Given a surface tailor-made for their fast-bowling artillery, West Indies did not so much win as restore the natural order, finishing the job inside three days to level the series. The irony, of course, is impossible to ignore: in an attempt to strengthen variation, they left out the raw pace of Patterson for the off-spin of Butts—ending a run of 58 Tests with no more than one frontline spinner. Yet such was the hostility of the pitch, and such the fragility of Pakistan’s technique against lift and lateral movement, that those two specialist spinners combined for just a single over. The game hardly paused long enough to justify their selection.
Pakistan,
having won the toss, walked into a tempest of their own making. Asif Mujtaba,
handed his debut in the injured Salim Malik’s stead, spent 25 anxious minutes
in search of a first Test run—an early demonstration of the uncompromising
environment he had entered. Only the imperturbable Javed Miandad, armed with
three hours of defiance, looked capable of negotiating the barrage for any
length of time.
West Indies
themselves were not immune to examination. Imran Khan and Abdul Qadir probed
relentlessly, and once the early shine of confidence waned, it was Gordon
Greenidge alone who steered the innings from turbulence towards
respectability—a total just over 200 that felt more strategic than
insufficient.
Yet cricket
often reveals that the decisive moment isn’t always spectacular. Trailing by
only 87 in first innings, Pakistan retained a foothold—brief, but tangible.
Then the foothold crumbled. Courtney Walsh struck Qasim Omar a brutal blow to
the face, and with his dismissal went Pakistan’s last thread of poise. What
followed was a collapse in its starkest form: all out for 77, their second-lowest
score in Test history and their lowest ever at home. An hour after tea, the
contest was gone.
Fast
bowling had reclaimed its narrative. The selection gamble had proven
irrelevant. And the series—suddenly and violently—was back on level.
Thank You
Faisal Caesar

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