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Umar Akmal

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Umar Akmal , brother of Kamran Akmal scoring TONS in Australia these days against Australia "A".
 
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Paceman Nuwan Kulasekara claimed four wickets and then Kumar Sangakkara slammed an unbeaten half-century as Sri Lanka seized control on the first day of the second Test match against Pakistan in Colombo.
Kumar Sangakkara celebrates his half-century as Sri Lanka took a 74-run lead in the Colombo Test.
Kulasekara finished with figures of four for 21 and spinner Ajantha Mendis chipped in with three for 20 as the visitors were dismissed for a paltry 90 runs midway through the afternoon session.

Sangakkara continued the home team's dominance with a fluent innings as Sri Lanka's hopes of securing their first Test series win against Pakistan at home gained momentum.

Off-spinner Saeed Ajmal claimed two wickets in the final session, but Sri Lanka had progressed to a comfortable 164 for three at stumps -- a lead of 74 runs.

Sangakkara was unbeaten on 81, while Thilan Samaraweera was on 13 in a fourth-wicket partnership so far worth 31.
Kulasekara caused Pakistan problems from the start, picking up three wickets in three successive overs.
He got Khurram Manzoor to edge a ball straight to stand-in wicketkeeper Tillakaratne Dilshan, before left-arm seamer Thilan Thushara sent back Younus Khan with the first ball of his second over -- getting the Pakistan captain to drag one back on to his stumps.

At six for two, Pakistan desperately needed some stability and Mohammad Yousuf began the task of rebuilding confidently.
He chopped Kulasekara into the ground and over the slip cordon for a boundary off the first ball and followed up with delectable square-driven boundary later in the over.But Kulasekara returned to snare Yousuf, who scooped a fuller length delivery to Rangana Herath at point.

Kulasekara had Misbah-ul-Haq back in the pavilion for a duck, caught behind off the inside edge, as Pakistan's now familiar tendency to capitulate continued.

Shoaib Malik put on 32 for the fifth wicket with debutant Fawad Alam -- quite easily Pakistan's best period of play -- but the innings came apart once Alam was trapped in front for 16 by Angelo Mathews.

Kulasekara returned in the afternoon to get rid of Abdur Rauf for a 34-ball duck, while Thushara had Kamran Akmal caught behind cheaply.

Pakistan's innings then folded for their lowest ever total against Sri Lanka with Mendis claiming three wickets, including two off successive deliveries to bring the curtain down and leave Malik stranded on 39.

Malinda Warnapura, who had two failures in the first Test, and Tharanga Paranavitana began Sri Lanka's response confidently until Umar Gul secured a leg before decision against Warnapura.

Sangakkara then put on 54 for the second wicket with Paranavitana until that partnership was ended by Ajmal, although the bowler was considerably aided by the batsman.

Paranavitana (26) rocked back to cut a short-pitched delivery from the off-spinner but only managed a bottom-edge which Akmal pouched at the second attempt.

Mahela Jayawardene looked good for his 19, but an inside-edge off the pad was neatly held by Manzoor at short leg. By then Sri Lanka had gone well past Pakistan's first-innings total.

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SPORT/07/12/cricket.test.srilanka.pakistan/index.html#cnnSTCText
 
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Spinners seal historic Bangladesh win
The Bulletin by Sriram Veera
July 13, 2009

Bangladesh 238 (Mortaza 39, Roach 3-46) and 345 (Tamim 128, Sammy 5-70) beat West Indies 307 (Phillips 94, Bernard 53, Mahmudullah 3-59) and 181 (Bernard 52, Mahmudullah 5-51, Shakib 3-39) by 95 runs

Shakib Al Hasan, the stand-in captain, led from the front to hand
9747b8b2824f7a85f6bd8541e82257db.jpg

Four years and six months after their first Test win, Bangladesh sealed a historic second victory when they beat West Indies by 95 runs in St Vincent. Bangladesh's spin twins Shakib Al Hasan and Mahmudullah weaved a tantalising web to consign a weakened West Indies to defeat. The only resistance came from David Bernard, who defied everything thrown at him for 134 balls to remain unbeaten on 52.

The champagne moment arrived at 4.40 pm local time when Shakib, the stand-in captain, nailed last man Tino Best in front with a dipping full toss with only ten overs left in the day. Best put up his bat as if to suggest he had edged it but the finger was up and the Bangladeshi fielders converged in a huddle of joy, soon joined by a limping Mashrafe Mortaza.

It was an enthralling last couple of sessions in a beautiful setting, the Kingstown stadium ringed by the sea. The cricket was almost sub-continental in its elements. Spinners operated with several close-in men prowling near the batsmen waiting for a mistake, and an over-excited chirpy wicketkeeper, Mushfiqur Rahim, applying immense pressure on the batsmen and the umpires with his appeals exclamations. And when the seamers came on, it wasn't seam but reverse swing on view with the slinging Rubel Hossain and the grunting Shahadat Hossain trying their best to break through.

The plot thickened in the last session, as Bernard found a willing partner in Nikita Miller, suggesting a replay of Cardiff, where England pulled off a great escape on Sunday. But Mohammad Ashraful, who failed in both innings with the bat, stamped his presence on the game by removing Miller, who'd stayed on his back foot to defend stoutly for 54 balls, with one that straightened to get the edge. Mahmudullah returned to trap Ryan Austin and take out Kemar Roach before Shakib sealed the finish.

Until then, Bernard had proved to be a huge headache to the visitors, standing solidly between them and history. His CV describes him as a stylish batsman but today he added grit to the existing grace. Despite the tremendous pressure, he managed to bat with some elegance, using his wrists to ride the turn and bounce on the final-day wicket. While the rest pushed hard at the ball, he played with soft hands and defended confidently.

The contest with Shakib was top-notch, with the bowler shifting angles and trying everything in his arsenal - left-arm breaks, straighter one, arm-ball, round-arm delivery, over and round-the-wicket - to beat a batsman batting in the zone. He moved forward or back, as the length demanded of him, using his wrists to drop the ball down short of the fielders. When the spin noose tightened, he had the courage to play the pressure-relieving strokes like the lofted drives and the cuts. He survived a close lbw shout in the 44th over against Shakib when a ball straightened to hit the pad in front of the stumps but, that blemish apart, he was pretty solid.

However, Shakib and Mahmudullah ensured no other batsmen would deny them a slice of history. Shakib, hailed by the former Australian spinner Kerry O' Keefe as the "best finger spinner in the world", turned in a suffocating spell of left-arm spin to relentlessly force the pressure on West Indies. Shakib was slightly slow through the air in the first innings and couldn't pose too many problems on a slow track. Today, though, he ripped it slightly quicker and immediately looked threatening. He varied his pace, even his angle, by lowering the arm on occasion and, unsurprisingly, was the better of the two spinners, despite finishing with fewer wickets. He occasionally got the ball to straighten and slipped in a few with the arm.

In his first over Shakib harassed Omar Phillips before going past an attempted sweep to trap the batsman. Later, after Darren Sammy and Bernard had added 37 in 11.3 overs, he struck, removing Sammy with a little bit of help from the batsman. Suddenly, against the run of play and just before tea, Sammy jumped out and sliced an ambitious square drive straight to point.

Even when he was not taking wickets, Shakib kept the pressure on and by keeping the batsmen on a leash, allowed Mahmudullah the space to wreak some damage. At one point in the chase the keeper Rahim shouted out to Mahmudullah: "Just keep hitting the right areas; the pitch will take care of the rest". Mahmudullah did exactly that to pick up three quick wickets after lunch before he returned to take another two in the last session. He increased the pressure with his accuracy and made the batsmen play at every ball. It paid off - and how.

Floyd Reifer, who was tormented by Shakib, showed himself to be a prime lbw candidate. Time and again, that front leg was pressed dangerously across but he managed to stab and jab his way out against Shakib. But Mahmudullah finally broke through with one that landed and straightened to strike that front leg. His next victim was Travis Dowlin, inducing a nervous prod straight to short-leg. Chadwick Walton walked in and started off with a second-ball six but was done in by one that kept low from Mahmudullah and was struck in front of the leg stump.

The slide had started with a moment of madness from the opener Dale Richards who added 20 runs in two overs before he had a brain freeze. He ambled out of the crease after being hit on the pad by Shahadat Hossain, all the while looking anxiously at the umpire for the verdict on the lbw appeal, which went in his favour, but was run out by a direct hit. That allowed Bangladesh the opening and they stormed through.

When the day started, it looked as if Bangladesh were dawdling with the bat and not showing enough urgency to either go for quick runs or leave many overs as possible to bowl out West Indies. However, Darren Sammy took a five-for to bowl them out and that proved a blessing in hindsight as it allowed their spinners enough time to bowl them to a euphoric triumph.

West Indies v Bangladesh, 1st Test, Kingstown, 5th day Report | Cricket News | West Indies v Bangladesh 2009 | Cricinfo.com
 
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Spinners seal historic Bangladesh win
The Bulletin by Sriram Veera
July 13, 2009

Bangladesh 238 (Mortaza 39, Roach 3-46) and 345 (Tamim 128, Sammy 5-70) beat West Indies 307 (Phillips 94, Bernard 53, Mahmudullah 3-59) and 181 (Bernard 52, Mahmudullah 5-51, Shakib 3-39) by 95 runs

Shakib Al Hasan, the stand-in captain, led from the front to hand
9747b8b2824f7a85f6bd8541e82257db.jpg

Four years and six months after their first Test win, Bangladesh sealed a historic second victory when they beat West Indies by 95 runs in St Vincent. Bangladesh's spin twins Shakib Al Hasan and Mahmudullah weaved a tantalising web to consign a weakened West Indies to defeat. The only resistance came from David Bernard, who defied everything thrown at him for 134 balls to remain unbeaten on 52.

The champagne moment arrived at 4.40 pm local time when Shakib, the stand-in captain, nailed last man Tino Best in front with a dipping full toss with only ten overs left in the day. Best put up his bat as if to suggest he had edged it but the finger was up and the Bangladeshi fielders converged in a huddle of joy, soon joined by a limping Mashrafe Mortaza.

It was an enthralling last couple of sessions in a beautiful setting, the Kingstown stadium ringed by the sea. The cricket was almost sub-continental in its elements. Spinners operated with several close-in men prowling near the batsmen waiting for a mistake, and an over-excited chirpy wicketkeeper, Mushfiqur Rahim, applying immense pressure on the batsmen and the umpires with his appeals exclamations. And when the seamers came on, it wasn't seam but reverse swing on view with the slinging Rubel Hossain and the grunting Shahadat Hossain trying their best to break through.

The plot thickened in the last session, as Bernard found a willing partner in Nikita Miller, suggesting a replay of Cardiff, where England pulled off a great escape on Sunday. But Mohammad Ashraful, who failed in both innings with the bat, stamped his presence on the game by removing Miller, who'd stayed on his back foot to defend stoutly for 54 balls, with one that straightened to get the edge. Mahmudullah returned to trap Ryan Austin and take out Kemar Roach before Shakib sealed the finish.

Until then, Bernard had proved to be a huge headache to the visitors, standing solidly between them and history. His CV describes him as a stylish batsman but today he added grit to the existing grace. Despite the tremendous pressure, he managed to bat with some elegance, using his wrists to ride the turn and bounce on the final-day wicket. While the rest pushed hard at the ball, he played with soft hands and defended confidently.

The contest with Shakib was top-notch, with the bowler shifting angles and trying everything in his arsenal - left-arm breaks, straighter one, arm-ball, round-arm delivery, over and round-the-wicket - to beat a batsman batting in the zone. He moved forward or back, as the length demanded of him, using his wrists to drop the ball down short of the fielders. When the spin noose tightened, he had the courage to play the pressure-relieving strokes like the lofted drives and the cuts. He survived a close lbw shout in the 44th over against Shakib when a ball straightened to hit the pad in front of the stumps but, that blemish apart, he was pretty solid.

However, Shakib and Mahmudullah ensured no other batsmen would deny them a slice of history. Shakib, hailed by the former Australian spinner Kerry O' Keefe as the "best finger spinner in the world", turned in a suffocating spell of left-arm spin to relentlessly force the pressure on West Indies. Shakib was slightly slow through the air in the first innings and couldn't pose too many problems on a slow track. Today, though, he ripped it slightly quicker and immediately looked threatening. He varied his pace, even his angle, by lowering the arm on occasion and, unsurprisingly, was the better of the two spinners, despite finishing with fewer wickets. He occasionally got the ball to straighten and slipped in a few with the arm.

In his first over Shakib harassed Omar Phillips before going past an attempted sweep to trap the batsman. Later, after Darren Sammy and Bernard had added 37 in 11.3 overs, he struck, removing Sammy with a little bit of help from the batsman. Suddenly, against the run of play and just before tea, Sammy jumped out and sliced an ambitious square drive straight to point.

Even when he was not taking wickets, Shakib kept the pressure on and by keeping the batsmen on a leash, allowed Mahmudullah the space to wreak some damage. At one point in the chase the keeper Rahim shouted out to Mahmudullah: "Just keep hitting the right areas; the pitch will take care of the rest". Mahmudullah did exactly that to pick up three quick wickets after lunch before he returned to take another two in the last session. He increased the pressure with his accuracy and made the batsmen play at every ball. It paid off - and how.

Floyd Reifer, who was tormented by Shakib, showed himself to be a prime lbw candidate. Time and again, that front leg was pressed dangerously across but he managed to stab and jab his way out against Shakib. But Mahmudullah finally broke through with one that landed and straightened to strike that front leg. His next victim was Travis Dowlin, inducing a nervous prod straight to short-leg. Chadwick Walton walked in and started off with a second-ball six but was done in by one that kept low from Mahmudullah and was struck in front of the leg stump.

The slide had started with a moment of madness from the opener Dale Richards who added 20 runs in two overs before he had a brain freeze. He ambled out of the crease after being hit on the pad by Shahadat Hossain, all the while looking anxiously at the umpire for the verdict on the lbw appeal, which went in his favour, but was run out by a direct hit. That allowed Bangladesh the opening and they stormed through.

When the day started, it looked as if Bangladesh were dawdling with the bat and not showing enough urgency to either go for quick runs or leave many overs as possible to bowl out West Indies. However, Darren Sammy took a five-for to bowl them out and that proved a blessing in hindsight as it allowed their spinners enough time to bowl them to a euphoric triumph.

West Indies v Bangladesh, 1st Test, Kingstown, 5th day Report | Cricket News | West Indies v Bangladesh 2009 | Cricinfo.com

Great win by BD.

Hope we can level the series against SL.
 
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But Sri Lankans are pulling back.great knock by Fawad on his debut.:tup:
You missed it on the first innings,should have scored at least 150.Now Pakistan will have to bowl exceptionally well to win this.171 runs to win is not a big target.
 
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London, July 19 (PTI) The job is not done yet but a cocksure British media is all agog, anticipating England to get a huge monkey off its back by winning their first Lord''s Test over Australia in 75 years. "History beckons rampant England at Lord''s", screamed a ''Sunday Times'' headline, summing up the mood after England''s domineering performance in the second Ashes Test brought them on the verge of a breakthrough victory.

"It has been an extraordinary turnaround since last weekend, when England looked dead in the water on the final morning in Cardiff," the daily observed. "But, not for the first time, a team managing to wriggle off the hook in one game has come back strongly in the next.

India did this in England two years ago, when they scraped a draw at Lords with nine wickets down and went on to win the series," it added. "Aussies on the Run" was the headline in ''Sunday Express'', which took quite a mischievous dig at Ricky Ponting''s men.

"On Friday the MCC had to send out to a supermarket for the old-fashioned drink of Dubonnet because the Queen wanted her favourite tipple when she came for lunch at Lord''s to meet the players. "At lunchtime yesterday they might have sent for smelling salts for the Australians, who were suffering their most torrid time at Lord''s since they last lost at cricket''s HQ in 1934," it said.

English media agog in anticipation of Lord''s history - Yahoo! India News
 
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moin u put up a very very good team but asif still cant play untill september and one player should be replaced in your squad which is misbah he is not a good player whenever he plays good pakistan loose or even he plays bad pakistan loose he has a bad luck for the team i hope he should be replaced with fawad alam in the team or some one like khalid latif
 
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my team for ODI

Imran Nazir
Kamran Akmal
Younis Khan
Mohammad Yousf
Khalid Latif or Fawad Alam or Umar Akmal
Shoaib Malik
Shahid Afridi
Abdur Razzak
Saeed Ajmal
Mohammad Amir
Umar Gul
 
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Mohammad yousuf again got run out bad luck since that crap misbah came in to the crease it is happening bad for the team i dont know why younus keep playing him when we have better player than misbah sitting faisal iqbal it is out of my mind
 
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Mohammad yousuf today got to 7000 runs of milestone he is better than those 7000 runs i hope he will get many more in future for us if PCB allow him to play for next 3 to 4 years im sure he will be near to sachin tendulkar record
 
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If everything goes perfect in his career from now on, i.e. he plays all the test matches that Pakistan plays, averages a decent 50 or so in them, then he might get upto 10000 runs. Nothing more than that. Still the most runs scored by a Pakisan batsman if he gets there.
 
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Bangladesh closes in on cricket series sweep against West Indies :victory:

By Craig Cozier (CP) – 7 hours ago

ST. GEORGE'S, Grenada — Captain Shakib-al-Hasan reached 5-70 as Bangladesh closed in on its first overseas series win after West Indies was bowled out for 209 on a rain-hit fourth day of the second test.

Bangladesh, which set a victory target of 215, safely negotiated six overs before lunch as they reached 17-0.

Tamim Iqbal was unbeaten on 12 while his opening partner Imrul Kayes was 4 not out.

Bangladesh is seeking a series sweep following its victory in the opening test in St. Vincent a week ago.

Persistent morning rain delayed the start of day four by more than two hours, but Bangladesh struck early once play resumed.

David Bernard Jr., who was 61 not out overnight, launched a six over straight long off but added just eight runs. The elegant right-hander was neatly stumped by wicket-keeper Mushfiqur Rahim as he missed an on-drive at a big turner from Enamul. The Jamaican hit six fours and two sixes in his topscore of 69 off 76 balls.

Tailender Tino Best also lofted a six but fell two balls later as he gloved a paddle sweep at Shakib, who collected his fifth five-wicket haul in his 14th test.

Kemar Roach finished on one not out.

Enamul claimed 3-48 to support his skipper.

The West Indies surprisingly opted not to use Roach with the new ball despite the lithe fast bowler collecting 6-48 in the first innings.

Instead, Best and Bernard shared the first six overs without success.

Tamim crunched one pulled four as he and Imrul comfortably saw Bangladesh to the break.

The Canadian Press: Bangladesh closes in on cricket series sweep against West Indies

Good job Al-Hasan bro......:cheers::tup:
 
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