Pakistan coach Dav Whatmore drew on bitter personal experience to warn his players that world number one Test team South Africa can bounce back in the second Test starting in Dubai on Wednesday.
Pakistan won the first Test in Abu Dhabi by seven wickets on Thursday, but Whatmore recalled a personal experience of South Africa’s resilience when he was the coach of Sri Lanka in 2000/2001.
“This South African unit is quite resilient,” said 59-year-old Whatmore yesterday.
“I’ve had first hand experience in Sri Lanka where they lost by an innings in Galle and came back to win in Kandy,” said Whatmore of the series in Sri Lanka.
“I think there was a drawn game in Colombo so it was 1-1 in the series, so you leave them off at your peril.”
South Africa’s unbeaten series run away from home since losing to Sri Lanka in 2006 is also under threat and Whatmore, born in Sri Lanka but who emigrated with his family aged eight, said Pakistan will do their best to win.
“Well 1-0 is just as good as 2-0 as I think because a hard fought draw is also very important for any team, having been 1-0 up in the series, but we enter the game to win,” added Whatmore, whose team lost to Zimbabwe in the second Test in a 1-1 drawn series last month.
Whatmore, who played seven Tests and one limited-overs international for Australia, refused to agree that Pakistan’s win was an upset.
“I wasn’t surprised we did well, people leading up to this series in Pakistan were alluding to the fact that we lost against Zimbabwe and here you are going to play the number one team in the world, no chance.
“But that was never the case, in my mind I knew that we can be competitive.”
South Africa await Amla, Donald returns
South Africa are anxiously waiting on star batsman Hashim Amla’s return to Dubai in time for the second Test, according to team manager Mohammed Mossajee.
Amla is in Durban with his wife for the imminent birth of the couple’s second child.
Mossajee told reporters after team practice yesterday: “We are still waiting for Amla to return.”
Meanwhile, bowling coach Alan Donald has returned home on family business.
“Alan [Donald] has returned home for family reasons, he has been granted excess leave, we are not sure whether he will return or not because he needs some time to sort things out,” said Moosajee.
Pakistan ODI players start preparations
Pakistan cricketers, who were picked for the forthcoming ODI series, will give final touches to their preparations at the training camp, starting in Lahore today.
According to a Pakistan Cricket Board official, all the eight players were expected to report in the camp by yesterday night.
The training camp that will continue till the players’ departure for the UAE will be held under the National Cricket Academy coaches.
Players, who will attend the camp include Mohammad Hafeez, Shahid Afridi, Umar Akmal, Nasir Jamshed, Sohail Tanvir, Wahab Riaz, Sarfraz Ahmed and Sohaib Maqsood.
The five-match series that will follow the two Test matches against South Africa will start from October 30 in Sharjah.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 21st, 2013.
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COMMENTS (5)
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Ridiculous headline. The content of the article suggests something completely different. Our team (coach included) needs our support. Conjuring up sensationalist headlines doesn't help. Our media is not (/shouldn't be) like the Indian media.
Can somebody just fire this lame excuse for a coach. He should not be heading the Pakistan Camp. If you go in to a game with a defeatist attitude, when will the team learn to believe in themselves. Instead of laying a trap for the South African with strategy and thought, he is trying to lay a seed of doubt for the underdog team. He is just the wrong material and he should have been gone last year. Spare him the agony and fire this guy already.
oh simply a mean thought. One should always enter the ground with only intent to win. When we'll come out of such defensive mind frame?
That headline is a very unfortunate and gross misrepresentation of what he actually said. Please don't try to paraphrase people's statements in headlines. Just use a simple quote (IN QUOTES) - but of course that wouldn't be sensational enough.
Be very precise about your comments Whatmore ... or about what you publish ET ..
1-0 is as good as 2-0 ... hard fought draw is worth it ... but we are entering the match to win.
Don't juggle with the statements and stuff... I'd be happy to see a 1-1 result rather than a 1-0 inspired by a complete intention of not-to-lose-via-draw approach.