BSS
  02 Mar 2022, 10:00

Six of the best: players to watch in Pakistan-Australia series

ISLAMABAD, March 2, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Pakistan will start their first Test
series at home against Australia in 24 years in Rawalpindi on Friday under
heavy security with the tourists on unfamiliar turf.

   AFP Sports looks at three players from each side to watch as the long-
awaited and potentially fascinating three-Test battle unfolds.

   AUSTRALIA

   - Steve Smith -

   Started his career as a leg-spinning all-rounder against Pakistan at
Lord's in 2010 before developing into one of the most complete batters in
international cricket.

   His average of 59.87 is unsurpassed by any active Test player and he has
proved his adaptability by scoring 1,200 runs in 13 Tests on slow, turning
sub-Continent wickets.

   Australia will look to Smith -- who by his own lofty standards had a lean
series against England with 244 runs at 30.50 and a top score of 93 -- to
anchor their batting against a formidable Pakistan attack on pitches alien to
the tourists.

   - Nathan Lyon -

   Likely to be the key to winning matches on the slow and turning pitches of
Pakistan.

   With 415 Test victims, Lyon is Australia's greatest off-spinner and as a
slow bowler his tally for his country is only bettered by leg-spinner Shane
Warne, who took 708 wickets.

   Lyon, who has taken 95 wickets in 19 Tests in Asia, has a knack of
understanding how pitches behave and subtly change over the course of a five-
day match, having worked as a curator in his early days of the career.

   - Marnus Labuschagne -

   The world's top-ranked batsman shot to prominence when he replaced Steve
Smith as concussion substitute in the 2019 Ashes Test at Lord's and scored
fifty.

   His 23 Tests have seen him score 2,220 runs at 56.92 with six hundreds.

   Labuschagne's maverick batting style puts him firmly in the same mould as
teammate Smith who is the only active player in Tests with a higher average.

   His eccentricity and meticulous approach meant he spent the few weeks
practising at his house on a home-made mat with aluminium strips taped to it,
to try to replicate conditions he may face against Pakistan's spinners.

   PAKISTAN

   - Shaheen Shah Afridi -

   Since making his Test debut as an 18-year-old three years ago, the tall
left-armer's rise has been remarkable.

   He possesses a wicked inswinger to right-handers that blew arch-rivals
India away in the Twenty20 World Cup last year.

   Shaheen's red-ball record stands up to scrutiny too -- he was the second
highest wicket-taker in Tests last year with 47, just behind Ravi Ashwin's 54
for India.

   His 78 wickets in all international cricket in 2021 saw him win the ICC
Player of the Year award.

   - Babar Azam -

   When the stylish Pakistan captain Azam plays one of his exquisite cover
drives it is said that brings the entire stadium to a standstill.

   His superb timing and effortless shot-making have elevated him into the
top 10 of the batting rankings in all three formats.

   He is number one in 50-over and Twenty20 cricket and is now setting his
sights on achieving the same in Tests having accumulated 416 in eight Tests
last year, without reaching three figures.

   Australia will be aware, though, that his last Test century came at this
week's venue in Rawalpindi against Bangladesh.

   - Sajid Khan -

   With an unusual action, Sajid has taken over the off-spinning duties from
Bilal Asif who was Pakistan's match-winner against Australia in the 2018
series win in the UAE.

   Sajid appears to bowl off the wrong foot, which can be disconcerting for
batsmen as he proved by taking 12 wickets against Bangladesh in Pakistan's
last Test outing in December.

   Like all off-spinners, loves to operate out of the bowlers' rough outside
the left-handers' off-stump, which could pose problems to Australia's lefty
quartet of David Warner, Travis Head, Usman Khawaja and Alex Carey.