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August
28
Aussies ready for busy two
months
NAROBI: Australia this week start the first leg of
Africa-Asia-Arabia cricket tour in Nairobi against the
team most likely to stand in its way when the world
championship kicks off on this continent in February.
A two-month trip which takes Australia from Africa, to
Sri Lanka and then the United Arab Emirates, starts with
a match on Friday against Pakistan, one-day cricket's
definition of mercurial but a team currently running
hotter than any other. Since losing the final of the
Natwest series against Australia at Lord's just over a
year ago, Pakistan has won a remarkable 18 of its past
26 matches - a 70 per cent winning record.
The run also coincides with Pakistan being forced into
exile following the September 11 terrorist attacks.
In the past year, as most nations refuse to travel to
the Islamic nation for security reasons, Pakistan has
played only three one-day matches at home, all for wins
against New Zealand.
The journey has taken the Pakistanis from Sharjah to
Chittagong and Dhaka in Bangladesh, to Melbourne,
Brisbane and Tangiers. Now it is Kenya for what is
supposed to a home series.
For Ricky Ponting's Australians, this series is a
warm-up for what could be a crucial match against New
Zealand to open the ICC Champions Trophy in Sri Lanka
next month.
With Australia and New Zealand drawn in a group
alongside against Bangladesh - a near certain win for
both sides - their opening match will determine which
team advances to the semi-finals.
Given the Kiwis' recent domination last summer, it's
crucial match for the Australians. Lose it and they are
effectively out of the one-day series and will have
precious little to do for three weeks before the
moveable Test series against Pakistan starts in Colombo
before heading to Sharjah.
Following that series, the Australians will barely have
time to think before they are up against England in an
Ashes series which will be jammed up against more one-dayers
against England and Sri Lanka, the finals of dovetailing
into the World Cup, which will be played in South
Africa, with matches in Zimbabwe and Kenya. Ahead of the
World Cup, this series - which starts with Pakistan
against Kenya on Thursday - is vital preparation for
Kenya, which will host matches against New Zealand and
Sri Lanka during the World Cup.
This will be a test of security as well as the growing
popularity of cricket here.
Kenya, a winner of eight of its 43 one-day matches, has
been warming with convincing wins against Bangladesh A.
As a sideline, the fact Nairobi is at an altitude of
1820 metres, should provide Brett Lee and Shoaib Ahktar
with the atmospheric conditions to bowl as fast as
possible in the thin air.
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