You are currently viewing Cricket: Babar Azam ranked among top 5 in all formats
Babar Azam

Cricket: Babar Azam ranked among top 5 in all formats

SOUTHAMPTON: Babar Azam is presently the only batsman to be ranked among the top-five in all formats of cricket.

It is pertinent to mention here that with 879 points Azam is the top batsman in the T20I format; number 3 in the One Day International Format; though the 2nd match between Pakistan and England here was a draw because the rain emerged as the winner, it helped him move up to number five in test match format.

Pakistan is perched at 7th spot in the ICC Test rankings, sixth spot in the 50-over format and fourth in T20s.

Yesterday (17th of August, 2020) Pakistan’s Mohammad Abbas took two wickets on  as a weather-interrupted second Test against England here ended in a predictable draw.
England were 110-4 in reply to Pakistan’s first innings 236 when home captain Joe Root (nine not out) declared to hasten the end of a match ahead of what would have been the statutory last hour.
Root’s declaration ended a match beset by delays, with the whole of Saturday’s third day washed out completely.
Abbas, who took 2-28 from 14 overs, removed Zak Crawley (53) and Dom Sibley (32).
The batsmen shared a second-wicket stand of 91 after Rory Burns fell for a duck to left-arm quick Shaheen Afridi on Sunday.
England, who enjoyed a three-wicket win in the first Test at Old Trafford earlier this month, remain 1-0 up in a three-match series ahead of Friday’s finale, also at Southampton.
An early morning downpour meant Monday’s play did not start until 1420 GMT.
England were then 7-1, with Sibley two not out and Crawley, playing after star all-rounder Ben Stokes opted out to be with his ill father in New Zealand, five not out.
Crawley, beneath sunny blue skies, confidently pulled and drove the usually accurate Abbas for two well-struck fours.
Pakistan captain Azhar Ali, perhaps wary of risking his frontline quicks in a dead match ahead of the third Test, brought medium-pacer Shan Masood, primarily an opening batsman, into the attack.
Mohammad Rizwan, who had impressed behind the stumps in the first Test before top-scoring with 72 in a man-of-the-match innings in this fixture, then missed a chance to stump Crawley, on 37, off leg-spinner Yasir Shah.
Crawley completed a 97-ball fifty when he pulled Yasir for the seventh four of his innings.
But two balls later, Crawley was out when Abbas, with the first delivery of a new spell, had him lbw on the back leg after nipping one off the seam.
Crawley reviewed but Richard Kettleborough’s decision was upheld on umpire’s call.
It was the start of a mini-collapse that saw England lose three wickets for 14 runs to be 105-4.
Sibley, not for the first time, was caught behind down the legside as Abbas struck again before Ollie Pope was lbw to Yasir.
Azhar bowled one ball to Root, who then declared.
Kettleborough and fellow umpire Michael Gough had been widely criticised for their interpretation of the rules regarding rain and bad light even on a ground where the floodlights have been in use, with former England captain Nasser Hussain telling Sky Sports that “merely because conditions are not ideal is not a reason to walk off the field”.
But there was more activity by both the officials and groundstaff on Monday in a season where regulations have been adapted to create a bio-secure bubble that guards against the threat of the coronavirus.
Stuart Broad led England’s attack with 4-56, a return that took the in-form paceman’s tally in four Tests this season to 26 wickets at a miserly average of 12.38.

Newspakistan.tv | YouTube Channel

M M Alam

M. M. Alam is a Pakistan-based working journalist since 1981. Karachi University faculty gold medalist Alam began his career four decades ago by writing for Dawn, Pakistan’s highest circulating English daily. He has worked for region’s leading publications, global aviation periodicals including Rotors (of USA) and vetted New York Times as permanent employee of daily Express Tribune. Alam regularly covers international aviation and defense-related events including Salon Du Bourget (France), Farnborough (United Kingdom), Dubai (UAE). Alam has reported thousands of events and interviewed hundreds of people in Pakistan, UAE, EU, UK and USA. Being Francophone Alam also coordinates with a number of French publications.