Australia vs. Pakistan Cricket: Live Scores, Updates, Video Second Test, Day Four



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Live Cricket Coverage

Pakistan has a huge lead for the fourth day of play against Australia in Abu Dhabi.

AUSTRALIA is on the rocks and needs another miracle to avoid a series defeat in Abu Dhabi. The weak Australian striker is heading for the fourth day and is still beating two days after losing Shaun Marsh's first wicket at the end of the third day.

It is unlikely that Usman Khawaja will strike after discovering that he had a meniscal tear in his left knee.

Breakfast

Australia 145 and 155/7 (Marnus Labuschagne 43, Nathan Lyon 0)

Pakistan 282 and 9 / 400d

Australia needs 382 races to win.

7:35 p.m.

Waugh slams a big problem

Mark Waugh slammed the Australian stick again.

At the legendary Australian drummer, the legendary Australian drummer said the main problem of his team was the stick.

"Pakistan made 280 after being 5/56, it was probably 80 too much, we should have sold it at 200," he said.

"But at the end of the day, our club has since been terrible. We were led 145 for the first lap and now we are seven for no more at second base on a very good pitch at bat against a good bowling attack.

"But our stick has just let us down too many times and this series has made us lose three in four runs."

7:15 p.m.

The end is near for Australia

Peter Siddle is the last Australian drummer to return to the pavilion with Yasir Shah crossing the Australian tail in a hurry.

Siddle was knocked down and the referee did not hesitate to see Australia thrashing the box seven times.

With Usman Khawaja no longer fighting, with Australia still needing 386 to win, there are only two wickets remaining in the game.

7:07 p.m.

Fictional reflection from Starc

Mitchell Starc called the most promising critics, but unsuccessfully, the Australians dropped to six.

It was a partnership of 67 meetings between Starc and Marnus Labuschagne, but that was not enough since Starc fell into the assault of Yasir Shah in the bulk of LBW types.

6:55 p.m.

Rain threatens Abu Dhabi

It's a breathtaking, sometimes bizarre test in Abu Dhabi, but one that could save Australia.

Abu Dhabi is in the middle of the desert and has not had rain for 12 months, but the rain is at the rendezvous.

Unfortunately for Australia, as for his second run, and his current partnership between Marnus Labuschagne and Mitchell Starc, it could be too late.

"The rain may not have saved Australia AB," said Mike Hussey.

"In the middle of the desert, it would be something," said Border.

"When I woke up this morning, it was raining a lot. I had never seen a cloud and even less rain during our entire stay here. It has not been raining here for 12 months. Cloud high enough so I would not expect players to leave the field. "

media_cameraGardeners prepare the blankets in Abu Dhabi.

5:55 p.m.

The collapse of the Australian horror

The first heroic trials of Australian drummers were not seen anywhere, Australia losing 4-7, heart-breaking Mohammad Abbas.

The unlikely pursuit only got worse, with Aaron Finch being awarded the LBW title to Abbas before Captain Tim Paine fired three balls later for a duck.

Paine left a bullet that hit the stump, commentators claiming that it was "a mere mental mistake on the part of the Australian captain".

After Khawaja's injury, Australia's Marnus Labuschagne is Australia's last top-ranked drummer.

5:35 p.m.

Marsh is putting more pressure on himself

With Shane Warne claiming his head, Mitchell Marsh needed a big score.

But it was not to be with Marsh, rejected by LBW by Mohammad Abbas.

The ball cut and touched the rear cushion, but originally, it was not released by the referee.

However, all is well for Pakistan with the criticism that the ball was flat.

Australia has now 3-down and needs another 461 races to win.

media_cameraMitchell Marsh was LBW lead.

5:27 p.m.

Australia loses its first wicket

Travis Head had been the Australian aggressor since the start of day four, but it was his loss.

Mohammad Abbas was arrested by the substitute goalkeeper at the box office while the Australian left for 36.

Australia is 2-71, it still takes 467 to win.

4:50 p.m.

Horror news for Khawaja

It's a series of two tries, but Usman Khawaja was able to taste both ups and downs.

In the first test, Khawaja had crossed a decisive century to save the test and give Australia the hope that his team was turning to a turning point.

The second test may have ended his summer.

Khawaja might need a left knee operation after a workout accident that caused a tear in the meniscus of the choke.

Despite the severity of the injury, Australia did not dismiss Khawaja from the bat in the second run.

The 31-year-old was visibly limping when he arrived on the ground.

Khawaja will not be able to beat higher than No. 7 if the wickets fall during the first two hours of play.

Khawaja had an anterior cruciate ligament problem in 2014 after an incident during his training with the Sydney Thunder in the Big Bash League, which led Queensland for seven months.

4:30 p.m.

Warne XI calls at the end of Marsh's

Spinning king Shane Warne named his test team after leading the critics against the team playing Pakistan in the UAE.

Warne was brutal in his assessment of the Australian's performance against Pakistan in the UAE and legend has named two camps.

Mitchell Marsh, Marnus Labuschagne, Travis Head, John Holland, Peter Siddle and Tim Paine are absent from his first stint. the side.

This included Aaron Finch, captain of the T20, captain of the T20 as skipper for Paine.

The first draft, however, was reconsidered after Warne made a call on Twitter for first-rate statistics.

Warne's second shot at a team has had some extra changes, but Finch will still keep the captaincy in the eyes of the legend.

His second team saw Matt Renshaw, Glenn Maxwell, Marcus Stoinis, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood coming back for Mitchell Marsh, Labuschagne, Holland and Siddle, as well as Shaun Marsh.

Shaun Marsh seems to be the most drummer facing the scene with another horror collapse.

Marsh has six centuries of testing with an average of 36.40 but the drummer of the higher order scored only 14 points in the current series against Pakistan, having already completed the last round of his series in the United Arab Emirates United.

Marsh was played by Mir Hamza for 4, and Australia – which starts the fourth day at 1-47 – still needs 490 test points in the last two days of the Test to win the series.

It would be a record fourth record in the fourth inning to win a test match (the current record is 418 by the West Indies against Australia in St John's in 2003), but the second highest score in fourth round of history (behind England 5/645 against South Africa in Durban in 1939) if Australia won a victory.

16h

Pakistani star prepares for mockery

The legendary Pakistani drummer Azhar Ali was expecting teasing from his 10-year-old son after his bizarre victory in Thursday's second test against Australia.

Azhar headed for Peter Siddle to the edge of the third man and, thinking that the ball had crossed the rope, stopped in the middle of the field to talk to fellow drummer Asad Shafiq.

But Mitchell Starc recovered the ball within one meter of the limit and sent it back to box office goaltender Tim Paine, who escaped Azhar, leaving the Pakistani duo – who have a combined total of 130 tests and more. 9,000 races – failed and disconcerted.

media_cameraAzhar Ali was teased by his 10 year old son after one of the strangest remands in the history of Cricket Test.

Azhar fell for a well-played 64 match, including four borders, as Pakistan took control of the test, setting a goal of 538 points for Australia with two days to go.

Australia was 47 for one in the standings and faced a 1-0 defeat in the two-game series after the first test ended in a draw.

"My son is going to talk about it for a long time and in a fun way," said Azhar of his 10-year-old son Ibtisam, who happily arrived on the ground after his father's dismissal.

"Every time I talk about cricket, it will surely come back to this incident." Azhar revealed that he was discussing the movement of the balloon with Shafiq as they were chatting in the middle of the wicket.

"We were just discussing the fact that the ball was swaying a little late. We did not really know anything like this could happen.

"When Starc threw the ball, we did not think anything was happening, but when he landed in the goalkeeper's gloves, we realized something was going on.

"The way the shot was hit by a quick pitcher and the edge flew, I think he's reached the limit. But there is no excuse. Everyone was pulling our legs in the locker room but at that time it was a shock.

Azhar admitted that Shafiq and he had not watched the ball.

"We were not looking at the ball and that's the reason I missed everything.

"I was not happy about that, and luckily other drummers did the work and we laughed at it afterwards. It's a little disappointing and shocking, but also fun. Azhar denied the existence of unsportsmanlike behavior on the part of Australian players during his dismissal.

"I do not think it was bad sportsmanship and I take on all my responsibilities, I feel a bit ignorant. It was nothing at all since no one embarrassed me or distracted me.

"It was my own fact. I think Australians have made the right choice. "

AFP

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