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2nd Test: England vs Pakistan at Birmingham, Aug 06-10, 2010

see what ever i predict it happens and i tell u we will not going to score even 100 runs in second innings we are loosing with again big defeat top 5 should go out salman buttt should never return and ferhat tooo even other openres got out on duck
 
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before this test brain lara got out on 4 ducks against glen mcgrath but what he did must see in this video scored double ton thats why the great saying in cricket that form is temproroy and class of batsman is perminent players of Yousuf dravid laxman tendulkar lara waugh can do this at any time no replacement fo experienece
 
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Umar Gul to Pietersen, no run, oh no! Dropped by Haider! Almost identical to Pietersen's second-innings dismissal at Trent Bridge, length ball outside off stump, Pietersen tried to force it through cover and got a big inside edge, Haider dived down the leg side but spilled the chance. Bring back Akmal!
 
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YouTube - ‪Mohammad Yousuf 202 Pak. Vs. Eng. - Mohammad Ameer Muawiya Langrial‬‎

it was just a stupidity to not to play him even he is just arrived he can easily coop with conditions soon even if he got out on duck i will take his duck happily because his class will produce big tons somewhere if we have given him these 7 innings he had scored most than what these 5 top players scored so shame that he not playing when we need him buttt u r sick your own form and place in team is not sure so how u piont finger to such a natural batsman

First thanks for the Video..

Second Yusuf bhai decided himself not to play this second test match because he was tired after the long flight and he has not been in practice and he wanted to play practice match before playing intl. test matches.... he wanted to do some net practice to gain rhythm because he played his last test match in january...
 
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i unable to what's happening wrong with pak cricket.....no one can believe that world cup winner can lost 13 match in row.at last they won one match against Australia,every one thought now every thing is Okay. but they are again playing like world weakest team......
 
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Since we can only improve from here on.. try this.

Salman Butt
Yasir Hameed
Azhar Ali
Moohammed Yousuf
Umar Akmal
Umar Amin
Kamran Akmal [need a better keeper than Zulqarnain & Kami]
Mohammed Aamer
Umar Gul
Raza Hasan
Mohammed Asif

Butt is inconsistent, Yasir is making a comeback, Ali is inexperienced, Yousuf is making a comeback, Umar Akmal is inconsistent, Umar Amin is inexperienced, Mohammed Aamer is awesome, Gul is ok, Raza is a debutant, Asif is brilliant.

Now you expect to win matches? No..but you can certainly get better than playing crappy no test players like Faisal, Malik, Farhat and co.
 
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Since we can only improve from here on.. try this.

Salman Butt
Yasir Hameed
Azhar Ali
Moohammed Yousuf
Umar Akmal
Umar Amin
Kamran Akmal [need a better keeper than Zulqarnain & Kami]
Mohammed Aamer
Umar Gul
Raza Hasan
Mohammed Asif

Butt is inconsistent, Yasir is making a comeback, Ali is inexperienced, Yousuf is making a comeback, Umar Akmal is inconsistent, Umar Amin is inexperienced, Mohammed Aamer is awesome, Gul is ok, Raza is a debutant, Asif is brilliant.

Now you expect to win matches? No..but you can certainly get better than playing crappy no test players like Faisal, Malik, Farhat and co.


Sir we dont expect them to win, we just want them to give a good resistance.
Yasir is a good player but this guy has a bad habbit. Whenever he started consoladating his position, he starts loosing concentration and ultimately he is dropped:coffee:
 
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Sir we dont expect them to win, we just want them to give a good resistance.
Yasir is a good player but this guy has a bad habbit. Whenever he started consoladating his position, he starts loosing concentration and ultimately he is dropped:coffee:

Agreed....Hameed, Farhat, they all been given so many chances in the past and yet we keep thinking of old players.....new talents like Umar akmal, Azhar they all keep disappointing, maybe playing in very tough conditions but surely expected better of Umar Akmal....today Azhar.....i mean zero score on 40 balls.....farhat zero on 30 balls.....droped simplest of catches...so cruel on bowlers...Criminal.
 
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I agree with you guys on Yasir Hameed. But he is the best available openor in our squad currently.
 
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I agree with you guys on Yasir Hameed. But he is the best available openor in our squad currently.

yea...agreed....Hameed is much more talented than Farhat and even a better fielder.....but Farhat must be jigars with both Buts of Pak cricket
 
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well sir webmaster even though u bring yousuf back not going to win the matches to us but we can score more than what we are scoring from 1 to 5 spot should be fully replaced and bring new fresh special wicket keeper not akmal not zulqarnain not sarfraz we need new good wicket keeper. and salman butt should be replaced to he is not good now for the team malik akmal azhar ali no one good for test ceicket

---------- Post added at 05:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:28 PM ----------

Anyone who witnessed that execrable contest at the SSC last week will agree that Test cricket is at its best when bowlers are backed by conditions that act as bait, and batsmen are forced to battle like salmon on the end of a hook. What took place on the first day at Edgbaston, however, was more akin to lobbing a stick of dynamite into a reservoir. It took a measure of skill for England's bowlers to land their projectiles in the right area, but as soon as they'd done so, the struggle was as good as over.

Twice in five days Pakistan have set new record lows for Test innings against England, having themselves triggered the current trend for double-figure dismissals by detonating Australia's batting for 88 at Headingley. The thrill of that contest, however, came in the manner in which the Aussies battled back for the remainder of the match, clawing at every half-chance going to end up a tantalising three wickets adrift. Pakistan, however, have already squandered five chances of varying degrees of difficulty in 34.2 overs of England's first innings. The prospect of a fightback is as insubstantial as Zulqarnain Haider's current Test average.

Five Tests have been completed in England this summer - and only one of them has so far been taken to five days. Incredibly, given that teams with the reputation of Australia and Pakistan have been in town, it is the ever-lampooned Bangladeshis who have put up the fiercest fight, with Tamim Iqbal's outrageously gung-ho century at Lord's provoking his team-mates into the sort of resistance that this series is now crying out for. Ironically, Pakistan set their stalls for survival in this contest with Azhar Ali and Imran Farhat recording two of the slowest ducks of all time, but the team simply lacked the class to translate their resistance into progress.

Mohammad Yousuf may yet be the man to inject Pakistan with some much-needed knowhow - his career average against England is 70, just two runs shy of his team-mates' grand total in this first innings. But as Tamim went on to demonstrate in a one-man show in Bangladesh's second Test at Old Trafford, a personal tour de force is irrelevant if your colleagues don't have the technique or temperament to survive.

Pakistan have been here before of course. In Sharjah back in 2002-03, they played the first of their now-habitual neutral series against Australia, and crumbled to twin scores of 59 and 53 in an ignominious second Test at Sharjah. Then as now, the feebleness of their batting disguised the enduring excellence of their seemingly unending production-line of fast bowling, with the finest spell of Shoaib Akhtar's career going unrewarded in the first Test in Colombo. Now as then, we must hope they will come again, just as they did to everyone's astonishment at Headingley last month. But the facts of the present make hugely unpalatable reading all the same.

"We've been doing this all our lives and we have to clean up our own mess," said a crestfallen captain, Salman Butt, who fronted up with the same sense of duty that he has shown throughout his brief tenure as captain, but whose authority is being eroded by the day - with Yousuf's formidable presence cramping him on the one hand, and his own series tally of 16 runs in three innings undermining him on the other. His decision to bat first in grim grey conditions was not his finest, either, even if, as an opening batsman, it did demonstrate an admirable willingness to lead his team from the front.

"It's been like this since we've come here, we haven't had one day with sunshine," he added. "This pitch will not change. Given these conditions the ball will keep on swinging, so the idea was to put some runs on the board and let the other side get them. It was a positive move, but it didn't happen for us. But they still bowled brilliantly, back-to-back performances require great efforts and that's what they did."

For England, it was simply business as usual, not least for Stuart Broad, who played here a fortnight ago for Nottinghamshire and picked up career-best figures of 8 for 52, before extending that recent ground record to a remarkable 12 for 90. "It was slow and hard to drive on, so if you created pressure it meant they had to play shots at balls that weren't there," he said. "They had a 24-ball nought and a 32-ball nought, so that tells you it was quite hard to score on, but also a testament to how we bowled and the disciplines we stuck to."

England, in fairness, were excellent insofar as they needed to be. Half-trackers were non-existent as the three seamers stuck to their Trent Bridge gameplan of containment for containment's sake, and a sixth consecutive Test victory is surely now an inevitability. "We're putting huge amounts of pressure on the Pakistan batting line-up," said Broad. "We're bowling fantastically well, and we've had slightly cloudy conditions which have suited us. We've not given them a sniff."

But for the good of Test cricket, and even for England's own long-term benefit, a bit more resistance from Pakistan would not go amiss. While stalemates of the SSC variety are the greatest menace to the game, a fundamental lack of competitivity runs a close second. Bangladesh have been accused of cheapening Test cricket for years, but at least in the last few seasons they have learned the necessary application to take a game the full distance. Pakistan on the other hand, like West Indies, seem worryingly intent on unlearning those same disciplines, and given the mighty heritage of that pair in particular, it is a distinctly unnerving development.

If Edgbaston's half-built and half-full ground had similar foundations to the Pakistan team, then outright demolition would be the only viable option. Broad, however, scoffed at the notion that life was getting too cushy for him and his team. "As the opposition I don't have any sympathy," he said. "English fans are very supportive of their teams, so I hope people wouldn't lose interest because we are dominating.

"I'm sure an Australian public wouldn't lose interest when their team was winning comprehensively in the 1990s," he added. "But it's important that we continue to play exciting cricket. The Trent Bridge Test was a great Test to watch. If you batted well there were runs to be scored, but if you bowled in the final third you were in with a chance. The feedback I've got from friends and family is that it's been a good series to watch, and long may that continue."
 
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England 254 all out. But an innings loss coming up. They have some 180 runs lead.
 
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