
    1. To Probe and ascertain whether there was match fixing between Pakistan and Bangladesh (World Cup-1999).
    2. The probe and ascertain whether there was match fixing between Pakistan and India (World Cup-1999).
    3. To determine whether some persons were involved and responsible for match fixing and betting.
    4. To recommend appropriate action and measures that in future this episode is not repeated in case of an affirmative finding.
    5. To inquire into the conduct of Umpire Javed Akhtar in the match between South Africa and England during South Africa tour to England in 1998.
  3. The public-at-large is informed that the Commission of Inquiry has decided to hold the inquiry at Lahore w.e.f. 22.9.2001 in the premises of the Lahore High Court, Lahore. Those having some information or evidence about the points in issue may get their names registered as witnesses with the Registrar. Commission of Inquiry by or before 20.9.2001. Statement of only those will be recorded during the inquiry, who have their names registered by or before the target date. Such registered witnesses will be separately summoned.

(sgd)
(Kazim Ali Malik)
Registrar,
Commission of Inquiry,
Lahore High Court,
Lahore.

Phone No: +92-42-9212418
Fax No: +92-42-9212281

Bruce blitz, bowlers hand Central Districts easy win

Central Districts 165 for 9 (Bruce 54, Worker 30, Verma 4-27) beat Wellington 132 (Pollard 44, Ronchi 42, Milne 2-18) by 33 runs
ScorecardFile photo – Adam Milne returned figures of 2 for 18 off his four overs•Getty Images

Tom Bruce’s blitz followed by an all-round bowling display provided Central Districts with their fourth win of the season, by 33 runs against Wellington in Napier.Central Districts were given a strong start after choosing to bat. Captain George Worker and Mahela Jayawardena smashed 48 in 35 balls before Anurag Verma had Jayawardena caught behind for 23 – his first score of less than 50 in three innings in the season. A few quick wickets ensued leaving Central Districts at 66 for 3 in the 10th over. Bruce, batting at No. 4, then combined with 18-year-old Josh Clarkson for a match-changing 53-run partnership in just 35 balls.Bruce struck two sixes and seven fours in his 31-ball 54 and took Central Districts past 150 before Wellington clawed their way back by restricting the hosts to 11 off the last two overs, as they finished with 165. Verma ended with career-best figures of 4 for 27 in his four overs.Wellington lost all that momentum as they were quickly reduced to 17 for 3 in the fourth over of the chase, with Seth Rance picking up two of those wickets. The match swung again as Luke Ronchi (42 off 22) and Michael Pollard (44 off 34), who were the only batsmen to reach double-digit scores, formed a 59-run stand off 38 balls to bring Wellington back into the contest.With Wellington requiring 90 off the last 10 overs, the match looked set for a thrilling finish, but a clump of wickets turned the match in Central Districts’ favour. Wellington were eventually bowled out for 132 in 19 overs, with Adam Milne being the pick of the bowlers with figures of 2 for 18.

New coach to be appointed by end of September

When will the BCCI appoint a successor to Greg Chappell? © AFP

A new coach for the Indian team “will in all likelihood be appointed by the end of September”, according to Ratnakar Shetty, the chief administrative officer of the Indian board (BCCI).Quoted in the , Shetty also didn’t deny that the team could have a manager and not a coach for the Twenty20 World Championship.Shetty also told NDTV that the selection of a new coach could take time since the team was in England and some members of the coach selection panel like Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shastri were away. “Maybe just after Twenty20 [World Championship] because even our boys are in England. Some members [of the coach selection panel] like Gavaskar and Shastri are also in England during the same periods. Therefore sometime they will have to find out to work on the modalities.”The BCCI continues to be undecided on the selection process even months after the coach hunt began. “If we have to announce and call for names we shall have to have a method of writing to the respective boards like Pakistan did and try to get people to apply.”We don’t know when the committee will meet. But before they meet we shall have to finalise how we go about calling for applications. We will have to set some parameters like what we expect of a coach.”Shetty told that the BCCI was being cautious since they didn’t want “a Ford-like situation to arise again”. Graham Ford had declined the position after being offered the post in June.Shetty admitted that the board had received a few applications – the latest according to news reports from Kepler Wessels, the former South African captain – but no steps had been taken thus far. “We have received some applications but we haven’t yet initiated the procedure.”

No second thoughts in sending Johnson home – selector

‘Mitchell’s seizing his opportunities. His progress over the last six months has been quiteamazing’ – Andrew Hilditch © Getty Images

Andrew Hilditch, the selector accompanying the Australian team in KualaLumpur, lavished praise on Mitchell Johnson after his stunning four-wicketburst against India, but insisted there were no second thoughts overthe decision to send him home midway through thetournament. With two league matches left, Australia are set to relyon more experienced hands, with the likes of Matthew Hayden, AndrewSymonds and Brett Lee coming back into the XI.”We made a decision at the start of the tournament to bring a larger groupthan normal,” said Hilditch. “We brought 18 players. We’ve got long- andshort-term goals for Australian cricket, and we took the opportunity tohave a look at some very exciting young players. The tour group is toolarge and we told them in advance that they’d be playing only the firsttwo games.”We’re thrilled with how they’ve gone. Obviously, Mitchell Johnson’sperformance last night was fantastic, a big moment for Australian cricketand for him. But now we get on with the rest of the tour. We’ve got Haydos[Hayden] coming back, which is exciting for us and for him.Michael Hussey will captain tomorrow, and Symonds and Lee come back intothe team.”When it was suggested that the move might halt Johnson’s momentum,Hilditch disagreed. “There’s a much bigger picture. He was told what hehad to do, and he’s taken his chance. That’s all you can do in cricket.This tournament is pretty unique in that we’ve not had any internationalcricket for about five months. We planned pretty carefully to get the bestout of it for the players and Australian cricket. It’s probably a one-off,but there were a lot of players we wanted to see exposed to internationalcricket.”After the Ashes last year, there was an opinion that the Australian teamwas past its best, and too dependent on an ageing core. The decision toblood youngsters was a conscious one, done to ensure that there would beno downswing similar to that caused by the exits of Greg Chappell, DennisLillee and Rodney Marsh in 1983-84.”The Australian side’s been a great side for a long period of time,” saidHilditch. “Some of the players that are going to leave Australian cricketare legends. Part of the process is to get these younger players aroundthe senior players and learning from them.”The biggest concern following the Ashes defeat had centred on the paceattack, and how it would cope in Glenn McGrath’s absence. The emergence ofJohnson, and the return from injury of Shaun Tait now gives the selectorsenviable options ahead of the Ashes. “I think we’ve made a fair bit ofprogress,” said Hilditch. “We’ve got a lot of good fast bowlers still notin the squad. Jason Gillespie’s there, one of the greatest bowlersAustralia’s produced with over 250 Test wickets. He’s going to push hardfor the Ashes. Tait’s an exciting prospect, and Mitchell’s seizing hisopportunities. His progress over the last six months has been quiteamazing. And we have Stuart Clark, who played really well in SouthAfrica.”He said that Tait had been close to selection for this tour, but “he’sstill got a bit of a shoulder issue that stops him throwing fulldistance”. And while appreciative of the variety that Johnson gave theattack, Hilditch wasn’t of the view that being a left-arm bowler gave himany special status. “I think the Australian cricket team’s at its bestwhen it’s got its best players on the paddock, whether they’re left orright-handed,” he said. “Left-handers obviously have certain advantages,if they can swing it. But if a right-hander swings the ball, he’s gotadvantages too.”He paid tribute to the system that nurtures talent – “We’ve got a verygood identification programme, a very good academy, and we’ve been followingMitchell’s progress for five years really” – and he reckoned that sterlingperformances from young players didn’t necessarily upset the selectionaims. “If a young player takes an opportunity, it doesn’t complicatethings, it’s just good,” he said. On Saturday’s evidence – Shane Watsonsmashed 79 from 74 balls, before Johnson stole the show – it was hard toargue with such an assessment.

Wisden rates Gilchrist the fastest scorer ever

Adam Gilchrist: the fastest of them all© Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist is the fastest Test runscorer of alltime, according to historic scientific research in the new edition of. It is the first serious undertaking ever attempted to calculate thebatting strike rates of every Test cricketersince 1877. The full list – the Hurricane Hundred – is published in the2004-05 edition of Wisden Australia, which comes out on November 3.Gilchrist comfortably tops the chart with a strike rate of 81.9 runs per 100 balls. Insecond place is Kapil Dev. Today’s heavier bats, smaller boundaries and buccaneeringapproach to batting are reflected in the fact that 30 of the fastest 100 arecurrent players. Four of them make the top 10: Gilchrist, Virender Sehwag of India (fifth), England’s Andrew Flintoff (sixth) andSri Lanka’s Sanath Jayasuriya (ninth). Matthew Haydenand Darren Lehmann rank 11th and 15th respectively.But despite the advantages of modern-day batsmen, an intriguing mixof dashers from yesteryear also figure prominently. Maurice Tate, the England allrounder of the 1920s and ’30s, is the third-fastest batsman. The swashbuckling South African Jimmy Sinclair, who debuted in 1896, ranks fourth. In eighth place is the legendary Australian strokemaker Victor Trumper, who hummed along at nearly 68 runs per 100 balls. Don Bradman, cricket’s most prodigious batsman, rates as the 16th-fastest.The Hurricane Hundred encompasses batsmen whoscored at least 1000 Test runs. If that minimum qualification isstripped away, then the speediest of them all – faster even than Gilchrist – was Gilbert Jessop, the bludgeoning Englishman of the early 20thcentury, who scored at a bewildering 112 runs per 100 balls.”It is fair to say that Gilchrist, taking both batting average andscoring speed into account, is the most dynamic batsman the game hasever seen,” says Charles Davis, the Melbourne-based cricket scientistwho conducted the research. “One advantage he has, as with Viv Richards, is that he plays in a supremely dominant side. But even when he is exposed topredicaments demanding fierce resistance, his response is invariablyaggressive.”Until now, the strike rates of batsmen through the ages have remaineda mystery. Balls faced were recorded irregularly – or not at all – until as recently as the mid-1980s. The Hurricane Hundred is the product of countless hours of detective work and slogging through old scorebooks and match reports. Where the number of balls a batsman faced in an innings is not available, Davis has made a near-precise estimate by taking into account the number ofminutes batted and the prevailing over-rate that day.”This research invites us to reassess cricket’s past, to seethe giants of batting in a new and revealing light,” says ChristianRyan, the editor of . “We always suspected Victor Trumper was something special, but wehad to rely on hearsay and imagination and romanticised eyewitnessaccounts. Now we have hard scientific evidence.”

Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack Australia 2004-05 is published on November 3. To order a copy from Cricshop, click here.

Benaud the new face of Australia

The voice of Australian cricket is about to become the face of Australian culture. Richie Benaud is fronting a series of funny, glossy TV advertisements, which will be screened all round the world in an attempt to reinvent Australia’s image as a tourist destination.The ads depict Benaud, wearing his favourite beige suit, strolling through Queensland rainforests and across Sydney’s Bondi Beach.He is pictured at the Camel Cup in Alice Springs, perched atop breathtaking escarpment, sticking his head out of a helicopter, riding a hot-air balloon and living it up outside the Bat & Ball Hotel. At every new location he delivers his trademark pronouncement: “Mmmmaaaarvellous.”The ads are a new variant on the pioneering “throw another shrimp on the barbie” commercials fronted by the actor Paul Hogan in the 1980s. Entitled”Australia: A Different Light”, they are part of an ambitious $360m campaign to show that Australia is about more than just beer and barbecues, sun and surf.Benaud, who appeared free of charge, confirmed this morning that the ads were not shot on location.”I’ve been to all of those places or similar places in all the years I’ve been in Australia,” he told Channel Nine, “but I wasn’t actually there. It was a brilliant piece of technology and I’m very happy to be part of it.”Benaud looks in magnificent shape at 73 and had no hesitation in starring in the ads. Nor was he worried about the fact that they, ever so affectionately, take the mickey out of him.”It was just one of those fun things,” he said. “You need a very, very good director to do anything like that and you must always obey your director, and that’s exactly what I did.”There can now be no doubt that Benaud is on something of a late-life roll. He played 63 Tests for Australia as a daring and innovative captain, legspinner and middle-order batsman. He has been the friendly, vaguely reptilian, face of Channel Nine’s cricket coverage for 27 years. Never, though, has he been more famous.He delivered the eulogy at Don Bradman’s funeral in March 2001 and has since stepped effortlessly into The Don’s shoes as cricket’s wise old king. In 2003, Wisden revealed that he had seen 486 Test matches – more than any man alive. By my calculations, this week’s first Test between England and New Zealand at Lord’s will be his 500th.It was widely feared Benaud would hang up the microphone when his Channel Nine contract expired at the end of last summer, prompting jittery speculation about who might succeed him. Simon O’Donnell, Ian Healy, Mark Taylor, Steve Waugh, James Brayshaw, Mark Nicholas and even Brendon Julian were mentioned. Instead Benaud declared that he was happy, the fans were delirious, the station was cock-a-hoop and he planned to bat on indefinitely.His distinctive voice – dry, wry and nasally – is mimicked by schoolkids, taxi-drivers, housewives and CEOs alike. His commentary shines on as fresh and droll and economical and astute and understated as ever. His fame now extends beyond cricket: last year he was an outside, though not entirely far-fetched, tip to become Australia’s next Governor-General. And it reaches beyond Australia too: the readers of Wisden Cricket Monthly voted him best commentator in England, by ever-expanding margins, six years in a row.The pop singer Delta Goodrem and poet Les Murray appear in similar ads. But Benaud’s ranks as the funniest and the campaign’s centrepiece. “Richie’s been an icon for years, not just of Australian cricket but of Australian culture,” said Australia’s Tourism Minister Joe Hockey. “When I rang Richie it was an immediate: `Yes, I’m prepared to do it.'”The ads have already been roadtested in the UK, Italy and Singapore – and “for some of the ads people had tears in their eyes”, according to Hockey. But can this same smooth-talking, silver-haired 73-year-old conquer the land of baseball and woo potential US visitors to Australia? That might be Benaud ‘s biggest challenge in decades.”When Hoges was taken to America 20 years ago nobody knew Hoges,” Hockey points out. Benaud is equally, and typically, confident.”Don’t worry about America,” he purred. “The Americans will be down in Australia. I’m patron of a cricket club in America, would you believe, the Sarasota Cricket Club in Florida, have been for many years, and you’ll get a few people wandering down to Australia with that.”He’s rarely been wrong before. Only a fool would doubt him now.

Sangakkara provides spunky riposte to selectors

Ok, we lost, but the result was of less significance than the performance ofKumar Sangakkara, who played his finest one-day innings, fully justifyinghis last-minute inclusion into the squad.

© Reuters

Sangakkara never deserved the chop. His wicket-keeping was at times raggedduring the World Cup but his form with the bat improved steadily throughoutthe tournament – the lingering feeling was that he was batting too low inthe order.Nevertheless, the jolt he received when he was first omitted from theSharjah squad appears to have had a positive impact, making him determinedto prove his worth to the side.

“I needed to score some runs today after the loss of two wickets. Battingand wicket-keeping are two very different jobs and, I suppose, mentally itis easier to just do one job.”
Kumar Sangakkara

Whether the lifting of the wicket-keeping burden contributed is a mootpoint. Many will say so but the statistics suggest otherwise – he averages31.22 in 54 matches with the gloves and only 23.04 in 32 matches as aspecialist batsman.Of greater consequence is his position in the order and it is hoped that hewill now be given an extended chance to bed down at number three or four,positions that allow him to build an innings in orthodox fashion.

© Reuters

However, apart from Sangakkara, and Kumar Dharmasena later, who looked atease on his return to the international fray, the batting was once again aconcern. Clearly, Mahela Jayawardene needs to be slotted back in as soon ashe has freshened up and forgotten his horror run in the World Cup.Prasanna Jayawardene also had a nightmare start to his international career,playing all around a quick leg-stump yorker. There is no doubting hisefficiency behind the stumps but he must prove his batting or make way – yousimply cannot afford to have a specialist wicket-keeper in the modern daythat cannot sit comfortably in the top seven.

We needed to put more runs on the board. It was very important that Kumar(Sangakkara) got runs and he batted really well today. We have to do betterin the next two games.”
Sanath Jayasuriya

The absence of Aravinda de Silva and Russel Arnold (who must be hankeringafter an opportunity higher up the order) certainly reduced options with theball and that is a serious concern with Sanath Jayasuriya is now overlyreliant on five bowlers. If someone has a bad day then there will beproblems.Probably, Sri Lanka would have preferred three seamers with the dew causingsuch problems later on. But with Chaminda Vaas crook the only option was forPrabath Nissanka to play ahead of Dharmasena and that would have involvedconsiderably more risk with no part-timers to chip in should his radarmisfire. Moreover, such a move would have weakened the batting.

“I am very pleased with the performance of Hafeez and Faisal as they stuckto the gameplan. This young side has come in from various places and havenot played together much – their coordination will improve and we will avoidsome of the mistakes that were made today.”
(Rashid Latif)

Indeed, Sri Lanka are a side grappling with issues, including the balance ofthe side and the best personnel. That is inevitable as they try to look tothe future but it does carry a price. Unfortunately, matches will be lostthat could have been won.But, in this tournament, the end result is off secondary importance.Yesterday, Sangakkara gave Sri Lankan fans something to cheer, on Sundaylets hope someone else raises their hand.

HPC expansion at Lincoln another boost for NZ cricket

The location of the new outdoor practice net facility
Photograph © CricInfo

New Zealand Cricket’s High Performance Centre is entering another phase of its development at Lincoln University, a move that will enhance its status as the finest cricket resource of its type in the world.Already the home of the Cricket Academy, the HPC is expanding to incorporate a third first-class ground, a new outdoor practice facility and a new soil and pitch research area.The complex is enhancing its status as the development and scientific home of the game in New Zealand.The director of the Cricket Academy, Dayle Hadlee said the complex will become the annual home for one of New Zealand’s age group tournaments each year and this year will be the base for the ICC Under-19 World Cup being staged in January and February.This follows the outstanding success of the hosting of the CricInfo Women’s World Cup last summer.The new, and as yet unnamed, ground is to be ready in time for the tournament, as will the new practice facility which is situated just off the centrepiece of the HPC, the Bert Sutcliffe Oval.While the relationship with Lincoln University started out as venue for the Cricket Academy, it has developed far beyond that to the point where the Academy is only one level of five for player education.The HPC is the home for the CLEAR Black Caps and White Ferns, for New Zealand A players, the Academy and New Zealand Cricket’s specialist squads.It is also the base for coach and umpire education and for resource development.The HPC also has among its resources, the original indoor centre, its accommodation units (the Hadlee-Watt pavilions), the three grounds and the pavilion on the Sutcliffe Oval.The HPC has also become a centre for regular cricket and this year’s programme leading into the new summer is an example of the use being made of the complex.From October 1, the playing programme is impressive. The Otago side will play a four-day game against the Academy from October 2-5. On October 7, the Central Districts team will arrive for a two-day camp before a four-day game against the Academy, starting on October 9.On October 12 the Commonwealth Bank Cricket Academy of Australia will arrive for two three-day games, October 15-17 and October 19-21, and four One-Day Internationals against their New Zealand counterparts on October 23, 24, 26 and 27.No sooner will the Australians depart than Auckland will arrive for a four-day game from October 30-November 2.Then the Queensland Pura Cup side will arrive for a four-day game from November 5-8.

West Indies storm to Under-15 title

West Indies 228 for 9 (Brathwaite 82, Senior 50) beat Pakistan 139 (Azam 51, Senior 4-24) by 89 runs
Scorecard

West Indies celebrate victory © The Nation
 

Eight years after the West Indies first lifted the International Under-15 trophy, a new batch of youngsters proved that they have what it takes as they defeated Pakistan by 89 runs in the 2008 CLICO International Under-15 Championship final at Queen’s Park Oval, Port of Spain.Pakistan, who defeated the West Indies by two runs in the Knockout final of the competition in St Kitts last month, were dismissed for 139 after the home team, led by a patient 82 from prolific Kraigg Brathwaite and a dominating 50 from Man of the Match Raman Senior, reached 228 for 9 after winning the toss and electing to take first strike.Openers Brathwaite and John Campbell again laid a solid foundation for the Windies, posting a stroke filled 61-run partnership at more than a run-a-ball for the first wicket. Campbell was the aggressor in the stand which at times was frustrated by spinners Hafiz Usman Qadir and Mirza Ahsan Jamil when they were introduced from the 11th over.Qadir went for one run in his opening over and Jamil followed that with a maiden which forced Campbell to hit out. Qadir eventually had him caught inside the long-on boundary by Zafar Gohar for 37 which included five boundaries.After Campbell departed, the runs quickly dried up, with Qadir bowling two consecutive maidens and Jamil containing the runs on the other end. But that was all the time that new batsman Roman Senior needed to get into his groove.Senior played the spinners well in compiling his runs and started to grow in confidence as he approached his 50. Gohar was then brought back into the attack with Senior having plundered a four and then a six, which was pushed over the ropes by the fielder on the boundary, to bring up his half century in 79 minutes from 84 balls. Gohar got his revenge with his next ball when Senior was stumped. But his 85-run stand for the second wicket with Brathwaite pushed the Windies to 151 for 2.At that stage, the Windies’ batting began to wobble. Sunil Ambris was run out by a direct throw from midwicket for two and Kyle Mayers sent an easy catch to Gohar off Qadir for 5. Akeem Saunders then struck two fours to take the home team past the 200-run mark but he was run-out shortly after.Brathwaite played a key role in holding the innings together during his stay of 128 balls. But as the overs began running out, he decided to take some risks and was run out with three overs left in the innings. Offspinner Qadir finished with figures of 3 for 25. Donovan Nelson and Kaveem Hodge then exploited the last over bowled by Jamil, collecting 18 runs, with Hodge getting off the mark with a six and Nelson hitting the last two balls for a six and a four respectively.The West Indies put themselves in further control when Kyle Mayers struck with the first ball of Pakistan’s innings to remove Muhammad Naeem via the lbw route.Pakistan were in more trouble after Ahsan Ali was run out for 8 after putting on 32 runs with the skipper Muhammad Babar. The visitors went further adrift when off-spinner Senior took two wickets in three balls when he trapped Ahsan Ali Abbasi lbw for two and bowled Muhammad Nawaz (0) in the seventh over of the innings. But he could not pull Pakistan out of trouble and after bringing up his half century, he played a lofted drive to Senior at long-on off the bowling of Derone Davis for 51.Qadir made a menacing 21, while Jamil contributed a stubborn 17 as Pakistan crossed the hundred mark. However, that was their only consolation as they were all out in 42.4 overs thanks to Senior’s four for 24.Young West Indies had evened the score in a most convincing way.