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Saturday July 06, 2024

Pakistan taking nothing for granted against Zimbabwe

Hosts unlikely to opt for experimentation during the forthcoming home series

By our correspondents
May 14, 2015
KARACHI: Pakistan are unlikely to opt for experimentation when they announce their limited-overs squad for this month’s groundbreaking home series against Zimbabwe.
Under normal circumstances, Pakistan wouldn’t have resisted the temptation of making some post World Cup changes for a series against a weaker team and that too on home soil but unfortunately for them these are not normal circumstances.
An embarrassing whitewash against Bangladesh in their One-day International series has resulted in a major slump for Pakistan in the International Cricket Council (ICC) rankings. Languishing at number nine in the list, Pakistan are currently facing the clear and present danger of missing out on a direct spot for the next edition of the Champions Trophy – ICC’s elite eight-nation contest.
“It’s not an ideal situation for us considering that our ODI ranking has really taken a hit,” a PCB official told ‘The News’. “That’s why I don’t think that our selectors will opt for too much experimentation for the series against Zimbabwe,” he added.
Pakistan, who will announce their squad for the series against Zimbabwe on May 18, will be hoping for a clean sweep in the contest that will include three ODIs and two Twenty20 games.
It might not be a big series considering that Zimbabwe are regarded among the minnows of international cricket, but Pakistan are eagerly waiting to host the African side later this month.
Agencies add: The Zimbabweans will touch down next week, the first Test-playing cricket team to visit Pakistan in more than six years.
The anticipation is building, heightened by a delay in selling tickets until Friday for all five limited-overs games at 27,000-seat Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.
The desire of Pakistan fans starved of internationals on their home grounds should sell out the three One-day Internationals and two Twenty20s from May 22-29.
The International Cricket Council is not expected to send its match officials for a tour in which the security has been deemed “unmanageable” by the international players’ body.
While the tour is more about proving to the other Test-playing nations that Pakistan is safe to play in again following the 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka team convoy, the home team will also use Zimbabwe to try to improve its credibility after a woeful run of limited-overs results.
Pakistan slipped to their lowest ever ODI world ranking of No. 9, two above Zimbabwe, after a shambolic 3-0 first-ever defeat in Bangladesh recently.
“The focus is, of course, on organizing a series without any security problems, but it’s hard to swallow the defeat against Bangladesh, too,” former Pakistan captain Rashid Latif said on Wednesday.
“Pakistan should not repeat the same performance in front of their home fans.”
The drop in the rankings has put Pakistan’s place in doubt for next year’s Champions Trophy, as only the top eight ranked teams will compete.
The team is in rebuild mode. Senior pros Misbah-ul-Haq and Shahid Afridi quit ODIs after the Cricket World Cup exit in the quarter-finals, and seasoned batsman Younis Khan was rested from the three-match series against Bangladesh.
Latif was critical of the decision to elevate Azhar Ali to captain, and still wasn’t a fan even after the new skipper scored a century against Bangladesh.
“Look, we need an aggressive captain who could bat with a good strike rate, and Azhar Ali is, for sure, not one of them,” Latif said.
Injuries also dented Pakistan’s plans against Bangladesh, and board chairman Shaharyar Khan last week termed the fitness of the team as the “worst in the world.”
Under coach Waqar Younis, the team has lost its five most recent ODI series; New Zealand (home and away), Sri Lanka, Australia, and Bangladesh.
“Had I been in Waqar’s place, I would have resigned after what happened in Bangladesh,” Latif said. “Pakistan needs a local coach who knows the strength of domestic cricketers and not someone like Waqar, who hardly knows which cricketer is performing on the domestic circuit.”