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Only ODI: Afghanistan v Australia at Sharjah Aug 25-26, 2012

TheParraboy

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A ODI over 2 days?

Aust should win easily, but good to see minnow nations getting some big gigs outside the world cup. Make up of the aussie side intrigues me, will bailey, notch and forrest be in the side? :crazy:

Feel for Cullum Ferguson if he isnt there, considering we play pakistan in a bunch of ODIs right afterwards
 

Hallatia

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I think this Pakistan series should be a really good one, it's a real pity that it cannot be played in Pakistan. I am really hoping that next year onwards Pakistan will return home for international cricket, and it will be safe for all parties to have that happen
 

Hallatia

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Clarke moves up to No. 3
Daniel Brettig
August 23, 2012

Australia's captain Michael Clarke is expected to promote himself to the pivotal No. 3 spot in the ODI batting order for the matches against Afghanistan and Pakistan in the UAE, with Michael Hussey's return to add greater ballast to the touring middle order.

Clarke walked to the crease at No. 3 in both the trial matches played during Australia's pre-season camp in Darwin, and ESPNcricinfo understands that he is now inked to remain there as the team's best limited overs option in the position.

Having returned from parental leave that ruled him out of the dire ODI tour of England, Hussey will bat at Nos. 4 or 5, leaving the Twenty20 captain George Bailey and David Hussey to round out the top six.

Since Ricky Ponting lost form and was dropped from the ODI team during the triangular series last Australian summer, No. 3 has been something of a problem position for the limited overs team, as the vice-captain Shane Watson, Peter Forrest, Bailey and Matthew Wade have all been tried there with limited degrees of success.

When fit, Clarke has retained the No. 4 spot he occupied beneath Ponting for some years, and in England did so despite the clear inadequacy of Forrest in particular to handle the challenges posed by the home attack. At the time, Clarke and the coach Mickey Arthur believed that Hussey's absence from the middle order meant the captain could not afford to be any higher than No. 4, the better to have some influence on the later passages of an innings.

Clarke has a sound ODI record in his limited appearances at No. 3, averaging 36.20 in 18 matches and making one century, an unbeaten 111 against India in Vizag in 2010, when he was stand-in captain. He is now set to make the move a permanent one.

Australia's acting coach for the first part of the tour, Steve Rixon, said the tourists would be playing their best team against Afghanistan and Pakistan, intent on building consistency and confidence in the ODI unit. The series follows a 12-month period that has veered from strong results in Sri Lanka and South Africa, to a halting triumph in the triangular series at home, a shared encounter in the West Indies and the abject 4-0 defeat in England.

"We've got one tournament leading into another, which a lot of these guys will be doubling up in, from [ODIs] here into T20 over here into the big one over in Sri Lanka," Rixon said. "So we are conscious of that, however, first things first we need to win these one dayers so we'll be looking at our very best side. We need to look at the wicket, see exactly what we've got … when we see what the wicket looks like we'll assess our options, and our options are pretty good at the moment.

"You have to really be looking at your own backyard, and our own backyard is how we're going to play best in these conditions. Regardless of the opposition, it's how David Warner is going to combat a turning wicket, or how Michael Clarke's going to play against the opposition in Dubai, that's the way we set ourselves up."

The opening match against Afghanistan will be a chance for the Australians to witness how quickly the strife-torn country has developed a brave and opportunistic limited overs team. Though he expected the tourists to win, Rixon said he and the players were enlivened by the chance to encounter a rising nation.

"Afghanistan has come in as a minor competitor, but they are competing at the top level, so we've got to go in with a lot of respect for the opposition, but we'd like to think we go in with the upper hand to be able to beat them in these conditions with the side we have," Rixon said. "I like the idea that minor nations are getting the opportunity to come in and play against the big boys, I think that's great for cricket and the culture of the game.

"We've only just got some [videos] recently so I'll have a little look at that. I'm sure they'll go in with a 'we've got nothing to lose' attitude, which is an outstanding way to play it, but we're also going in as a side that's been No. 1 for a long time and we want to get back to No. 1 and make every post a winner. We have to do what we do well, and if we do that then I think we'll be good enough."
Sauce
 

Hallatia

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Australia have named their XI to play Afghanistan
David Warner, Matthew Wade (keeper), Michael Clarke (captain), Michael Hussey, David Hussey, George Bailey, What'shisname Maxwell, Mitchell Johnson, Mitchell Starc, James Pattinson, Xavier Doherty
 

Hallatia

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Dan Christian is 12 man. I am reliably informed that Maxwell's first name is actually Glenn. I really couldn't think what it was when I was saying the team and the only name that came into my head was Gerard Maxwell, but I knew that was wrong
 

Hallatia

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the that time of night bit is a bit bollocks. I know the tennis ball is nowhere near as hard, but it travels much faster and people play competitive tennis at that time of night. They are not small children, they can play cricket at that time of night.

Exactly how hot is it over there that they can't play during the day? Cricket is a Summer sport, it would have to take some extreme heat for it to be deemed too dangerous for play to occur in
 

Hallatia

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It said in that article "The heat gets up into the 40s during the day"

which sounds like they are making a fuss over it passing 40. I am not a professional athlete and I have played cricket in >40 degree heat
 

Twizzle

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yeh me too, I've been surfing when its been 47 degrees

they're all a bunch of pussies
 

Horrie Is God

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8,073
http://www.espncricinfo.com/pakistan-v-australia-2012/content/current/story/579260.html

Afghanistan v Australia, only ODI, Sharjah

Afghanistan ready for 'huge moment'..

The Preview by Brydon Coverdale
August 24, 2012

afgancricket.jpg

This will be the first match of any format between Australia and Afghanistan © UAE Cricket Board

Match facts
August 25-26, 2012
Start time 1800 (1400 GMT)

Big Picture
Ten years ago, the idea of a one-day international between Australia and Afghanistan seemed about as plausible as playing cricket on the moon. But Afghanistan's cricket progress has been one of the most remarkable success stories in the game's recent history and now they have a chance to play Australia for the first time. The one-off match will be Afghanistan's second ODI against an ICC full member and Cricket Australia's chief executive James Sutherland said when he announced the fixture last month that he hoped it would help the development of the Afghanistan team.

"Everyone in world cricket have been really impressed with how cricket has flourished in Afghanistan, despite its pressing national problems," Sutherland said at the time. "As an ICC member, CA strongly supports world cricket's ambition for cricket to continue to develop as a global sport and that, combined with the strong relationships between our two countries, encouraged us to look at how we might recognise and encourage Afghanistan by playing them on the field."

Australia are expected to win the match but their captain Michael Clarke was careful not to underestimate Afghanistan before the game, noting that they would be more familiar with the conditions, whereas Australia have just come from a tour of England and a cold winter back home. The Afghanistan captain Nawroz Mangal said the match would be "a huge moment" for all of his players.

There is another reason this fixture is historic: it is the first time a one-day international has been scheduled to be played across two days. The extreme heat in the UAE forced a rethink of the playing times for a 50-over contest and to avoid the worst of the sun, it was decided that Australia's ODIs against Afghanistan and Pakistan would start at 6pm and would be scheduled to finish at 1.45am. It is not so much day-night cricket as night-morning cricket.

Form guide (Complete matches, most recent first)

Afghanistan LWLLW
Australia LLLLW

Watch out for
The legspinner Samiullah Shenwari is Afghanistan's leading wicket taker in one-day internationals, with 27 victims at 26.66. He also doesn't mind the conditions in Sharjah, where he has played five of his 22 ODIs, and where he picked up his best figures of 4 for 31 against Canada. The Australians will be a stiffer challenge, but on a pitch expected to offer some turn he could prove a tricky customer.

Glenn Maxwell will become Australia's 196th one-day international player and the sixth man to debut for them in the format this year. In 2010-11, he broke the record for the fastest half-century in Australian domestic one-day history, with a 19-ball effort for Victoria, and he will provide some strikepower in the lower middle order. He is athletic in the field and will enjoy bowling on the turning Sharjah surface.

Team news
Afghanistan have named a 15-man squad, with their captain Nawroz Mangal back in the mix after he missed their most recent matches in Ireland in July.

Afghanistan (possible) 1 Karim Sadiq, 2 Javed Ahmadi, 3 Mohammad Shahzad (wk), 4 Nawroz Mangal (capt), 5 Najibullah Zadran, 6 Mohammad Nabi, 7 Asghar Stanikzai, 8 Samiullah Shenwari, 9 Gulbodin Naib, 10 Dawlat Zadran, 11 Shapoor Zadran

Australia have named their starting XI ahead of time. Maxwell will make his international debut and Clarke has promoted himself to No.3. The four players to miss out from within the squad were Callum Ferguson, Daniel Christian, Steven Smith and Alister McDermott.

Australia 1 Matthew Wade (wk), 2 Dave Warner, 3 Michael Clarke (capt), 4 Michael Hussey, 5 David Hussey, 6 George Bailey, 7 Glenn Maxwell, 8 Mitchell Johnson, 9 Mitchell Starc, 10 James Pattinson, 11 Xavier Doherty

Pitch and conditions
"The wicket looks quite hard, there's no grass on it at all," Clarke said on the day before the match. "I think as the game goes on there'll probably be a bit more spin throughout the game."
The weather can be summed up in one word: scorching. Even late at night the temperature is not expected to dip below 34C.

Stats and trivia
This is Afghanistan's second ODI against a full member of the ICC; they lost their first by seven wickets to Pakistan in Sharjah in February
Although most of their games have been against fellow associate members, Afghanistan have an impressive ODI record, having won 12 of the 22 matches they have played
The No.3 position has been a problem for Australia in ODIs recently; in the past year they have used six batsmen there for a combined average of 21.13

Quotes
"This will be a huge moment for every single one of us, playing against the mighty Australians."
Nawroz Mangal, the Afghanistan captain

"They've played a lot of cricket over the last couple of weeks in preparation for the T20 World Cup. It's an opportunity for them to come out with nothing to lose and plenty to gain."
Australia's captain Michael Clarke

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo.
 
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