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Quadir gives South Africans something to ponder

South Africans 345 for 8 dec. (Kallis 70) and 109 for 3 drew with Pakistan A 311 for 6 dec. (Shehzad 66)
Scorecard

Satisfied with their workout after eight sessions, the South Africans called time on their practice match against Pakistan A at tea on the final day. Their final act was to almost invert their batting line-up to ensure the lower and middle order had time at the crease.

Usman Qadir, the 20-year old son of Pakistan's Abdul Qadir, bowled a testing spell to give the South Africans a flavour of what is to come in the Test series. His googly was difficult for Faf du Plessis and Robin Peterson to read and Peterson was eventually foxed by it, feathering a catch to Mohammad Rizwan.

Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel battled as well but were stubborn in their resistance. With the South Africans allowing Dale Steyn to put his feet up, once the other two seamers had faced what management thought was a sufficient amount of the bowling, they decided enough was enough.

That left Graeme Smith as the only batsmen who did not spend a significant amount of time in the middle. Smith was dismissed for 2 in the first innings and did not return to bat in the second. The official line was that he sat out as part of a management process following his ankle surgery in May. The other four batsmen in the top order - Alviro Petersen, Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis and AB de Villiers - also did not bat in the second dig but scored half-centuries in the first.

Pakistan's bowling remained as disciplined as it was earlier in the match, with the seamers keeping things tight on a flat pitch against batsmen whose aim was to get practice against the new ball. Both Duminy and du Plessis handled the test carefully. Yasir Shah, the other legspinner in the attack, did not trouble the batsmen too much and it was only when Qadir was introduced, that the South Africans experienced problems.

The lower middle-order struggles with the wrong 'un will no doubt be relayed to the Pakistan senior side ahead of Monday's first Test. Ahmed Shehzad, who scored 66 for Pakistan A, Shan Masood, the other opener who reached a half-century, and Asad Shafiq, whose was solid for most of his innings, were added to their group.

Shafiq has been a regular member of Pakistan's Test squad in recent times and will be disappointed with the way he was dismissed in what was a trial for him. Vernon Philander, who looked the most impressive of the South African seamers on the final morning, had him surprised by extra lift and caught in the slips.

Philander was the only wicket-taker for the South Africans on day three but all the seamers got in a spell. Morkel claimed a scalp the previous day but Steyn, bowling within himself pace-wise, went without reward. Kallis had a brief four-over outing while the spinners were all thoroughly worked as South Africa decide on a final XI for Abu Dhabi.

  • Quadir gives South Africans something to ponder

    Satisfied with their workout after eight sessions, the South Africans called time on their practice match against Pakistan A at tea on the final day.

  • Shehzad impresses with fluent fifty

    Fluent fifties from openers Ahmed Shehzad and Shan Masood, and No. 3 batsman Azhar Ali helped Pakistan A reach 230 for 4 at the end of the first day against the South Africans

  • 'Our plan against Smith worked' - Amin

    Umar Amin, the Pakistan A captain, has something useful to share with the Pakistan senior side ahead of the Tests against South Africa: how to get Graeme Smith out

  • Top order keeps South Africans solid

    Four of South Africa's top five strolled to half-centuries against Pakistan A in Sharjah on a surface reminiscent of the ones they played the two Test series on in 2010 for its lifelessness

Sth Africans 3rd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st37JP DuminyF du Plessis
2nd47RJ PetersonF du Plessis
3rd1RJ PetersonVD Philander
4th24VD PhilanderM Morkel