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Batting collapse turns Peake debut into Pakistani victory pageant

Daniel Brettig

Updated ,first published

This was supposed to be a banner day for Ollie Peake, surpassing Ricky Ponting as Australia’s youngest batting debutant in an ODI.

Instead, it became a pageant for a Pakistani debutant, the wily left-arm spinner Arafat Minhas, who scooped 5-32 as the under-strength tourists were flummoxed on a Rawalpindi pitch that spun and kept low. No Pakistani had ever taken five-for on ODI debut before.

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By the time Peake came to the middle at number seven, most of the damage had already been done: senior men Alex Carey, Josh Inglis, Marnus Labuschagne and Cameron Green all fell rapidly to effectively rule out any kind of big total for Australia.

It was the sort of batting disintegration Australia have seen multiple times in south Asia over the years. The absent Travis Head and Steve Smith may well have been able to stem the bleeding a little more effectively.

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Matt Short and Matt Renshaw played soundly to retrieve the situation somewhat, but never got completely in control of things against spin bowlers who kept the scoring rate down, while producing the occasional moment of magic in helpful conditions.

“When you’re four down early it makes it really difficult to try and build a big score,” Renshaw said. “We built a couple of really good partnerships, but unfortunately, it wasn’t enough. I think maybe 250-260 would’ve been really interesting on that wicket.

Ollie Peake tries on his new Australian cap before play.Getty Images

“We come to the subcontinent as Australians, we know we’re going to get more wickets favouring spin. Subcontinent teams come to Australia, and we’re getting bouncy, fast ones, so it is what it is when we come over here. There are a few balls that went really low, that spun, but that’s just the way cricket is when you come to the subcontinent.

“But we did what we could with what we had and unfortunately, it wasn’t enough today.”

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Peake’s first ball in international cricket came from Arafat, and the 19-year-old just managed to get his bat down before it snaked back towards pads and stumps.

There was one streaky boundary as Peake tried to form a partnership with Renshaw, before he leant back to cut a delivery that was perhaps slightly too full for the shot and edged behind to depart for seven.

Peake batting in his debut for Australia.Getty Images

With left-arm spinner Matt Kuhnemann batting at eight, the Australians had a decidedly long tail, so it should have been up to Carey, Inglis, Labuschagne and Green to do something more substantial.

Instead, they all departed within 34 runs, the last three dematerialising inside six balls from 21-year-old Arafat, to leave the game at the mercy of Pakistan.

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Changing his pace and varying the degree of turn expertly, Arafat beat Inglis on a reverse sweep, then zipped through Labuschagne’s ambitious back-foot forcing attempt. Green, who has unhappy memories of the pre-T20 World Cup trip to Pakistan earlier in the year, was utterly defeated by a delivery that turned sharply from outside leg stump to take the top of off.

From there, Australia’s best chance lay in a huge partnership between Short and Renshaw, but after reaching a serviceable 50, Short ventured out of his crease to the first ball of a new spell by Arafat and was stumped by metres.

Pakistan’s Arafat Minhas celebrates his five-wicket haul.Getty Images

Renshaw’s departure came to another ripping delivery, this time from Abrar Ahmed, which turned and kept low from around the wicket to clatter into off stump halfway up.

Defending a paltry total, the Australians needed early wickets. Kuhnemann and wrist spinner Tanveer Sangha, playing in place of Adam Zampa due to a neck spasm, coaxed skied catches in the deep to have Pakistan 2-49, but from there the hosts had some good fortune.

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Babar Azam, allowed to play at the sort of tempo he prefers due to the low scoring nature of the run chase, was reprieved a couple of times. First he bunted a low catch to Short at short cover off Kuhnemann, only for third umpire Richard Kettleborough to rule against a clean catch.

On 39, Babar was pinned in front of the stumps by the recalled Billy Stanlake, but was given not out by Kumar Dharmasena and Australia’s review found the appeal denied on umpire’s call because this was a rare delivery bouncing enough to only be clipping the top of the stumps.

Babar had just reached 50 and the total was 136 when Short’s off-break bounced enough to cramp the striker into a miscue towards mid-off, where Kuhnemann put down the catch. That was Australia’s last chance.

From there, the stand between Babar (69) and Ghazi Gori (65) took Pakistan to within 25 runs of their target, which was ultimately achieved with more than seven overs to spare. Fittingly, it was Arafat who punched a six down the ground to close it out.

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Scoreboard

AUSTRALIA
Alex Carey c Salman Ali Agha b Abrar Ahmed 19
Matt Short st Muhammad Ghazi Ghori b Arafat Minhas 55
Josh Inglis lbw Arafat Minhas 13
Marnus Labuschagne lbw Arafat Minhas 0
Cameron Green b Arafat Minhas 0
Matt Renshaw b Abrar Ahmed 61
Ollie Peake c Muhammad Ghazi Ghori b Salman Ali Agha 7
Matthew Kuhnemann c Babar Azam b Haris Rauf 24
Nathan Ellis b Arafat Minhas 8
Tanveer Sangha b Shaheen Afridi 0
Billy Stanlake not out 0
Extras: 0b 6lb 0nb 7w 13
Total: (44.1 overs) 200 all out
Fall of wickets: 1-34 Carey, 2-62 Inglis, 3-62 Labuschagne, 4-68 Green, 5-123 Short, 6-145 Peake, 7-179 Renshaw, 8-199 Ellis, 9-200 Sangha, 10-200 Kuhnemann.
Bowling: Shaheen Afridi 6 0 1-19 (3.17), Haris Rauf 5.1 0 1-24 (4.65), Abrar Ahmed 10 0 2-44 (4.40), Arafat Minhas 10 1 5-32 (3.20), Shadab Khan 8 0 0-54 (6.75), Salman Ali Agha 5 0 1-21 (4.20)

PAKISTAN
Sahibzada Farhan c Matt Short b Tanveer Sangha 28
Maaz Sadaqat c Matt Short b Matthew Kuhnemann 8
Babar Azam b Nathan Ellis 69
Muhammad Ghazi Ghori lbw Nathan Ellis 65
Arafat Minhas not out 18
Salman Ali Agha lbw Marnus Labuschagne 6
Abdul Samad not out 1
Extras: 0b 1lb 0nb 6w 7
Total: (42.3 overs) 5-202
Fall of wickets: 1-25 Sadaqat, 2-49 Farhan, 3-176 Azam, 4-185 Ghori, 5-195 Agha
Did not bat: Khan, Afridi, Rauf, Ahmed
Bowling: Nathan Ellis 7 0 2-45 (6.43), Billy Stanlake 6 0 0-37 (6.17), Matthew Kuhnemann 10 1 1-29 (2.90), Tanveer Sangha 10 3 1-31 (3.10), Matt Short 3 0 0-11 (3.67), Matt Renshaw 5 0 0-33 (6.60), Marnus Labuschagne 1.3 0 1-15 (10.00)
Pakistan win by five wickets,

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Daniel BrettigDaniel Brettig is The Age's chief cricket writer and the author of several books on cricket.Connect via X.

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