1st Test, Bangladesh tour of Pakistan at Karachi, Aug 20-24 2003
Scorecard and Video Highlights
At Karachi, August 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 2003.
Pakistan won by seven wickets. Toss: Pakistan. Test debuts: Mohammad
Hafeez, Shabbir Ahmed, Umar Gul, Yasir Hameed; Rajin Saleh.
Test cricket returned to Pakistan after a gap of nearly 16 months, but
the spectators still stayed away. Although the official attendance was
not counted, on each of the five days police and security men
outnumbered the few hundred spectators. Unusually for a Test involving
Bangladesh, those who turned up saw cricket which was generally
competitive and sometimes riveting. Bangladesh showed remarkable
tenacity, and the eventual seven-wicket margin of their defeat did not
reflect the real picture. At the end of the third day, the underdogs
were 105 runs ahead with seven second innings wickets in hand.
Rashid Latif, the captain of Pakistan, admitted it was the worst
sleepless night of his career. But on the next day, Bangladesh's
inexperience showed. As the lead grew to 193, with five wickets left, an
upset was still on the cards. But that soon changed: their last five
wickets fell for only 23 runs.
Pakistan were left a victory target of 217, which they achieved without
fuss. Along the way, Yasir Hameed, one of four Pakistan debutants, wrote
his name in the record books by scoring his second century of the
match. It was a pivotal performance. In the first innings, Yasir saved
Pakistan by scoring 170 - almost half the total. And, by taking his side
to the brink of victory with 105 in the second, he joined Lawrence Rowe
of West Indies (who hit 214 and 100 not out against New Zealand at
Kingston in 1971-72) with two centuries on Test debut. On his
first-class debut, made on this same ground in 1996-97, Yasir had bagged
a pair.
He dedicated his achievements to his late father, a lawyer who used to
say that, one day, his son would play for Pakistan and score a century
on debut. Even a proud father's dreams hadn't stretched to two.
Pencil-thin, and with all the shots in the book, Yasir was particularly
strong through the off side on the back foot. Pakistan finally seemed to
have found an answer to their long-standing problem at No. 3. In the
first innings, Bangladesh, who had never managed more than 160 in three
previous Tests against Pakistan, had surprised their hosts by scoring
288 after being inserted on a green-tinged wicket. But the grass was
misleading and the pitch turned
out to be perfect for batting. Hannan Sarkar and Habibul Bashar laid a
foundation with 114 for the second wicket, Habibul's 71 coming from only
72 balls. The best puller among the Bangladeshi batsmen, he took on
Shoaib Akhtar and three of Shoaib's first six balls to him disappeared
for four. Habibul continued to play audacious shots but he and Sarkar
undid some of their good work by getting out in consecutive overs.
After Yasir helped to give Pakistan a 58-run first-innings lead, Habibul
did even better in the second innings. Often referred to as "Mr Fifty"
in Bangladesh for his inability to convert half-centuries into hundreds,
he became the first Bangladesh batsman to make two Test centuries. The
21 months and 14 Tests since their last hundred had been an abject
period for Bangladeshi cricket. After this battling performance, they
could hold their heads a little higher.
Man of the Match: Yasir Hameed.
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