
#Pakistans #batsmen #struggle #difficult #Dhaka #tracks #Sports
Pakistan won the face by saving the third T20 against Bangladesh but lost the series 1-2. Earlier, Bangladesh made history for the first time by winning the T20 series against Pakistan.
Bangladesh won the first game of the series by seven wickets, after which only 111 were chased and after winning the second T20, they took an unbeaten 2-0 lead with the final match. The third game Green Shirts won by 79 runs.
It was four efforts on Pakistan in Bangladesh’s first T20I series. For records,
Bangladesh has won the series against Pakistan. But it was a one -off match in 2015, which the hosts won by seven wickets in Mirpur.
Last month, Pakistan whitewashed Bangladesh in the three -match home T20 series at Gaddafi Stadium. But the Bengal Tigers take revenge immediately after winning the Home T20 series. Like the first T20 game, in the second match, the Green Shirts found them in uncertainty 30-6, with five declining in the same way in the previous out. All six batsmen in the 10th are out for a digit.
Pakistan did not demand the worst start to chase their 134 runs as they lose their first five wickets and fell 15 for 5 and their lowest score. The crisis was deepened when the seventh wicket fell to 47 in the 12th over.
The young players of Pakistan failed to benefit the opportunity, Sam Ayub (28 runs), Mohammad Herses (9), Hassan Nawaz (33), Mohammad Nawaz (30), Khushdil Shah (30), all disappointed the new coach.
Even captain Agha Salman failed to take the lead from the front as he scored only 24 runs in the series, with an average of 12.
Opener Sahibzada Farhan got a chance with Quick Fire 63 runs, which included only five sixes and six forces in the game only in the game.
Pakistan’s hopes of building a concrete batting line -up in the future faced a major setback when the young brigade was trapped on Bangladesh’s bowling friendly tracks. Despite entering the series with confidence, the inexperienced batsmen failed to adapt to the slowdown, which demanded patience and technique.
The new crop of Pakistani batsmen, which is expected to fill the shoes of veteran ex -soldiers, are struggling to handle sharp spin and variable bounce. Repeated fall highlights technical flaws, lack of mood, and poor selection of shot. Although some people have been able to start, no one can turn them into an important score, and Pakistan relies heavily on its bowlers and senior players.
Cricket experts believe that failure reflects a deep problem, which is lacking to be exposed to challenging the situation in the subcontinent outside the home. Domestic cricket flat tracks and aggressive T20 mentality have left players illegal for tests and ODIs abroad.
Pakistan’s batting lineup has often been a story of two extremes. So far on domestic soil, especially on the conditions of the seamless.
At home, where the pitch is traditionally in favor of spin and minimal background movement, Pakistani batsmen have achieved growth, which has posted impressive average and major partnerships. The batsmen scored a goal in Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi.
But the story changes dramatically when Pakistan travels on countries like England, New Zealand, South Africa, or Australia, and even now on the pitches of Bangladesh.
On the pitches that support the seam and swing, the batting order often falls. The main challenge is in technical adaptation that is needed to handle the moving ball under cloudy conditions or to the tight, buncy levels. There has been a repeatedly -ending theme in the overseas Test and ODI series.
This difference between home and abroad is not accidental. Spin is dominated by domestic cups, offering minimal exhibitions in the speeding of speed. Saming tracks abroad require modern techniques. Overseas are essentially essentially-essential-inhale, especially in the early innings, without specific preparations.
Experts attribute this due to lack of quality seam in domestic cricket and lack of exhibition for a limited time of preparation before visits abroad. Although the spin dominates Pakistan’s first class structure, there are few opportunities to face Dux or cobra hair in difficult situations.
As a result, when facing movements away from the seam and through the air, the batsmen often struggle with footwork and shot selection, which is dismissed in the sale and the street.
Pakistan cricket is facing a disturbing trend as young batsmen have failed to fill the shoes of veteran veterans and are struggling abroad on bowling friendly pitches. Although domestic circuits and domestic conditions offer spin -friendly tracks with less bounce, foreign tours expose technical flaws. One of the major reasons is limited exhibition. Pakistan’s domestic structure supports batting on flat pitchs, where stroke making is easy and bowlers rarely create background movement. Young people become accustomed to high scores without developing the necessary defense skills in challenging situations. As a result, when the moving ball is encountered, the choice of unprecedented fitness and poor shot causes repeated fall.
To indicate this, experts urge the PCB to improve domestic cricket, create semiconductor tracks, and regulate exhibition visits regularly. Without these measures, Pakistan’s batting troubles will remain abroad, which makes it difficult to fill a gap.
Pakistan’s batting problems continued as the careless shot selection and baseless aggression resulted in another end. Instead of applying himself to a challenging pitch, the batsmen chose a stroke quickly, giving wickets without any resistance.
Several players were trying to make unnecessary successful films in the early innings, ignoring the need to be settled. Cricket analysts criticized the lack of sports awareness, calling it a “self -infected catastrophe.” In the circumstances demanding patience and the smart of the strike, Pakistan’s point of view was completely opposed – to counter the immediate dismissal and the rising pressure on the lower order.
Experts believe that this trend is exceeding a limit on T20 -style aggression, which does not translate well in long shapes. As long as Pakistan’s batsmen learn to balance the attack with responsibility, such an end will continue to be a nightmare for the team. The emerging batsmen of Pakistan have struggled to fill the experienced roles, especially on foreign, bowling friendly levels. While the domestic tracks are offered an apology, the conditions of the abroad expose technological weaknesses and patience.
Pakistan’s domestic setup does not make almost no friendly preparation. The young batsmen have scored a lot of runs in the house for several centuries, still facing an advanced pace abroad. This sharp contrast indicates a difference between techniques and mood.
To eliminate this gap, the former players have called on the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to organize long conditioning camps abroad and make more ‘A’ team tour schedule in seam friendly countries.
Only by facing quality pace in a difficult environment can the new generation learn to deal with the conditions that have long been Pakistani batsmen. Until then, the success of Pakistan’s batting can be limited to large -scale domestic rest, rather than global consistency.
Experts urge the PCB to schedule long -term camps in the Red Ball countries, and send the ‘A’ squad to the opposite conditions on expansion visits. As long as the Pakistani batsmen are constantly facing and does not win the running ball abroad, their overseas record are left behind in the house.
If Pakistan aims to compete internationally, it is no longer optional to prepare young batsmen for tough conditions like Bangladesh – this is a need.
Ali was the top scorer of the T20 series with 71 runs in the series, including an average of 35.50, including a fifty. For Pakistan, Sir Zada Farhan scored a maximum of 63 runs despite playing only the last match.
On the bowling, Pakistan’s young fast bowler Salman Mirza took a maximum of seven wickets with an average of 8.42 while Bangladesh’s Taskin Ahmed took six wickets.
KHURMS87@yahoo.com