Tag Futebol

Ranji round-up

*North ZoneKavaljit Singh scores a doubleJammu & Kashmir batsman Kavaljit Singh notched up a double centuryagainst Services in their Ranji Trophy league match at Delhi.Services, in reply to their rivals’ first-innings total of 350, scored287, led largely by fifties from Jasvir Singh, Arun Sharma, and CDThomson; Jammu bowler Jagtar Singh picked five wickets. The close ofplay on Day Three saw Jammu & Kashmir at a score of 133/4.At Rohtak, Himachal Pradesh bowler Shakti Singh scalped five batsmenin dismissing Haryana fpr 264, giving his side a lead of 74 runs. AjayRatra, fresh from his match against the visiting English side atJaipur, top-scored for Haryana with an unbeaten 72. In their secondinnings, Himachal Pradesh were 108/2 at stumps on Day Three.At Amritsar, Punjab made a strong reply to Delhi’s first-innings totalof 499. After Mithun Manhas (193) and Pradeep Chawla (142) hadslaughtered the bowling, Punjab’s batsmen looked like they wouldfollow suit when opener Manish Sharma fell for 1. The next threebatsmen, however, scored centuries – Ravneet Ricky made 100, YuvrajSingh 102, and Dinesh Mongia 102. Punjab were 385/7 at stumps on DayThree. For Delhi, Amit Bhandari picked five wickets.*South ZoneShock collapse for HyderabadInspired perhaps by one of their ilk breaking into the national squadfor the first time, Kerala’s bowlers ripped through a strong Hyderabadbatting line-up, dismissing them for only 117 on Day One of theirRanji Trophy league match at Cochin.With Suresh Kumar and Rejith Kumar picking up four wickets each, onlyDaniel Manohar could make a significant score – 35. Kerala, in theirreply, were 80/3 at the close of play.In the other South Zone match, Karnataka batsman Barrington Rowlandwaged a lone battle against Tamil Nadu, striking 113 off 221 balls.His fellow batsmen, however, could not display similar application,and Karnataka could only notch up 215 in their first innings. TamilNadu, in reply, were 39/1 at stumps on Day One.*East ZoneBihar batsmen make merrySkipper Rajiv Kumar and Saurav Shukla both notched up centuries,propelling Bihar to a total of 412 in their Ranji Trophy league matchagainst Tripura at Agartala.Kumar (113) and Shukla (120) shared a huge partnership for the fifthwicket in reply to Tripura’s first-innings total of 394, ensuring thatBihar would not lose the match and, in all probability, would pick upfive points from the likely-to-be-drawn tie.Tripura were 50/3 at the close of Day Three, and Bihar could very wellnotch up a win if they can bowl their rivals out and then make theremaining runs for victory.In the other East Zone match, Bengal’s batsmen notched up a fifty-runfirst-innings lead over Assam at Kolkata. Sukhvinder Singh, for thevisitors, picked six wickets, hastening the end of the innings. Forthe home side, skipper Rohan Gavaskar top-scored with 86. After making299, Bengal had Assam at 147/6 at stumps on Day Three.*West ZoneMumbai complete comprehensive winputting on a mammoth first-innings total of 553, Mumbai bowlers thenwreaked havoc with Baroda’s batting line-up, winning their RanjiTrophy league match at Vadodara by an innings 141 runs.After Ramesh Powar disheartened the Baroda bowlers by scoring 110 off134 balls coming in at number nine, Paras Mhambrey (3-27), NileshKulkarni (4-15) and Avishkar Salvi (3-41) then dismissed Baroda forjust 89. Nayan Mongia was the only resistance, scoring 17 off 100balls. When they followed on, Baroda could only muster up 323, handingtheir rivals a comprehensive triumph.At Rajkot, Gujarat opted not to take advantage of a sportingSaurashtra declaration, playing for a draw and picking up three pointsfrom their match. Saurashtra, declaring their second innings closed at157/7, set an eminently achievable victory target of 270 off 50 overs.Gujarat reached 138/2 by the close of play on the last day.

Final Test evenly balanced after Pakistan take lead

Karachi, March 13: Muttiah Muralitharan continued to be an enigma forthe Pakistan batsmen as Sri Lanka pulled themselves back intocontention of the third and final cricket Test being played here onMonday at the National Stadium.Muralitharan pushed Pakistan on the backfoot when he picked up twocrucial wickets on Monday evening after the home team appeared to runaway with the match after Shahid Afridi and Mohammad Naveed Qureshihad provided them with the best opening start of the series by scoring70 in 18 overs.But Muralitharan trapped Naveed in front of the wickets and thenearned a controversial decision against Ijaz Ahmad to restrictPakistan to 88 for three at stumps on the second day.Ravindra Pushpakumara had provided Muralitharan the inroad by sendingShahid Afridi’s off stump cartwheeling.Pakistan had earlier dismissed Sri Lanka for 227 to secure a 29-runfirst innings lead. It was the first time Pakistan snatched the firstinnings advantage after surrendering a 171-run lead in Rawalpindi and69-run lead in Peshawar. Sri Lanka won both the Tests by two wicketsand 57 runs respectively.Pakistan, who have never lost a Test here in 33 matches, lead thetourists by 117 runs with seven second innings wickets in hand. Thematch, which was heading Pakistan’s way 14 overs before close, is nowevenly balanced.Nevertheless, Pakistan bowlers aggressive approach was undone byMuralitharan’s menace who now has taken his tally of wickets in theseries to 24. When Sri Lanka won the series here in 1995-96,Muralitharan had picked 18 wickets.Interestingly, most of Muralitharan’s victims in the series havefallen to bat and pad catches which proves the Pakistan stroke-makersinability to counter his spin and overcautious approach.Muralitharan, the undoubtable spin king, achieved a personal milestonewhen he reached 250 wickets in 51 Tests by accounting for Naveed. Theopener, who was looking compact in defence while scoring 27, foundhimself a bit unlucky to be declared leg before as the ball wasapparently spinning down the leg-side.But it was heartwarming to see Shahid Afridi stroke the ball on meritand show patience. He played sizzling drives until he was beaten by areal beauty from pacer Pushpakumara. Afridi’s 59-ball 34 was spicedwith six boundaries.Until Pushpakumara dismissed Afridi and Muralitharan got his actstogether, the Sri Lankans, for the first time, appeared a disjointedunit. Their shoulders were drooped and the body language showed thatthey had run out of steam.The reason maybe that they had already clinched the series inPeshawar. The other reason might be that they are at the fag end of awonderful tour and consequently keen to return home early.Sanath Jayasuriya’s leadership also came into question for the firsttime in the series when he delayed the introduction of Muralitharanuntil the 17th over. A bowler, who has mentally destroyed the Pakistanbatsmen, should have been brought into the attack much earlier.Nevertheless, Sri Lanka’s belated fightback on the second day’s cannotdiscredit Pakistan who dominated six of the seven hours play. Day’splay was extended because Pakistan’s over-rate was well below therequirement. Only a miracle can save them from being penalized bymatch referee Brian Hastings.Waqar Younis showed his experience of bowling on a green top track bypitching the ball upto the batsmen while Shoaib Akhtar displayed hisspeed with controlled line and length. Shahid Afridi exhibited hisutility by snapping up two wickets.The double change in the team management was also evident as thereappeared a set plan and purpose behind the bowling. The Sri Lankanbatsmen were not given much width or room to play their trademarkextravagant shots. Field placings were near perfect while the bowlingchanges were timely and calculated.But Pakistan’s strategy was nearly pierced by pint-sized RomeshKaluwitharana who punctuated nine boundaries in his 29-ball 42. Butalert fielding restricted the little dynamite from inflicting furtherdamage when Naveed’s accurate throw from square-leg beat the SriLankan wicket-keeper by yards who tried to steal an impossible secondrun.Jayasuriya was deliberately fed outside the off-stump before theskipper perished when Ijaz took a sharp catch off Shoaib Akhtar. WaqarYounis kept the ball on the right spot until he found the outside edgeof Mahela Jayawardena’s bat after having trapped Marvan Atapattu infront of the wickets off a sharp banana-like inswinger.Russel Arnold, who missed a century by one run in Peshawar, was notgiven free strokes on his favourite leg-side. He eventually lost hispatience and slashed a wide delivery off debutant Irfan Fazil to besmartly caught at third slip by Younis Khan.Indika de Saram, who had just two scoring shots in his 22-ball five,tried to take liberty against Shahid Afridi and was caught at mid-on.Tillekeratne Dilshan tried to cut a ball too close to his body andcaught by Moin Khan who had given him a life three runs earlier.Dilshan masterminded Sri Lanka’s revival after they had slumped to 46for three in the first hour. He added 54 runs for the fourth wicketwith Arnold and remained a silent spectators in another partnership of54 with Kaluwitharana.Waqar Younis finished as the most impressive bowler with two for 39but Shoaib Akhtar was the most successful bowler with three for 52.Shahid Afridi bagged two for 40 but Irfan Fazil had a nightmare debutwhen he was hit for 35 runs from his four overs for a solitary wicket.

Steve Smith double-century pushes England to the brink once again

England 23 for 1 trail Australia 497 for 8 (Smith 211, Labuschagne 67) by 474 runs

For about two overs on the second day at Old Trafford, Steven Smith looked fallible as he resumed his comeback innings after yesterday’s preamble half-century. Stuart Broad found his edge with his first ball of the day, then induced that rarest of aberrations, a waft outside off from his second.Moments later, it appeared that Smith’s neurotic focus had found the root of his discomfort – a rogue van’s windscreen, visible through the slenderest of gaps in a gate behind the bowler’s arm, and winking at him with unfathomable persistence, much as the North Star might after one too many disco biscuits.But even after a towel had been lodged under the wipers to block out the glare, Smith was unable to settle immediately, and three balls into Jofra Archer’s first over of the day, he pumped a low full toss at a catchable height through the bowler’s outstretched fingers and away to the boundary for four. A final, flighty fence past leg stump followed. And there and then, England knew, deep in their souls, that their window of opportunity had clanged shut.Fidget, shuffle, nudge, smack. Rinse. Repeat. Back and across, coiled like a pinball launcher, way outside off if needs be, to clip a perfectly decent ball off the hip, or to pongo onto the front foot for another freakishly emphatic drive, bat pointing to the precise patch of grass that he had targeted, rubbing in his genius while simply completing the arc of his stroke.For the remainder of his 263-ball, 497-minute stay, Smith batted as if he had never been away – which, but for that delivery from Archer at Lord’s, he might indeed never have been. Once again, he encountered an opposition that ran out of plans and patience in equal measure, as he found sufficient support from, first, Tim Paine and then Mitchell Starc to leave England praying for more rain to assist the series-extending draw that is surely now the limit of their ambitions.By the time he eventually fell for 211, reverse-sweeping the part-time spin of Joe Root (having frogmarched England’s frontline bowlers to the brink of that inevitable declaration), Smith had racked up a nonsensical haul of 589 runs in four innings, at an average of 147.25 that would have been closer to 200 but for his brave but unwise decision to resume that Lord’s knock while displaying the early signs of concussion.Steve Smith celebrates his century•Getty Images

And by the close, the ease of Smith’s own progress had been put into stark perspective by the agonised extraction of England’s own erstwhile No.4, Joe Denly. Promoted to open due to Jason Roy’s clear unsuitability for the task, Denly endured for 23 balls and four sketchily gathered runs, before stabbing Pat Cummins into the midriff of Matthew Wade at short leg, who snaffled the rebound brilliantly in one hand, diving to his right.The difference between Australia’s focus and England’s was as visible in that final half-an-hour with the ball as it had been for so long with Smith’s bat. Starc, armed with the new ball after stewing on the sidelines for three Tests, looked as “cherry-ripe” as Archer in particular has looked fatigued in this contest, while his fellow quicks, Josh Hazlewood and Cummins, were no less eager to show what can yet be achieved on this surface.But it was the energy in the field was the most palpable difference. For if England could be excused for being blown off-track by the howling gales of the first truncated day, today’s (largely) blue skies robbed them of any mitigation. They needed to be at their best on a pivotal day of the series, but they were by and large as poor as they’ve been all summer.Smith’s first century of the day, his third of the series, was a formality – ushered through with a misfield at square leg, and celebrated with a pointed wave of the bat that doubled as a “hello, I’m back”. It was his fifth in his last eight innings against England, his 11th in Ashes cricket, and his 26th in 67 Tests all told. Comparisons with Don Bradman have long been sacrilege in Test cricket, but the relentless weight of these numbers are starting to scotch all complaints.There was, however, one moment that stood head and shoulders above all England’s other errors. Jack Leach has had a storied summer – that 92 as a nightwatchman at Lord’s, that most glorious of 1 not outs at Headingley last week. And with the ball, all things considered, he was probably second only to the toiling Broad as England’s most probing option of the day.But when, with Smith on 118 and showing another fleeting glimpse of mortality against his relative kryptonite of left-arm spin, Leach found the edge of his bat with a flighted, dipping, ripping delivery that sent every data analyst in the game into raptures, the moment was immediately lost as replays showed that he had overstepped by a good half an inch.A spinner’s no-ball is one of cricket’s unforgivable sins, and traumatically for Leach it was only his 13th out of more than 15,000 in his career. But what a delivery to serve one up on. Smith turned on his heel, marching back to resume his innings through a phalanx of crestfallen fielders, who were immediately torn a strip by a livid Joe Root, desperately trying to lift some flat-lining standards. But once again, that window of opportunity was already shut.The absence of Smith, after all, would have meant the presence of another not-Smith – but even the less impossible task of making dents in the rest of the batting order proved to be beyond England, at least at the first grasp. Earlier in the day, Matthew Wade had gifted his wicket with a foul slog to mid-on, where Root clung onto a swirling chance that left him white with relief, but when the under-pressure Tim Paine arrived to replace him, the equally under-pressure Roy dropped a shocker at second slip, the ball barely hitting the heel of his palm before plopping to the turf to leave Broad, the bowler, apoplectic.Paine is without a first-class century in 12 years, and is increasingly lacking in mandate as Australia captain now that Smith, for all his sins, is so clearly restored as the team’s front-man. His removal for 9 would have left him with a highest score of 34 in seven innings. But instead he found the resolve to grind through to a cathartic half-century, albeit that he required another let-off to get there, as Sam Curran – briefly on the field for Ben Stokes – dropped a low pull at mid-on on 49 as Archer bent his back in the best spell of his wicketless innings.Paine didn’t last much longer – he nicked a fine legcutter from Craig Overton’s first ball after tea to depart for 56 – but his presence had augmented Smith’s dominance of a stand of 145, and though Pat Cummins didn’t linger long, Starc’s eagerness to get involved in the series manifested itself in the ideal tailender’s innings.His 54 from 58 balls included seven fours and two sixes, but began as a keen supporting role, just 6 runs from 23 until Smith’s double-century gave him licence to unleash the long handle. Broad was hacked for four fours in a row to kickstart a helter-skelter finale that might have carried on to the close against a despondent attack, had Paine not waved them in with half-an-hour of the day to go.By then, of course, Smith was gone – an event so rare that it would have justified on of the Don’s bespoke “He’s Out!” billboards, had the Manchester Evening News deemed it worthy to publish a special edition. His nudge behind square off Broad pushed him ever further into into the elite of Ashes combatants, with only the Don himself (EIGHT!) and Wally Hammond (4) having recorded more double-hundreds in the game’s oldest rivalry.Either way, his series tally is 589 runs from four innings, one of which was effectively sawn off by concussion. And now, after this latest masterclass, the only dizziness on display is that being induced by the vertigo of his statistics, and the bewilderment of an England opposition that must now be believing that Headingley was a fever-dream after all.

Vettori unfazed ahead of South Africa tour

His biggest test yet: Vettori prepares to lead New Zealand for the first time in Tests © Getty Images

Not even Stephen Fleming, who was widely considered one of the modern game’s most astute leaders, has led New Zealand to a series win in South Africa. But the recently installed captain, Daniel Vettori, has no qualms about taking over the reins ahead of his side’s three-Test tour which gets underway in November.”I have thought about the responsibilities and have planned how I want to do things,” Vettori said at Sydney before flying out to South Africa. “I like to think I have always thought about the game. Really, it is not too much of a step up.”Vettori took over the one-day captaincy from Fleming after the World Cup and, in September, the selectors decided to install him as the Test captain too. But although he only has limited experience in captaining Northern Districts at first-class level, he isn’t alien to the role and has substituted for Fleming on occasions.”While I haven’t done the job full time, I have done enough to take confidence from what I have done,” he said. “But I’m not silly enough to see it [the captaincy] as a bed of roses. It is more of a progression. We know Stephen Fleming is going to retire at some stage and I’m pleased to have been given the opportunity to follow him.”One criticism levelled at his leadership in the past has been a tendency to underbowl himself, an accusation he stringently denies. “Anyone saying that has probably got it wrong,” he said. “I think the thing I have done well is bowl at tough times. I have no problem managing my own bowling. I’m happy to bowl after 10 overs if the situation so demands, just as I’m happy to bowl at the death.”New Zealand will play two Tests, a Twenty20 international and three one-dayers on their South Africa tour. Preceding those are two warm-ups against South Africa A, the first of which is at Potchefstroom on October 25.

Bulls ride to victory after Perren blitz

Scorecard

Clinton Perren launches one of his seven sixes © Getty Images

Clinton Perren smashed 82 from 37 deliveries to set up a Queensland victory in the first Twenty20 match of the season. Despite the extraordinary bowling of Tasmania’s Michael Dighton, who claimed 6 for 25, the Bulls’ 202 was enough as a Nathan Rimmington hat-trick ended Tasmania’s hopes.Perren blasted seven sixes and six fours and together with Nathan Reardon, whose 54 came from 31 balls, did the damage before Dighton kept the Tigers in the game. Dighton, a batsman who has not taken a wicket in 49 first-class matches, kept the scoring down in the late overs after the front-line spinners Daniel Marsh and Xavier Doherty proved expensive.But the visitors could not match Queensland’s run-rate and were dismissed for 164 in the 19th over. Rimmington, who finished with 5 for 27, picked up four wickets in five balls to end the fight. George Bailey made 41 from 26 balls and Michael Di Venuto scored 36 from 19 but tight bowling from Rimmington and Ashley Noffke made the chase difficult.

Lillee happy for Warne to break record

Dennis Lillee captured 85 wickets in 1981 © Getty Images

Dennis Lillee says Shane Warne deserves his record for the most wickets in a calendar year and won’t be sad if it gets passed during the first Test. Warne enters Friday’s South Africa match with 84 victims for 2005 and needs only two to pass Lillee’s 1981 collection.”It’s all his. He deserves it,” Lillee said in . “He can come and get it. There isn’t a bit of sadness there for me in passing on the record to the greatest bowler we have seen. I have always really enjoyed Shane’s career and what he has brought to the game.”Lillee, the Western Australia Cricket Association president, will be at the WACA and should get a first-hand look if Warne can make some breakthroughs on his least successful Australian ground. Warne’s role in Perth is as a support bowler to the fast men and he has taken only 26 wickets in ten Tests.”We have always got along well and he has had to overcome a lot of setbacks to get where he is,” Lillee told the paper. “He has had an amazing career and I am really looking forward to being at the WACA when he breaks the record.”Lillee’s incredible 1981 included 85 wickets at 20.95 in 13 matches with Test series against India, England, Pakistan and West Indies. In the first Test against West Indies he broke Lance Gibbs’ world record of 309 wickets with first-innings figures of 7 for 83.

David Terbrugge handed one-match suspension

David Terbrugge has been given a one-match suspension© Getty Images

David Terbrugge, the South African Test fast bowler, has been suspended for one Standard Bank Cup match for conduct which could bring the game itself into disrepute. No details about the breach, however, have been released.Terbrugge, 27, appeared before Michael Kuper, the disciplinary commissioner of the South African board, in Johannesburg on Tuesday, after an incident that occurred in the match between Terbrugge’s Lions team and Western Province-Boland at The Wanderers, on Sunday.The suspension will take place with immediate effect, although Terbrugge does have a right to appeal.

Worcestershire edge out Glamorgan

Worcestershire 117 for 5 beat Glamorgan 122 for 7 by four runs at New Road (D/L method)
Scorecard
Glamorgan missed their chance to overhaul Gloucester and Surrey at the top of Division One, after losing out to Worcestershire in a thrilling finish at New Road.In a match that had been decimated by rain, Worcestershire managed a meagre 117 for 5 in 18 overs, although they had been expecting to bat for 23 overs. The match had eventually begun under floodlights at 7.15pm, and when Anurag Singh and Vikram Solanki added 36 in five overs, a healthy total seemed likely.But Mike Kasprowicz dismissed Solanki for 20, and later added Graeme Hick and Andrew Hall, both for ducks. Only Ben Smith, who finished unbeaten on 43, was able to maintain the momentum.Glamorgan were set a revised target of 126, and though Mike Powell (33) and Matthew Maynard (32) made good headway, 10 runs from David Leatherdale’s final over proved too much. Glamorgan’s chase was severely hampered with 15 runs still needed, when Adrian Dale edged a Kabir Ali delivery into his face and was forced to retire hurt.

Kallis makes ton

South African batting star Jacques Kallis continued a rich vein of form when he made a century against Western Australia in the cricket tour match here.Kallis was out on the stroke tea for 120 as South Africa reached 3-278 – an overall lead of 45.The South Africans indicated they may declare late in the day to give Test spearhead Allan Donald a handful of overs after he missed a day’s bowling on Sunday with a foot injury.Donald had a hole drilled in the big toenail of his left foot to help ease bruising caused by a new pair of boots which didn’t fit properly.Kallis arrived in Australia after scoring 590 runs at an average 295 in South Africa’s four home Tests this summer.He showed every sign of continuing that form with an effortless ton.His century took 199 minutes but 60 of the runs came in boundaries – 13 fours and three sixes – as he batted patiently and waited for the bad balls.He was eventually caught behind off Brad Hogg, the ball hitting his pad and bouncing off his glove as Ryan Campbell took a good reactionary catch.In favourable conditions, Kallis and Neil McKenzie, who was 81 not out at tea, made sure they had a decent innings ahead of the Test match against Australiastarting in Adelaide on Friday.They smashed 157 runs in the middle session, as they added 161 for the third wicket.Earlier, opener Gary Kirsten blew a chance to gain some valuable practice on the last day, getting out for 59 six minutes before lunch when he spooned a returncatch to the left arm wrist spin of Hogg.Kirsten’s fellow Test opener Herschelle Gibbs, after making only two in the first innings, had been unable to bat so far today because of a groin strain.Kallis revelled against Hogg, hitting two sixes and a four off one over with brutal strokeplay.Earlier, Jacques Rudolph was caught behind off Gavin Swan without adding to his overnight score of 12.The WA attack was missing pace spearhead Matthew Nicholson, who made his maiden first-class century yesterday after taking five wickets in South Africa’s firstinnings.He was unable to bowl because he was struck a painful blow on the toe while batting.

Pakistan close in after Hafeez 151

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsPakistan were circling a wounded opponent as the fourth day in Sharjah drew to a close with England two wickets down in pursuit of a seemingly distant target of 284. A century from Mohammad Hafeez had underpinned Pakistan’s fightback after conceding a first-innings deficit and only the presence of Alastair Cook and Joe Root, England’s two best batsman, at the crease gave the tourists slender reason to hope for an historic victory.Hafeez’s outstanding 151 laid the sturdiest of foundations and left England facing a battle to avoid a 2-0 defeat in the series. Although the scores have gone up in each innings so far in this match, the chase was much steeper than anything England had previously achieved in Asia and Pakistan’s spinners looked far more adept than their English counterparts at taking advantage of a wearing pitch.The injury suffered by Ben Stokes on the first day, effectively reducing England to 10 fit men and a bloody-minded No. 11 with a strapped-up shoulder, has added to the challenge. Even getting close would represent one of England’s greatest achievements in the UAE, where they have yet to win a Test in five attempts and counting.Pakistan are the masters of their domain, for all that England have run them hard throughout the series. Endeavour can only get you so far, however, and a skills deficit in certain areas – spin bowling, most notably – has allowed Pakistan to exert themselves at key moments. Several missed chances in the field on the fourth day, most damagingly a stumping before Hafeez had added to his overnight score, also served to undermine what was an admirably wholehearted effort.England began their chase with a degree of elan. Moeen Ali overcame what looked a nasty blow to the back of a the helmet when ducking into a Wahab Riaz bouncer to help take 23 off the opening four overs from Pakistan’s quicks. But the battle was only really joined when Misbah-ul-Haq turned to his spinners. This was where the Test would be won and lost.Zulfiqar Babar’s second ball snaked menacingly past Cook’s off stump, the low bounce amplifying the sense of danger, and the cries of the men around the bat, led by the ever-excitable Sarfraz Ahmed, began to echo louder and louder around the Sharjah Cricket Stadium as England’s momentum dissipated. It took 18 overs of spin for England to double their score.For the second time in the match, Moeen fell to the offspin of Shoaib Malik, a review failing to save him after being caught on the crease by one that would have skidded on to hit leg stump. Malik, on his farewell Test appearance after announcing his retirement at the close of the third day, then breached Ian Bell’s defences in his next over.Mohammad Hafeez’s century was the backbone of Pakistan’s innings•Getty Images

In between, Cook narrowly avoided being dismissed by Yasir Shah for the fourth innings in succession, when hit on the pads trying to sweep; Pakistan reviewed, with the on-field decision upheld via umpire’s call. They resorted to the DRS again, searching for another lbw decision against Root off Babar, with the same result. Given the amount of chances created, the loss of both reviews did not look like being a major hindrance.For England, it was a day of might-have-beens. Hafeez was nearly dismissed twice in the first over but he escaped to record his ninth Test hundred and strengthen Pakistan’s grip on the Test. Although England steadily worked through the line-up, taking the last four wickets for 43 after Hafeez was sixth man out, the chase had already ballooned beyond manageable proportions. A fifth-wicket stand of 93 between Hafeez and Misbah was pivotal.Only three batsmen have managed to pass 50 in three completed innings but Hafeez rode several moments of fortune to post by far the most significant individual contribution of the match so far, almost double the next best score. This was his fourth hundred in the last 12 months and made him the fifth Pakistani to record a three-figure score in the series; England still only have one, Cook’s monument to concentration in Abu Dhabi.England needed a steady trickle of wickets, if not an outright torrent, but although the nightwatchman, Rahat Ali, was sent back in the second over, their hopes evaporated during the morning along with a succession of half-chances. In a session that seemed crucial to the direction of the match, England’s luck was of the desert variety.It has supposedly been cooler in Sharjah but the breeze was blowing Pakistan’s way. Hafeez had survived a review for lbw from the first ball of the morning and that seemed to trigger a rare bout of nerves, perhaps recalling his dismissal for 98 on the first day of the series in Abu Dhabi. Adil Rashid’s opening delivery trapped Hafeez in front but Hawk-Eye adjudged it to have pitched outside leg stump; his third was a well-disguised googly that beat the batsman’s charge, turned past leg and left Jonny Bairstow grasping at thin air with Hafeez yards from safety.Finally, having faced 16 deliveries and lost his partner, Hafeez was able to sweep the single required to bring up his first Test hundred against England. He gave another clear chance when on 109 but Stuart Broad was unable to grasp a reflex caught-and-bowled low to his left off a leading edge.While Hafeez forged on, Misbah erected a wearyingly familiar roadblock at the other end and it was a surprise when he fell to the second new ball for 38, failing to post a half-century for the first time in five innings. Broad set him up for the short ball with a cluster of leg-side fielders before trapping him in front of the stumps with a full, straight delivery.Asad Shafiq marshalled Pakistan’s tail to set England a daunting 284•Getty Images

England might – that word again – have dismissed him without scoring, had they posted a short leg during James Anderson’s opening spell. When Misbah strode out, Anderson having speared another precision inswinger through Rahat’s defences, Pakistan’s lead was 80 and England could sense their opportunity. But Misbah was able to fend away a pesky bouncer and settle into his rhythm, clobbering Rashid over long-on for his 12th six of the series.England removed both batsmen within four overs, Hafeez chipping Moeen somewhat lackadaisically to long-on, but there was more in the tank, as Asad Shafiq and Sarfraz added a scurrying 55 in short order. That took the target beyond England’s highest successful pursuit in Asian conditions, 209 to beat Bangladesh in Dhaka five years ago.Cook’s spinners could not offer any control and the dismissal of Sarfraz by Samit Patel with a sharply turning delivery during an over that also leaked three boundaries summed up their problems as well as the challenge to come.Patel should also have removed Shafiq for 29 but Anderson, normally one of England’s most reliable catchers, unsuccessfully juggled a straightforward chance at mid-on. The dismissal of Yasir finally gave Rashid a wicket on the stroke of tea and Broad then castled Shafiq shortly after the resumption before a run-out in the following over brought England’s toil to an end.

Game
Register
Service
Bonus