Misbah, bowlers set up 96-run win
Pakistan 231 for 7 (Misbah 83*, Farhat 49, Haq 3-39) beat Scotland 135 (Coetzer 32, Ajmal 3-25) by 96 runs
Scorecard
Scorecard
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Matches:
Scotland v Pakistan at Edinburgh
Series/Tournaments:
Pakistan tour of Scotland, Ireland and England
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Pakistan began their tour of England on a good note, registering a
96-run win over Scotland in the first ODI between the two sides. In
Edinburgh on Friday, Pakistan successfully defended a total of 231 for
7, as Scotland went down to the bowling of Saeed Ajmal and Junaid Khan.
Chasing 232, Scotland had a nervy start, losing their first wicket for
no score when Neil Carter was bowled by Junaid Khan in the second over.
Mohammad Irfan's pace and bounce created problems for the hosts early
on, but Kyle Coetzer brought his county experience to the fore, playing
shots and hitting boundaries early in the innings. Josh Davey also hit a
few fours before he was smartly caught down the leg-side by Akmal. The
wicket-keeper was involved again when Irfan got Coetzer caught behind,
leaving Preston Mommsen and Moneeb Iqbal to rebuild.
The pressure began to show in the 28th over, when a mix-up left Iqbal
stranded and he was run-out for 10 off 40 balls. The long-awaited
introduction of Saeed Ajmal restricted the Scottish batsmen as they
looked to push singles and hit boundaries to cope with the rising
run-rate.
Scotland had one card left to play - Richie Berrington, who had scored a
T20 century against Bangladesh last year, came to bat at No. 7.
However, Berrington's time at the crease was short-lived as he was
caught on the midwicket boundary off Ajmal for just 10. By the time
Murphy arrived at the crease, the game was all but done, and Scotland
needed some T20-style hitting from their last three batsmen to have any
hopes of winning.
Pakistan, however, had other ideas. Ajmal had Mommsen stumped with ease
off the last ball of the 36th over. Murphy was trapped leg-before by
Junaid Khan off the first ball of the 37th over, and he followed it up
by dismissing Majid Haq for a first-ball duck. Junaid narrowly missed
out on his own hat-trick bowling to number eleven Wardlaw, who got a
bottom edge playing a drive. Taylor hit a few boundaries before Ajmal
finished the rout.
Earlier, the visitors won the toss and chose to bat on a decent pitch
with Imran Farhat and Nasir Jamshed taking the crease. Pakistan cruised
early on, playing their way in and punishing the bad balls with straight
drives and pulls for early boundaries whilst looking very comfortable.
Too easy in fact, as Jamshed pushed a nothing drive into the covers off a
decent Rob Taylor delivery to give Preston Mommsen an easy catch at
cover.
Mohammd Hafeez took his time to play himself in while Farhat went
swinging from the other end. Scotland brought spin on early with new
face Matt Machan, in an attempt to keep the runs down to singles rather
than boundaries. Pakistan, though, had patience and backed their ability
to score runs in the middle order. But Hafeez was out to an errant cut
shot after smashing a boundary, and Umar Amin fell slogging for 3.
Majid Haq was brought on with his experience and took an early wicket to
become Scotland's leading ODI wicket-taker, while Machan got rid of
Farhat, who dragged one on. Pakistan were reduced to 117 for 5, and with
runs ticking at under four an over it was left to captain Misbah-ul-Haq
and wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal to rebuild the innings and set a
competitive total.
During the batting Powerplay, Akmal nudged the ball around gaps but
played one safe shot to many, trapped in front by seamer Neil Carter. At
six wickets down, Misbah had work to do with the bowlers, as Scotland
looked to keep him off strike. With one wicket down and 22 runs scored,
the batting Powerplay had backfired on Pakistan.
In the last 10 overs, there were too many precious dot balls for
Scotland. Pakistan knew that anything around 220 would give their
bowlers a good chance. There were some interesting shot-selections, as
paddle scoops were attempted with varying degree of success. Misbah
controlled most of the strike and reached his half-century in the 45th
over. Scotland continued to rotate the bowlers which meant Pakistan
couldn't establish any rhythm with their batting stuttering toward the
200 mark. Saeed Ajmal played an entertaining run-a-ball innings of 28,
full of big swings and boundaries, before being clean bowled playing one
paddle too many.
Misbah finished strong on an unbeaten 78, supported by Ehsan Adil who
hit the first six of the match in the 47th over, dispatching Haq over
midwicket. Misbah attacked Carter in the penultimate over which went for
17.
Schedule of some other matches
2nd ODI: Scotland v Pakistan at Edinburgh
May 19, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
May 19, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
1st ODI: Ireland v Pakistan at Dublin
May 23, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
May 23, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
2nd ODI: Ireland v Pakistan at Dublin
May 26, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
May 26, 2013 (10:45 local | 09:45 GMT | 14:45 PKT)
Pakistan v Sri Lanka at Birmingham
May 30, 2013 (13:00 local | 12:00 GMT | 17:00 PKT)
May 30, 2013 (13:00 local | 12:00 GMT | 17:00 PKT)
Pakistan v South Africa at The Oval
Jun 3, 2013 (10:30 local | 09:30 GMT | 14:30 PKT)
Jun 3, 2013 (10:30 local | 09:30 GMT | 14:30 PKT)
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