Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Lets hope the 3rd ODI humiliation will not be repeated. Go green. :jhanda:

England v Pakistan, 4th ODI, Headingley[RIGHT]August 31, 2016[/RIGHT]
Only way is up for record-beating England

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THE PREVIEW BY ANDREW MILLER
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Match facts
September 1, Headingley
Start time 1400 (1300GMT)

The series is in the bag but the fun, as far as England are concerned, is only just beginning. “We haven’t reached our peak yet,” said Alex Hales on Tuesday night, after leading a record-breaking rampage in the third ODI at Trent Bridge - and unnervingly for Pakistan, he is almost certainly right. With a national-record 171 under Hales’ own belt, and a world-beating mark of 444 for 3 for the team as a whole, England have served notice of just how formidable their one-day set-up might soon turn out to be.
But, with a current ranking of No. 5 in the world, and with memories of their debacle in the 2015 World Cup still fresher in the memory than anyone would care to admit, England’s motivation to keep improving won’t be dented by such short-term triumphs, no matter how impressive. The Champions Trophy looms in 2017, and the 2019 World Cup soon after that - both on home soil. If this young and hungry squad keeps its eye on the ball as successfully as Hales, Joe Root, Jos Buttler and Eoin Morgan managed on Tuesday afternoon, an end to England’s drought in global 50-over tournaments could surely be on the cards.
Pakistan, likewise, have half an eye on the next World Cup, albeit for far less palatable reasons. Their current ranking of No. 9 may seem implausible - especially when set against their magnificent march to the top of the Test pile - but nothing they have produced in the series so far disputes their lowly status, and the pressure is self-evident if they wish to avoid the ignominy of having to pre-qualify for a tournament that they won, as cornered tigers, under Imran Khan in 1992.
Amid the carnage at Trent Bridge, there were a few fleeting indications that the patient has a pulse. Sharjeel Khan’s welcome aggression at the top of the order was matched, in precise numerical terms, by Mohammad Amir’s furious 58 at No. 11, and if more of their team-mates can be encouraged to have a go and hang the consequences - as England themselves did in their post-World Cup epiphany 18 months ago - then the future could yet be a touch brighter.
On the flip side, however, the state of Pakistan’s fielding was beyond lamentable. Three grotesque errors in the opening moments of England’s innings set the tone for a woeful day’s work, and though Wahab Riaz just managed to avoid claiming a world record of his own - his analysis of 10-0-110-0 was three runs more economical than Australia’s Mick Lewis at Johannesburg in 2006 - his summer-long tussle with the front line proved incredibly costly, as England benefited from a brace of no-ball reprieves, for Hales on 72 and Buttler on 75.
England, to be honest, weren’t a whole lot more impressive in their own fielding effort - in addition to several lapses in their groundwork, Hales blotted his copybook with a routine drop at backward square, and Buttler spilled a running catch behind the stumps as well. But those blemishes merely served to reinforce Hales’ assertion that his team is a work in progress. It’s scary to think how good they might be one day. For Pakistan, however, the current situation is, simply… scary.
Form guide

(completed matches, most recent first)
**England WWWWW

**Pakistan LLLWL


****In the spotlight


Others seem capable of more high-octane exploits, but no one better exemplifies the thrum of understated class in England’s new-found one-day team than Joe Root. His fury at falling for 85 from 86 balls on Tuesday once again highlighted the desire in his veins, while hinting at a rare weakness in the most rounded batsmen among England’s young guns - namely, a tendency to falter just short of three figures. However, with consecutive scores of 65, 93, 61, 89 and 85 in his last five ODIs, Root has already equalled England’s record of five fifties in as many innings, and he has the chance to press for six in a row, a feat surpassed just once in one-day history, by Javed Miandad (9) in 1987. His innings at Trent Bridge was typical of his best knocks - nigh on anonymous for his first 40 runs, as he nudged the singles and ceded the limelight to the belligerent Hales, before stepping up his intent once the stand had been cemented.
******Figures of 10-0-74-2 aren’t usually much to write home about, but **Hasan Ali emerged with rare credit on an ignominious day for his team-mates. His thrusting, skiddy pace accounted for the dangerous Jason Roy early on - a wicket that was celebrated with a roar of triumph reminiscent of Brett Lee on the same ground in the 2005 Ashes - but it was his subtle variation and calm head at the death that really caught the eye. With England seemingly marching to a total of 450-plus, Hasan’s back-of-the-hand wiles outfoxed the swinging blades of Buttler and Morgan, with just a solitary run off the bat from his first five balls, before a slightly desperate heave over the covers from Buttler secured England the boundary that carried them to a coveted team record. As victories go, it was pyrrhic in the extreme from Hasan. But, for a player who hadn’t yet claimed his maiden international wicket at the start of the series, his willingness to front up in adversity won’t have gone unnoticed as his coach, Mickey Arthur, threatens to wield the axe on a failing squad.


******Team news


******At Trent Bridge, Ben Stokes came through his first spell since his calf injury with no alarms, and another recently sidelined bowler is making a case for a recall too. David Willey is fit again after sustaining a hand injury, and with the series already wrapped up, there may be a temptation to rest either Chris Woakes, who has had a busy summer, or Mark Wood, whose fitness needs to be monitored after an energetic comeback. There might be a temptation to play Jonny Bairstow on his home ground, but when six of England’s players aren’t required in the compiling of a world-record total, fiddling with the batting seems superfluous in the extreme.


********England (probable)

1 Alex Hales, 2 Jason Roy, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Moeen Ali, 8 David Willey/Chris Woakes, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 Liam Plunkett, 11 Mark Wood********


The gigantic seamer Mohammad Irfan, belatedly added to the squad as a replacement for Mohammad Hafeez, might be worth a call-up in place of the perspiring Wahab, whose erratic display at Trent Bridge was a liability. Mohammad Nawaz performed creditably with bat and ball as a stand-in for Imad Wasim, but either he or Shoaib Malik could expect to make way if Imad has recovered from his knee injury.


********Pakistan (possible)

1 Sami Aslam, 2 Sharjeel Khan, 3 Azhar Ali (capt), 4 Babar Azam, 5 Sarfraz Ahmed (wk), 6 Shoaib Malik, 7 Mohammad Nawaz/Imad Wasim, 8 Hasan Ali, 9 Yasir Shah, 10, Mohammad Irfan, 11 Mohammad Amir


******Pitch and conditions


Another pleasant late-summer’s day is on the cards in Leeds, on a surface that may have been a touch on the slow side for last weekend’s Royal London Cup semi-final between Yorkshire and Surrey, but was a belter this time last year, when England (304 for 7) beat Australia (299 for 7) by three wickets.
Stats and trivia

[LIST=|INDENT=4]
[li]Eoin Morganneeds one more run to reach 5000 in ODI cricket. Among England-qualified batsmen, only Ian Bell (5416) and Paul Collingwood (5092) have scored more runs in the format. However, Morgan’s record includes the 744 he made for Ireland between 2006 and 2009. He is currently seventh on England’s list, with 4255.[/li][li]Root, who needs another fifty to set a new England record of six half-centuries in consecutive innings, is 22 short of 3000 ODI runs.[/li][li]England have won four of their last five completed ODIs at Headingley, dating back to 2008 - including their last meeting with Pakistan, a four-wicket win in 2010. However, there have also been three abandonments in that time, against West Indies in 2009 and 2012, and Australia in 2013.[/li][li]A better memory for Pakistan at Headingley came in 2001, when Waqar Younis claimed hiscareer-best figures of 7 for 36 - the second-best by a Pakistani in ODI history and the seventh-best overall.[/li][/LIST]
Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. He tweets @miller_cricket

******© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

www.espncricinfo.com/england-v-pakistan-2016/content/story/1052523.html******

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

🐲🐨🐙

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

**Pakistan win the toss and bat

One thing is for sure with Pakistan batting first England has got no chance of beatng their 444 record.
**

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

4 changes:

Imad Wasim is back after his knee knock, Umar Gul also returns and there are first appearances for Mohammad Rizwan and Mohammad Irfan.

Shoaib Malik, Mohammad Amir, Yasir Shah and Wahab Riaz drop out.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Amir is OUT? you mean Pak’s BEST batsman is not gonna play today? who is gonna score22-ball 60+ for the 10th wicket then? :hmmm:

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Gul will, not with the bat though. :slight_smile:

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Pakistan bahaduri say lar rahay hain izzat bachanay kay liyea. :) ...

Azhar: 0 runs in 6 balls
Sami: 5 runs in 18 balls.

English Captain telling the bowlers to keep it like that, no need to take wickets, we would win anyhow as at this rate, Pakistan would make 50 odds runs in 50 overs. :)

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

This is all because of two people...

i cant name both... one is on this forum and open these threads.. other is Captain of the team...

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Decent6 toh aaj kul aata hee nahin woh thread kahan say kholey ga, aisay hee usay badnaam mut karein.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

England to chase: 248…not a cookie tonight though… :smiley:

Imad Wasim truly a short format player… :k:

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

So Pakistan remains the team of an average score of 240-250. I think nobody is ready to play till Azhar is captain.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Sunlo ai deewanon
Beimaan naa bano
Decent ka naam
Badnaam naa karo
Badnaam naa karo

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

4-0 :jhanda: :smiley:

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

This was the only match in which Pak got some chance but their defending total is always so low that i feel pity for the bowlers. I dont know man, not sure exactly who to blame. May be nobody. Let them lose all five and look forward for next changes.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Irfans injury didnt help.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

Seriously who's idea was it to bring an unfit Irfan all the way to England and get him injured even more ??
What a laughing stock this team/management is becoming, seriously they think nobody saw that?

I assume Micket Arthur did not know about Irfan's fitness levels, he must be fuming about this.

anyway, 1 more to lose and then lose the t20 and then it'll be over for the boys until they meet WI in Dubai

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

there is never any changes, its the same mediocre players all over again.
Don't expect much change. No tabdeeli, same ole stuff

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

do you guys really think that all of us know more than selectors and Inzi? if there are indeed great players sitting on bench then obviously they would get a chance because no selection committee wants kalak of 5-0 whitewash. question is, what do we have on bench?

we always act as if some great jewels are sitting on bench. i have checked the batting average of pretty much every U19 player plus recent young batters and almost all of them is below 40...if they average below 40 on dead paksitani pitches, what do you guys exepect?

we need some serious overhaul....school cricket is over. mohallah street cricket is over, and we have way too many teams in first class structure, so no competition.

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

They could have selected me! 🐮

Re: Pakistan V England 4th ODI

But did it hurt?