World champion South Africa face spin test in Pakistan for 2-test series

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Lahore, Oct 11: World champion South Africa faces a stern spin challenge in Pakistan without two of its key players when both teams kickstart their next World Test Championship campaigns on Sunday.
Proteas regular captain Temba Bavuma will miss the two-test series because of strained calf. Left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj is only available for the second test because of a groin injury.
“We’re going to miss Temba a lot, of course, he’s our leader,” South Africa captain Aiden Markram said Saturday.
“We don’t need to give him any introductions. He’s a batter firstly for us that has been doing incredibly well . and then naturally the leadership as well. It is a big miss for us, but the other boys are pulling together and trying to get us off to a good start.” Bavuma led the Proteas to the WTC title at Lord’s in a five-wicket victory over Australia in the final.
Maharaj’s absence from the first test is “a big loss,” Markram said.
Left-arm spinner Senuran Muthusamy got a nod from Markram for the first test after the spinner took four wickets against Zimbabwe in a test match in July when South Africa rested all its key red-ball players.
The 36-year-old Simon Harmer, who hasn’t played a test match since March 2023, is the other specialist spin option for South Africa.
Pakistan, which finished last in the previous WTC cycle, won three of its last four home test matches on spin wickets made with the help of industrial-sized fans, heaters and wind breakers.
The home team didn’t use any of those while preparing the wicket for the first test at Gaddafi Stadium, but spinners are still expected play a factor on a grassless 22-yard strip.
The Proteas tried to replicate expected spin conditions back home when they practiced on underprepared wickets at the High Performance Center in Pretoria during a two-day training camp.
“As a team that’s not exposed to those (spin) conditions, it’s exciting for us and a great opportunity for us to get things right in these conditions,” Markram said.
Pakistan players go into first test with little experience of red-ball cricket since it lost to the West Indies in Multan in late January and drew the series 1-1.
Premier batter Babar Azam and fast bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi, who hasn’t played a test match for a year, haven’t played a first-class game over the last nine months.
Captain Shan Masood scored 90 and 111 in his last two County Championship games for Leicestershire while wicketkeeper-batter Mohammad Rizwan struck a century in his only first-class game last week in a domestic tournament.But Masood was not overthinking about lack of his players competing in first-class games.“It will be a good yardstick for us to play against them, especially if we can get a good result against them,” Masood said. (AP)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

India’s Russian crude oil imports hit record in June

New Delhi, July 12: India's imports of Russian crude oil surged to a record high in June, rising...

Sensex may test 78,000 resistance, Nifty eyes 24,600 breakout: Experts

Mumbai, July 12: The Indian stock market is expected to remain range-bound with a cautiously positive bias in...

India recycling over 70 per cent of textile waste

New Delhi, July 12 : More than 70 per cent of India's total textile waste is currently recovered...

The Classroom That Swallows Children Whole and Calls It Education

By Napoleon S. Mawphniang Socrates once said that the unexamined life is not worth living. But what, I...