Knocks Pakistan out with a 21-run victory
One could see the familiar glint in the Aussie eyes,
suggesting they might be peaking at the right time, after their
purposeful batting and well-planned bowling fetched them a 21-run
victory over a directionless Pakistan in the World T20 at the PCA
Stadium here on Friday.
Australia's win ensured that
its last group encounter against India here on Sunday will be a virtual
quarterfinal. It also confirmed Pakistan’s exit from the event.
Starting
from the toss, everything fell into place for Steve Smith and his men.
Bolstered by a responsible unbroken 74-run stand between Smith (61 not
out) and Shane Watson (44 not out), Australia erected a towering 193 for
four and banked on wrecker-in-chief James Faulkner's five-for, the
first in the tournament, to restrict Pakistan to 172 for eight, much to
Shahid Afridi’s disappointment.
High point
The
high point of Australia's batting was its ability to fight back. Usman
Khawaja continued with his brilliant touch to get a rapid-fire 21 and
seize the initial momentum.
The hard-hitting Aaron Finch, returning to the XI, played an unusually sedate role.
Australia
was pegged back by Wahab Riaz’s two wickets in quick succession;
Khawaja missed an accurate yorker while trying to make room, and
dangerman David Warner was beaten by pace.
Left-arm
spinner Imad Wasim breached Finch’s defence in the eighth over, and
Afridi used himself and Imad in tandem in the hope of stifling the
Australians.
A better plan
However, a composed
Smith and the explosive Glenn Maxwell (30) had a better plan. Smith
preferred to rotate the strike and Maxwell gave him good support.
The
pair forged a timely 62-run partnership off 38 balls to set the stage
for a bigger onslaught. Maxwell, who reached the fence four times,
including a four and a six off a Mohammad Sami over, was snared by Ahmed
Shehzad at long-on off Imad. What followed was pure entertainment for
40 minutes from two stalwarts, Smith and Watson.
Smith
broke a string of poor performances against Pakistan to score a 43-ball
61, his second half-century in the shortest version. Known for his
strong on-side game, the Australian captain hammered six of his seven
fours through the off-side and made the Pakistan attack look ordinary.
Shuffling
across beyond his off-stump in a Riaz over only highlighted the
Aussie’s thorough control over the situation. At the other end, the
gigantic Watson clobbered the Pakistan pacers on both sides to hit four
fours and three sixes in his breezy 21-ball unbeaten 44.
The Smith-Watson stand nearly shut the opponent out of the contest.
In
reply, Pakistan again suffered due to its poor endgame in a big run
chase. Following Sharjeel Khan’s early blitz (30 off 19), it was a
familiar script heading towards disaster despite the efforts of Khalid
Latif (46, 41), Umar Akmal (32, 20) and Shoaib Malik (40, 20).
A
master of the back-of-the-hand slower ball, Faulkner foxed the Pakistan
batsmen at will and claimed two wickets apiece in his last two overs,
achieving a rare feat and a much-needed win for Australia.