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Pakistan beat Australia by 356 runs in the second and final Test Sorry - this page has been removed.
(5 months later)
A defiant Steve Smith tried to delay the inevitable before Pakistan crushed Australia by 356 runs in the second and final Test to complete a 2-0 series victory in Abu Dhabi on Monday. This could be because it launched early, our rights have expired, there was a legal issue, or for another reason.
Having set the visitors an improbable 603-run victory target, Pakistan claimed the remaining six wickets in a little over a session on the final day to secure their first Test series victory against Australia in 20 years. The win took them above England, Sri Lanka and India to No3 in Test rankings, behind South Africa and Australia.
Smith (97) added 107 runs with Mitchell Marsh in a rare display of Australian resistance in the two-match series before his post-lunch dismissal triggered a collapse with the visitors losing their last five wickets for only eight runs to be all out for 246. For further information, please contact:
“I think Misbah-ul-Haq and his team played some outstanding cricket in both Test matches and we’ve certainly been outplayed,” the Australia captain, Michael Clarke, said. “In all three facets – batting, bowling and fielding – we probably let ourselves down. We were not good enough against the very good and experienced Pakistan team.”
Zulfiqar Babar (five for 120) and Yasir Shah (three for 44) once again laid bare Australia’s spin frailties even though Pakistan were without their main spinner Saeed Ajmal who has been banned for an illegal action.
Misbah, the Pakistan captain, was adjudged man of the match for his twin centuries in the match, the second of which equalled Viv Richards’ record for the fastest Test century in 56 balls. Younus Khan, who hit two centuries and a double hundred in his four innings, was the obvious choice for man of the series.
Resuming on 143 for four, Smith and Marsh (47) frustrated the Pakistani bowlers with a century stand, showing the stomach for fight which was missing in their team mates.
Marsh, playing only his second Test, proved the perfect foil for Smith, whose decisive footwork against the spinners and positive intent stood out in an otherwise Australian batting capitulation.
Marsh was looking set for his second 50 of the match when the 23-year-old walked into a leg-slip trap, flicking the off-spinner Mohammad Hafeez straight into the hands of Asad Shafiq.
Smith hit Babar for successive boundaries to bring up his eighth Test half-century and meted out the same treatment to the spinner in the final over before lunch to cruise into the 90s.
Yasir denied the 25-year-old Smith his fifth Test century, trapping him leg before with the second delivery after lunch, which opened the floodgates and Australia collapsed in a heap.
“It’s a really special series for me, because every individual performed,” said Misbah. “That’s a sign of a good team and I’m really happy.”
Smith hit 12 fours in his 204-ball knock that proved there were no real demons in the dry and dusty pitch at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium.
Comprehensively beaten in the first Test in Dubai, nothing went right for the tourists in the second. Not a single Australian managed a century in the Test while Misbah and Azhar Ali got hundreds in both innings and Younus struck 213 in the first.