Marks Out Of Ten

A few good men

Dileep Premachandran

March 29, 2005

For India, this was a drawn series that felt like a defeat. The team that had won in Pakistan was expected to roll over their inexperienced opposition, whose prospects were dented by the absence of Shoaib Akhtar and his frightening pace. But Pakistan rarely took a backward step, while too many of India’s stars idled in low gear, leaving three or four good men to carry the team. Ultimately, against a side where everyone pulled their weight, it was too much of a burden to bear.

9 Virender Sehwag
Sehwag bats like no-one else in the history of the game ? a consummate strokemaker whose superb temperament allows him to block out criticism of his cavalier methods. Pakistan were on the receiving end in Multan last year and 12 months later nothing had changed with two glorious knocks at Mohali and Bangalore. The fact that India gave up any pretence of going for the final-day target once Sehwag was run out in Bangalore said much about how he has become the prime mover of this team.

8 Rahul Dravid
Was simply sublime in the Kolkata Test, having started the series with a scratchy half-century at Mohali. However, his travails on home turf continued unabated, and failure to save the Bangalore Test would have cut deep for a man who prides himself on delivering on the biggest stages. His slip fielding was also below par.

8 Lakshmipathy Balaji
Sensationally eclipsed the new-ball pairing at Mohali where he swung the ball and moved it cleverly off the seam. A few bright spells followed at Kolkata and Bangalore, despite neither surface having anything to excite a pace bowler. What impressed most was his unstinting effort, and the beaming smile with which he bowled and batted.

7.5 Anil Kumble
Immense at Kolkata, but disappointing on the final day in Mohali. He had a nightmare on his home ground, and that contributed in no small measure to India’s eventual capitulation. Showed glimpses of the batsman that he once was with some resolute batting.

7 Sachin Tendulkar
Granted a life by Rudi Koertzen, Tendulkar eased his way to within six runs of that elusive 35th century at Mohali, but his finest effort of the series was undoubtedly the brilliant second-innings 52 at Eden Gardens, cut short by another poor umpiring decision. Worryingly, he tended to get out to some very ordinary shots, and failure to defy Pakistan on the final day of the series would have hurt as much as the abysmal collapse that followed in the wake of his dismissal at Chennai six years ago.

6 Gautam Gambhir
Sometimes seemed puzzled about his role in the side. When he was content to buttress Sehwag’s brilliance, Gambhir looked the part, but when he tried to match him stroke for stroke, he only gave it away. At least he plays his shots with refreshing freedom, allowing Sehwag the occasional breather.

6 Dinesh Karthik
Played one magnificent innings with the bat at Kolkata, batting with a complete lack of selfishness in a critical situation. Was fairly competent behind the stumps, though he suffered in comparison with the immaculate Kamran Akmal.

5.5 Harbhajan Singh
Disappointed at Eden Gardens, a venue that he normally bestrides like a colossus, and then got into trouble with the match officials too. Redemption came on the second day at Bangalore, but by then, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Younis Khan had done irreparable damage.

5 VVS Laxman
Far below his best, as he has been for a while now. Two half-centuries revealed little of the flair or fluency that, when on song, make him a vision like no other. His tactics while batting with the tail in the first innings at Bangalore were perplexing.

3 Irfan Pathan
By and large, a series to forget. Short on pace, lacking the line and length that made him so potent in Pakistan last year, Pathan was lucky to play all three Tests. A couple of decent spells can obscure the fact that he was a massive letdown as the team spearhead.

3 Zaheer Khan
Started the series with a couple of superb spells that went unrewarded, and then retrogressed until he was bowling absolute dross on the final day at Mohali, when Abdul Razzaq and Akmal defied India. Wasn’t given a chance to redeem himself.

2 Sourav Ganguly
Offered nothing with the bat, and did his reputation as captain no favours with an insipid show on the final day at Mohali. There is a real fear that his lack of form could be affecting those that precede him in the batting order.

Link: http://usa.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2005/MAR/217950_INDPAK2004-05_29MAR2005.html

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

Pakistan’s stars in the ascendancy

Osman Samiuddin

March 29, 2005

Pakistan were expected to lose this series, and sure enough, they seemed down and out on numerous occasions. And yet, they managed to stay afloat and finally level the series, an achievement that speaks volumes for the resilience and spirit of this young side

8.5 Shahid Afridi
Afridi’s breakthrough series? An irresistible force when the mood takes him, he was irrepressible in the two Tests he played. At Kolkata he provided gusto to a deflated top order and then briefly scared the life out of the Indians on the fourth afternoon. But at Bangalore, Afridi turned the game on its head, with both bat and ball. His batting gave Pakistan time where previously there had been none, and the following day, he provided the key breakthroughs with what he terms legspin ? Sachin Tendulkar is a nice bunny. In your face, intimidating, annoying and ebullient, Afridi was at the heart of Pakistan’s aggression.

8.5 Younis Khan
Mohali was as bad a Test as anyone can have ? dropped catches and joke dismissals galore. But his comeback in Kolkata was a testament to his character. Finally, he began to convert starts into substance and his running was supreme throughout. His energy levels were phenomenal, especially in Bangalore, and on the field, he was the team’s engine, geeing people up, consoling, applauding, setting fields, offering and taking advice. Often he was over-exuberant, but mostly he was refreshing. His Bangalore epic will enter folklore, and as a potential future captain, the whole series might come to be viewed as the beginning of the succession.

7.5 Inzamam-ul-Haq
Amidst a galaxy of batting superstars, Inzamam was often the brightest of them all ? rarely has he been as unconcerned, imperious and lordly with the bat as this. At Mohali, his anger at the top-order elicited from him an innings for the ages, but he saved his most glorious effort for his most memorable occasion - his 100th Test at Bangalore. His captaincy in Mohali and Kolkata was caricature Inzi ? laid back, reactive, onerous and made to look worse by the vivacity of his deputy, Younis Khan. But in the emotional cauldron of Bangalore, he belatedly let his poker face slip, becoming as expressive as he has ever been on the field, and even discovered an audacious lucky streak.

7.5 Kamran Akmal
An abnormally poor final Test, where he didn’t collect cleanly and dropped a sitter, shouldn’t detract from his status as Pakistan’s leading glovesman. Amazingly graceful and efficient otherwise, his century at Mohali was important for two reasons; it saved the test and the series and it removed question marks about his batting back home. Moin and Rashid who?

7.5 Danish Kaneria
In a land where others of his ilk have returned traumatised, Kaneria was a trailblazer. Okay, so he didn’t run through the line-up, but then no-one expected him to do that. But he kept coming back for more, even when Sehwag was rattling him. Ineffective at Kolkata, when many thought he had finally been found out, Kaneria bounced back in Bangalore, picking up an admirable five-for in the first innings. For the second series running, he ended up with more wickets than the leading opposition legspinner. For Shane Warne in Australia, read Anil Kumble in India ?

7 Asim Kamal
An unflappable performance from an imperturbable character; Asim rescued Pakistan in the first innings at Mohali and provided reassurance in the second. In Kolkata, he held firm while others flailed and it is precisely because of this that his place must now be cemented in the Test team. A poor match at Bangalore ? he threw his wicket away ? could have been disastrous, had he not made amends by catching Tendulkar, moments after spilling a similar chance.

6.5 Mohammad Sami
Finally, a series to remember. Sami’s career has developed in inverse proportions to the hype surrounding him, but now that skepticism has begun to take root, his performances have grown. He was forgettable at Mohali, but he redeemed himself with his spells on the fourth day at Kolkata and throughout most of the Bangalore match. Tireless, aggressive, menacingly quick and largely effective ? could this be the series that sorted Sami?

6.5 Yousuf Youhana
A little overshadowed by the emergence of Younis Khan as a batsman and vice-captain, Youhana nevertheless remained an assuring presence in the order, especially against the spin of Kumble and Harbhajan. His century at Kolkata was signature stuff, easy on the eye and the scoreboard and exasperating for the fielders, but his second-innings discomfort under pressure hinted at his failings. He should have made a substantial contribution on that batsman’s paradise at Bangalore.

6 Abdul Razzaq
A fitful series. He threatened on occasions to turn games with bat, ball, and even in the field, but elsewhere, when he was busy playing pointless knocks or being brutalised by Sehwag, his place in the Test side still remained questionable.

6 Yasir Hameed
Why he didn’t play ahead of Taufeeq Umar remains anyone’s guess, but his second-innings fifty at Bangalore was an elegant riposte.

3 Rana Naveed-ul-Hasan
Willing as ever, but not as threatening as a new-ball bowler should be.

3 Arshad Khan
A strange return. He started well in Bangalore, but thereafter looked ordinary until the final afternoon. By then, he never threatened to run through the innings, but extracted some bounce and got the crucial breakthroughs. By removing Dravid and Pathan he wrote his name into one of Pakistan’s greatest stories.

2 Mohammad Khalil
Treated like a sautela (step-relation) in Kolkata, a match in which he shouldn’t have been picked. He looked largely innocuous and the few overs he bowled were picked off by the likes of Dravid and Sehwag.

2 Taufeeq Umar
This is what you get after a year on the sidelines and selectorial confusion as to your role as a Test- or one-day opener. Taufeeq Umar; a shadow of his former self, just doesn’t look an international opener anymore.

Salman Butt
Fading fast after his start in Australia, but he is still young. More worrying will be the manner of his dismissals in Mohali ? poor in the first, ghastly in the second.

Link: http://usa.cricinfo.com/db/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2005/MAR/217977_INDPAK2004-05_29MAR2005.html

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

^^writer :bailan:is so mean and miser he just gave my afiridi 8.5 score.he deserves 10/10.

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

^^ shivangi you are getting far from being a fan and very close to become a Stock-Er :p

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

stock wat? i didnt get u

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

Stalker. :rolleyes:

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

err i am not a psycopath.i just luv him.cant think of harming him anyway.can harm myself for him but wont ever harm him

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

so it begins :D

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

Good stuff Yasir! :k:

Shivanji , are you out of Jomanji board ? How can we roll-dice you in again,? send you back that is,? :devil:

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

:mad:u r too good to be a stupid

Re: Marks Out Of Ten

it began long back.already in process