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Bangladesh vs Pakistan Preview: Pride on the line as Bangladesh and Pakistan go head to head

  • The Nightwatchman
  • Jul 5, 2019
  • 3 min read

Pakistan will be hoping to win against Bangladesh to finish off their campaign on a high.

The concept is at once simple and mindbending.


Pakistan arrive at Lord’s knowing exactly what they must do to reach the last four of the World Cup, the problem is the task is enough to make Hercules baulk.


Thanks to a combination of England’s wet June, their meagre early-tournament displays and cricket’s reluctant bedfellow - net run rate, Sarfraz Ahmed and Co know that a win alone will not take them past New Zealand and into the knockout rounds.


With nine points to their name after eight matches, Pakistan can only draw level with the Kiwis and, thanks mainly to their implosion against West Indies five weeks ago, they are left needing a miracle margin of victory.


Let’s think about the mathematics for a second: Sarfraz and his team have to overturn a net run rate deficit of 0.967, and to do so requires a win the likes of which the game has never seen.


Should they rack up 350 - and bear in mind they have only surpassed that mark 10 times in 924 one-day internationals since 1973 - they would need to skittle Bangladesh out for 38 or fewer in order to progress.


What if they gave a little extra leeway for the Tigers to score a few more runs - a shrewd suggestion, given Bangladesh allrounder Shakib Al Hasan has made at least 41 in every single innings in this World Cup?


Well, if Pakistan hit 400, they could afford to concede 86 with the ball in response and still go through.


Possible? Maybe. There is power at the top of the Pakistani order - Fakhar Zaman has an ODI double century, after all. But it should be noted that the country has never compiled a score of 400 or more in their one-day international history, their best being the 399 for 1 against Zimbabwe in which Fakhar made his unbeaten 210.


Only one team - coincidentally Zimbabwe - has been dismissed for an ODI total below 80 more times than Bangladesh’s eight, but the most recent instance was in 2014 and they have not returned a score below 200 in any innings this year.


A step further, then. This is starting to get silly now. Should Pakistan manage 450 or more (a colleague is shouting across the room that the highest ODI total recorded at Lord’s is 334, and to be fair to him he has a point), then they would have to rattle through Bangladesh for a maximum of 129.


Not insurmountable, but you could say the same about Everest for a gibbon on a unicycle.


It is an unfortunate scenario for Pakistan, who at times in this tournament have played courageous, fearless, elegant cricket, who beat New Zealand quite comfortably, who held off the charge of England at their favourite hunting ground Trent Bridge and yet who, at times, have been as ragtag as a drunk uncle at Christmas.


That they have had to resort to cheering for old enemy India and then the Blackcaps is effectively a situation of their own making - that abject failure against the short ball in their opening game against West Indies saw their net run rate plummet to -5.802, the sort of depths you would generally associate with goblin sharks and enemies of organised crime, and, though performances have steadily improved, Pakistan have not dished out the sort of thrashing they needed to balance the books.


The mythical parallels with 1992 have evaporated, the conspiracy theories abound and now their fans must pray for something truly extraordinary to take place at the Home of Cricket on Friday.


Of course, the toss of a coin could render even those dreams redundant. WATCH OUT FOR - Shakib Al Hasan

Shakib Al Hasan has proven himself to be a world class all-rounder.

It's easy to pick this guy to watch out for. With either bat or ball, he is a genuine threat to win games. A solid performance here with both may result in him being named player of the tournament, without playing in the finals. And that in itself should fire him up for a big performance. PREDICTION

I think the wind has been knocked out of Pakistan's sails, and if I'm being honest, I've always thought Bangladesh would win this one. They have been excellent in this World Cup and now have a chance to leapfrog Pakistan into fifth spot and finish their campaign in the top half of the table.


Bangladesh to win by 50-70 runs / 4-5 wickets

STATISTICS HEAD TO HEAD ODI Matches: 36 Bangladesh: 5

Paksitan: 31


HEAD TO HEAD IN WORLD CUPS

Matches: 1 Bangladesh: 1

Pakistan: 0

WORLD CUP RECORDS

Bangladesh

Matches: 38

Won: 14

Lost: 23

Best Result - Quarter Final (2015)

Pakistan

Matches: 78

Won: 44

Lost: 32

Best Result - Winners (1992)

ODI Record since World Cup 2015:

Bangladesh

Matches: 69

Won: 37

Lost: 28


Pakistan

Matches: 87

Won: 39

Lost: 45



 
 
 

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Just a couple of blokes with their take on the day of cricket.

The nightwatchman is for those budding cricket analysts, commentators, writers and bloggers to have their opportunity to get their written pieces more audience. Many of us area amateur writers with our own careers and family life taking up most of our days, however, we have always found time to write about the pressing issues in cricket that matter most to us, after dark, well after play. This is why we are the nightwatchman. 

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