File picture of Pakistan cricketer Saeed Ajmal (second right) delivering a ball during a practice session at the Galle International Cricket Stadium in Galle.

Pakistan’s Twenty20 captain Shahid Afridi admitted his team will miss suspended ace spinner Saeed Ajmal when they meet Australia in Dubai on Sunday.

The 36-year-old off-spinner is serving suspension on illegal bowling action and will not be available to play internationally until he is cleared after remedial work and reassessment.

Ajmal has been an integral part for Pakistan in all three formats of the game, having missed only three Twenty20 matches since his debut, also against Australia at the same venue in 2009.

He is the leading wicket-taker in all Twenty20 cricket with 85 in 63 matches, a record which Afridi admitted made him an important bowler.

“We all know the importance of Ajmal and we will miss him,” Afridi told reporters after the team’s practice session yesterday.

Pakistan have selected 22-year-old left-arm spinner Raza Hasan to replace Ajmal, a selection Afridi hoped will come good.

“I am very confident that Hasan has played cricket before and has done well,” said Afridi of the spinner whose all six wickets came in seven World Twenty20 matches in Sri Lanka two years ago.

Afridi said other spinners will also take responsibility.

“(Mohammad) Hafeez and I will be there and as captain when I look at my bowling, definitely miss Ajmal, but I am very confident that we will have no issues,” said Afridi.

Pakistan have also included uncapped 24-year-old leg-spinning allrounder Saad Nasim to bolster the spin attack.

Australian coach Darren Lehmann Wednesday played down Ajmal’s absence, saying Pakistan will be tough even without the spinner as they have youngsters who can surprise.

Afridi hoped it will be a keenly contested Twenty20 game.

“Both teams are balanced so it will be a good game. All the players have played cricket, this type of cricket you need youngsters and I am confident as a player, they will deliver,” said Afridi, who was last month appointed Twenty20 captain for two years.

Afridi said he wanted all-out effort from his team.

“You win or lose but I think all-out effort should be there. Every series is very important and if we win the body language will be better,” said Afridi.

 

Pakistan’s Hafeez unfazed after action reported

Pakistan’s spinning all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez yesterday said he was surprised but not concerned after his bowling was reported in an Indian domestic tournament, adding he had no plans to modify his action.

The 33-year-old is key to Pakistan’s attack in their series against Australia which starts with a Twenty20 against Australia in Dubai on Sunday, particularly after the suspension of ace spinner Saeed Ajmal whose action was found to be illegal in testing last month.

The report by on-field umpires in the Indian tournament has no bearing on international cricket, but Pakistan coach Waqar Younis told AFP it would “shatter” the all-rounders confidence.

Hafeez, however, said he was unfazed.

“I am surprised over my action being reported because I am bowling like this for the last 11 years,” he said. “I have played six major world events: two World Cups and three World Twenty20s and nobody had ever questioned my action, this is a big surprise for me,” he added.

 

 

 

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