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Shoaib
leads Pakistan to test win over West Indies
Sharjah,
United Arab Emirates, February 4: Fast bowlers Shoaib Akhtar
and Abdur Razzaq caused a sensational West Indian collapse on
Monday to lead Pakistan to a resounding 170-run victory in the
first cricket Test here.
Shoaib
picked up a career-best 5-24 and Razzaq took 4-25 as the West
Indians lost nine wickets for 56 runs - the last seven for 25 - to
be shot out for 171 in their second knock at tea on the fifth and
final day.
Set
an improbable victory target of 342, the West Indians caved in
despite a solid start that had propelled them to 115-1 soon after
lunch.
The
second and final Test of the short series, being played at the
neutral venue of the Sharjah cricket stadium, starts on Thursday
on an adjacent wicket.
Shoaib
put aside the controversy over his bowling action to work up
hostile pace even on the slow wicket to better his previous best
of 5-43 against South Africa at Durban in 1998.
The
tuition he received during the course of this Test from former
West Indian bowling great Michael Holding, who is here as a
television commentator, worked wonders as Shoaib beat batsmen with
lightening speed.
Seven
West Indian batsmen were either bowled or trapped leg-before,
indicating the speed at which both Shoaib and Razzaq bowled.
Shoaib
began the destruction in the third over after lunch when he clean
bowled Chris Gayle, who hit an impressive 66 with 15 boundaries.
In
his next over, Shoaib produced a fast, lifting delivery that took
the glove of Wavell Hinds and was snapped up by wicket-keeper
Rashid Latif.
It
was Latif's 100th dismissal in his 28th Test, during which he also
completed 1,000 runs while making 150 in the first innings.
The
West Indies suffered another blow soon after when Sherwin Campbell
was declared run out by third umpire Athar Zaidi after responding
to Carl Hooper's call for a sharp single.
Razzaq
took over from there, removing Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Hooper and
Ridley Jacobs in one over to reduce the West Indies to 150-7.
Chanderpaul
was caught behind from the first ball of Razzaq's fourth over,
before Hooper and Jacobs were trapped leg-before off the fifth and
sixth.
Razzaq
was denied a hat-trick, as was Shoaib soon after when he clean
bowled Mervyn Dillon and Cameron Cuffy off successive balls.
The
last-wicket pair of Ryan Hinds and Pedro Collins put on 16 before
Razzaq bowled Collins for 12 to signal Pakistan's win.
There
was little indication of what lay ahead when the West Indies,
lifted by an unbeaten 62 from Gayle, moved to 111-1 by lunch.
Starting
the day at 24-0, still needing 318 in a minimum of 90 overs,
openers Daren Ganga and Gayle hammered 49 runs from 12 overs in
the first hour.
Leg-spinner
Danish Kaneria was thrashed for 19 runs in his first over of the
day, including four boundaries by Gayle.
The
run-rate did not slacken despite Shoaib sending down five maidens
in his first six overs.
Shoaib
was rewarded for his hard work in his eighth over when he
flattened Ganga's stumps with an express delivery.
Ganga
scored 34 in a first-wicket stand of 76 with Gayle.
Gayle
reached his half-century by driving off-spinner Saqlain Mushtaq
through the covers for his 11th boundary, and celebrated the feat
with two more fours in the same over.
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