Mohammad Rizwan‘s career-best 171 and his 240-run fifth wicket stand with Saud Shakeel (141) put Pakistan in a strong position in the first Test against Bangladesh in Rawalpindi. Only two wickets fell on the second day’s play as Pakistan declared their innings after reaching 448/6. Bangladesh’s openers saw through a tricky 12-over period to help the visitors to 27/0 at Stumps.
A 240-run fifth-wicket stand between Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan formed the centerpiece of a dominant second day for Pakistan as they declared at 448 for 6, leaving Bangladesh to see off a tricky hour or so before stumps. Bangladesh did so, with openers Shadman Islam and Zakir Hasan surviving 12 overs, but they will have to come back and face Pakistan’s four-pronged seam attack on day three with a ball that is still relatively new.
Mohammad Rizwan, Saud Shakeel tons put Pakistan in command
Earlier, Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan continued their solid partnership into the morning session on Day 2, having added 44 the previous day. They rotated the strike well, capitalized on boundary opportunities and scored at a steady rate while the Bangladesh bowlers weren’t able to find much help, be it pace or spin. Mohammad Rizwan became the third to cross fifty in the innings when he managed to guide a well-directed short ball from Rana to the third man fence, and repeated the shot.
An authoritative pull off Rana helped Mohammad Rizwan get his first six and the century stand was raised a few deliveries later as the Bangladesh bowlers struggled to make an impact despite Najmul Hossain Shanto rotating his bowling options.
They weren’t able to cut down the scoring rate too, with the Pakistan batters finding the gaps and Mohammad Rizwan getting the boundaries regularly as he maintained a strike rate in excess of 80 and went past his batting partner. Both batters entered the 80s as they went into the Lunch break unbeaten and did more damage in the second session.
Starting the second session on 89, Mohammad Rizwan got to the three-figure mark quickly, with a six and a four off Shakib Al Hasan en route. Shakeel, on the other hand, was happy to deal in singles and twos, getting to his hundred with a couple of Mehidy Hasan Miraz. Litton Das, meanwhile, missed a couple of takes behind the stumps to hand Mohammad Rizwan reprieves. Bangladesh took the second new ball as soon as it was due but it only led to more boundaries as Pakistan crossed 300 and the fifth wicket pair extended their partnership past 200.
Litton tried to create an opportunity when Shakeel was batting out of the crease to Hasan Mahmud, throwing the ball at the stumps after the batter had shouldered arms, but he was back in the crease in time. But Shakeel had to depart eventually when he was drawn out of the crease by Mehidy and Litton was quick to bring down the bails and end the big partnership. Agha Salman struck a boundary off Nahid Rana and was unbeaten along with Mohammad Rizwan at Tea.
Saud Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan both registered their third Test hundreds to put Pakistan in a dominant position in the first Test against Bangladesh. Their tons came in a 240-run stand, the second highest fifth wicket stand for Pakistan against Bangladesh, as the hosts went into Tea on Day 2 at 367/5, having added 111 runs in the second session.
Having added 44 on day one, Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan batted on for the best part of two sessions before Bangladesh finally broke their stand, with just over 15 minutes to go for tea.
The visitors’ long-awaited moment of inspiration came from Mehidy Hasan Miraz, who dangled up a teasing off break that dragged Shakeel onto the front foot to defend, then dipped and turned sharply past his outside edge, leaving him reaching for the ball and dragging his back foot out of the crease. Litton Das completed the dismissal with lightning glovework after collecting the ball somewhere around the seventh-stump line. This was a dismissal with a margin of millimeters; the tip of Shakeel’s toe was on the crease when the bails began to flash.
There had been only millimeters in it an over earlier, too, when Shakeel – who had routinely left his crease against the fast bowlers to negotiate movement – shouldered arms to Hasan Mahmud and Litton, alert to the possibility, threw down the stumps. Then, Shakeel had plonked his bat into the crease and landed a fraction of a second – a fraction too small for the frame rate of the TV cameras to capture definite proof – before the bails lit up.
Litton had been involved in most of the small sprinkling of nervous moments that Shakeel and Rizwan endured during their 63.5 overs together. He had moved alertly to his left to create a diving opportunity when Rizwan lobbed up a bat-pad half-chance off Mehidy, but hadn’t been able to finish the job. He had missed an even tougher chance, down the leg side, off Rizwan’s glove when he had tried to sweep Shakib.
That these moments were so infrequent, and so far from being genuine chances, reflected how well Shakeel and Rizwan batted as they brought up their respective third Test hundreds. It also reflected how much the conditions had eased up since the start of the Test match, when Bangladesh had made full use of the new ball and early moisture to reduce Pakistan to 16 for 3.
Proof of the transformed conditions – though the tiredness in the Bangladesh seamers’ limbs also contributed, no doubt – came when Bangladesh took the second new ball, ten overs after lunch. Both batters had brought up their centuries by then – Rizwan going from 91 to 97 by stepping out and launching Shakib for a big six over wide long-on, then whipping him over midwicket for four to reach three figures – and they greeted the return of the fast bowlers with a series of gorgeous strokes.
Rizwan eased Hasan Mahmud through cover point in the 82nd over, and in the next over Shakeel stood tall to drive Shoriful on the up through cover. The batters embraced when Shakeel played that shot, perhaps recognizing the fact that it was his first boundary of the day, and his unhurried, unbothered manner while going through 123 balls without one.
Shakeel made up for that in the overs that followed, pulling Shoriful and Nahid Rana disdainfully when they tried to bounce him, and whipping Rana off his hips when he veered too straight. Rana had tried the short-ball ploy in the first session too, and occasionally made both batters look awkward. But it came at a cost: his five overs in the morning went for 32 runs.
Rizwan scored most of those runs, including back-to-back falling ramps over the slips off bouncers angling into his body to go from 46 to 54. In Rana’s next over, he showed more of his range against the short ball, hooking him for a six over backward square leg.
Rizwan was by far the quicker scorer of the fifth-wicket pair during the first session, adding 65 off 100 balls. Shakeel had less of the strike, and made quieter use of it, scoring 32 off 77 without adding to his five boundaries from day one. By lunch, Rizwan had overtaken Shakeel having started the day 33 runs behind.
Their methods may have been different, but their effect on Bangladesh was similarly dispiriting. Shakeel’s defence, in particular, looked unbreachable at times; he was beautifully balanced at all times, and invariably met the ball right under his eyes with the bat’s full face.
As the day went on, Bangladesh’s spinners began to take on a greater share of the workload, and both Shakib and Mehidy put a difficult first day – they had gone for a combined 36 from their six overs – behind them and performed an admirable holding job.
Much of their day-one despair had been related to Pakistan’s clinical use of the sweep. They responded by attacking the stumps far more, and bowling a touch quicker than they had earlier, with protection in the deep square on the leg side. Both used drift cleverly, and Mehidy on occasion extracted sharp turn too.
Mohammad Rizwan, Saud Shakeel tons headline Pakistan’s dominance on Day 2
Pakistan looked to up their scoring rate when they resumed after tea, with Mohammad Rizwan announcing their intent by stepping out and clouting Shoriful Islam for a big six over long-on. The shot triggered a bout of cramps, and Mohammad Rizwan continued to hobble as he collected 37 off 42 balls after tea to finish unbeaten on 171 when Pakistan declared.
Pakistan’s aggressive intent after tea cost them one wicket, when Shakib Al Hasan’s guile undid Agha Salman’s attempt to hit him against the turn, bringing about a sliced catch at backward point. But it also brought quick runs, as Shaheen Shah Afridi slogged two sixes on his way to an unbeaten 29 off 24.
Mohammad Rizwan came out and kept wickets when Bangladesh’s innings began, but cramps forced him to leave the field after 7.3 overs, with Sarfaraz Ahmed taking over behind the stumps. In all, Rizwan was on the field for all but 4.3 overs of the day’s play.
Shakeel and Mohammad Rizwan continued their solid partnership into the morning session on Day 2, having added 44 the previous day. They rotated the strike well, capitalized on boundary opportunities and scored at a steady rate while the Bangladesh bowlers weren’t able to find much help, be it with pace or spin. Mohammad Rizwan became the third to cross fifty in the innings when he managed to guide a well-directed short ball from Nahid Rana to the third man fence, and repeated the shot.
An authoritative pull off Rana helped Mohammad Rizwan get his first six and the century stand was raised a few deliveries later as the Bangladesh bowlers struggled to make an impact despite Najmul Hossain Shanto rotating his bowling options.
They weren’t able to cut down the scoring rate too, with the Pakistan batters finding the gaps and Mohammad Rizwan getting the boundaries regularly as he maintained a strike rate in excess of 80 and went past his batting partner. Both batters entered the 80s as they went into the Lunch break unbeaten having helped Pakistan add 98 runs in the morning session.
Starting the second session on 89, Mohammad Rizwan got to the three-figure mark quickly, with a six and a four off Shakib Al Hasan. Shakeel, on the other hand, was happy to deal in singles and twos, getting to his hundred with a couple of Mehidy Hasan Miraz. Litton Das, meanwhile, missed a couple of takes behind the stumps to hand Mohammad Rizwan reprieves. Bangladesh took the second new ball as soon as it was due but it only led to more boundaries as Pakistan crossed 300 and the fifth wicket pair extended their partnership past 200.
Litton tried to create an opportunity when Shakeel was batting out of the crease to Hasan Mahmud, throwing the ball at the stumps after the batter had shouldered arms, but he was back in the crease in time. But Shakeel had to depart eventually when he was drawn out of the crease by Mehidy and Litton was quick to bring down the bails and end a big partnership. The second session yielded 111 runs for Pakistan who continued to assert dominance.
Agha Salman struck a boundary off Rana before the Tea break and batted solidly in partnership with Rizwan as they added 44. Rizwan crossed 150 for the first time in his Test career, getting there with a six and three off Shoriful Islam. The stand, however, ended shortly before Pakistan crossed 400 as Salman got a leading edge off Shakib going for a shot over midwicket. Shaheen Afridi struck a quick-fire 29 off 24 in a 50-run stand for the seventh wicket with Rizwan before skipper Shan Masood decided to declare the innings.
Bangladesh’s openers Shadman Islam and Zakir Hasan were nervous to start off with, getting outside edges off Shaheen Afridi and Naseem Shah for a couple of boundaries. With swing and movement, the two pacers went past the edge a few times while Khurram Shahzad also beat the bat on a couple of occasions. Islam and Hasan managed to see it through to Stumps but Bangladesh have their work cut out with the bat on Day 3.
Day 3 in focus as Pakistan and Bangladesh looks to carry their innings forward
Another bright and sunny morning welcomes us in Rawalpindi. It was a long hard day for Bangladesh and their bowlers on day 2 as they were made to toil by the Rizwan-Shakeel pair. The two Pakistan batters started the day cautiously, negating the first hour and building from thereon. They got to their respective hundreds in the second session and in process put the home side in a strong position.
Mehidy eventually broke the 240-run stand and Shakib accounted for Agha Salman, but some quick runs by Shaheen and Mohammad Rizwan in the third session allowed Shan Masood to make the declaration. Zakir Hasan and Shadman Islam had an hour’s play to survive and the Bangladesh openers did well to come out unscathed. They still have a long way to go and it will only get tougher.