16 October,2018 01:06 PM IST | | Ian Chappell
Oz opener Usman Khawaja is dejected after being dismissed by Pakistan's offie Bilal Asif during the Dubai Test last week. Pic/Getty Images
Spin misery in Dubai too
In fact, there was a period in Australia's first innings where the team could have answered with a confident rejoinder; "What weakness against spin?" as they cruised to 142 without loss. However at that point the Australian batting suffered another all-too-familiar collapse, losing ten wickets for a paltry sixty runs. This Lehmann brothers-like collapse was precipitated by the off-spin of debutant Bilal Asif, a taller version of the highly successful Muttiah Muralitharan form of finger-spin, involving a lot of wrist work. Asif's deceptive flight and bounce bamboozled the Australian left-handers and opened the door for the highly efficient medium-pacer Mohammad Abbas to barnstorm the lower order with his relentlessly accurate swing bowling.
Pak miss out on desert win
This effective combination set Pakistan - who are as at home in the desert as Lawrence of Arabia - on the path to what should have been yet another 'home turf' victory. Nevertheless, the inexperienced Australians shouldn't feel too downcast because far better Baggy Green line-ups have been destroyed by off-spin, albeit by tweakers with a much more illustrious CV. In my memory this malaise started with England's Jim Laker in 1956 and gathered pace at the beginning of the new century with the Indian pair Harbhajan Singh and then Ravi Ashwin, along with occasional misfires against Muralitharan [in Sri Lanka], Pakistan's Saqlain Mushtaq and Graeme Swann of England.
In the controversy-laden 1956 season Jim Laker plundered a strong Australian line-up that included the 1948 Invincible team members, Neil Harvey and Keith Miller to the tune of 46 wickets at an average of nine. That included nineteen wickets [nine and then ten] on a specifically prepared Old Trafford dust bowl. When I played my one game for Lancashire at Old Trafford in 1963, I asked the humorous and refreshingly honest groundsman Bert Flack about that pitch; "Oooh 'twere a bluddy bad un," he replied with a chuckle.
"Them's at 'headquarters [Lord's I assumed] told me t' prepare a bleedin' turner," he continued with a grin, "and a bleedin' turner 't were." Not surprisingly modern Australian teams are often greeted with "bleedin' turner's" but minus the humorous admission from local authorities. The pitch in Dubai however could only be classified as a mild turner; it was far from a spitting cobra and appeared to hibernate on the last day. The Australians produced a more studious approach in their second innings and following the example set by Khawaja, they unravelled the mystery of Asif and fought out a confidence inducing draw.
Khawaja, Oz's new hope
Khawaja was a man on a mission as he set out to prove that his previously poor record in these type of conditions was a thing of the past. With a more aggressive approach that resulted in sharper footwork and profiting from an improved fitness regime he displayed skill, determination and extraordinary stamina in demanding conditions. Following the suspension of the two most proficient batsmen in Steve Smith and David Warner, Australia badly needed Khawaja to display progress. He took a giant leap forward to help fill the void and deny a conservative Pakistan what seemed to be a certain victory after another calamitous first innings collapse.
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