This is taken from the Australian offical cricket page on the cricinfo website;
For the Pakistanis, by contrast, neither their fortunes nor their collective mindset could have been any different. After having all but clinched this match with some unflinching cricket over the course of the previous two and a half days, they suddenly lost their focus as they are sometimes prone to do and their bowling - not to mention their fielding - reverted from the outstanding to the mediocre in the twinkling of an eye. Nevertheless, it must be conceded that they were on the wrong side of a number of close decisions and that they will be left to rue one in particular.
After a slow start to the day’s play under griseous Hobart skies, there was a noticeable uplifting of the tempo from about the time that Wasim Akram took the new ball just over forty minutes into the day’s play. Akram comprehensively beat Langer twice in his first three deliveries, and looked to have been despairingly close to securing an lbw verdict from one of those deliveries. Then the crowd witnessed a few bizarre moments of action and a testing of tempers as Gilchrist (complaining about the movement of Saqlain Mushtaq at mid on) withdrew twice in successive attempts as Shoaib Akhtar was on his way into bowl to him.
More drama and the critical decision of the match followed when Langer (then on 76) seemed to almost everyone at the ground but Umpire Peter Parker to have outside edged a delivery from Akram through to wicketkeeper Moin Khan. Convinced that he had thus broken the partnership with the score at 237, the Pakistani captain did not hide his displeasure at the verdict, his sense of disbelief and annoyance exacerbated as a thick edge from the gritty left hander fell just short of Mohammad Wasim at slip from the next ball.
John Polak
We didn’t deserve to lose this match. Our team did us proud.