A strike-rate of 29.60 is not often associated with Tamim; none of his previous 20 fifty-plus scores
have come that slowly. He tried hard not to be sucked into off-side
traps, and a majority of his runs came when the bowlers were frustrated
into bowling too straight at him. It wasn't quite a chanceless innings
though. He was beaten when the errant drive on the up made an appearance
and a ripper from Malcolm Waller took the shoulder of his bat, but the
keeper couldn't convert the chance. But those lapses only steeled him
further. He collected 72 runs for the second wicket with Mominul Haque
and 95 for the third with Mahmudullah.
Bangladesh were watchful by default, but they needed that approach against Natsai M'shangwe,
the debutant legspinner, who combined drift with turn. The pitch
afforded him another weapon in the form of variable bounce. He was
particularly threatening against Mahmudullah, whose eagerness to drive
through the covers had him playing and missing. But M'shangwe's control
against left-handers was not as consistent, and he was left still
searching for a maiden Test wicket. He was tiring as well, having bowled
all of his 24 overs continuously with only the lunch and tea breaks to
replenish him.
With M'shangwe needing rest, Zimbabwe hoped to exploit a slow and
turning pitch with their part-time spinners but Mahmudullah had settled
down - he was comfortable spending 25 overs without a boundary before
his fourth four during a dogged fifty - and Tamim weathered cramps on
his right hand to keep the visitors at bay. The 250-ball effort was his
longest Test innings.
Zimbabwe recognised the importance of the new ball on a flat pitch and
worked the batsmen in the off-stump corridor. The ploy had dragged
Shamsur Rahman a little too far across and the change-up inswinger from
Elton Chigumbura halted him in his tracks. The batsman was struck below
the knee-roll while on the move and was reprieved by umpire Billy
Bowden, but not by DRS. A similar delivery did Mahmudullah with the
second new ball.
Half of the first 10 overs were maidens, and two of those on the run
preceded the wicket-taking over, but Bangladesh did well not to fall
prey to a stagnant scoreboard. The pitch held enough moisture for the
seamers to justify the caution from Mominul and Tamim. And the odd ball
zipping past the outside edge of a drive on the up was enough of a
reminder for them not to worry about a run-rate of 2.13 in the morning.
The rate at the end of the day was 2.14.
The seamers hoped to unsettle the batsmen with the odd scrambled-seam
delivery. Tinashe Panyangara succeeded in getting a back-of-a-length
ball to hold up on the pitch and Mominul's punch ended up as a return
catch in the ninth over after lunch. Zimbabwe would have been doubly
pleased with that wicket considering they did not review an lbw shout
against Mominul from M'shangwe that HawkEye revealed would have hit the
stumps.
Not that Bangladesh's natural instincts were completely subdued. Tamim
unfurled a stunning cover drive against Chigumbura in the 12th over and
one of a similar class in the 79th. Mahmudullah displayed his range when
he raced down the track to loft M'shangwe over his head and then leaped
back against Waller to crack him through the covers.
Brendan Taylor, the Zimbabwe captain, will hope his men can follow the
hosts' example, especially after he had bolstered his batting line-up at
the cost of a bowler. John Nyumbu, the offspinner, had bowled only 16
overs in the first Test and was dropped in favour of Waller. Brian
Chari, with an average of 20.62 in 23 first-class matches, got a Test
debut and forced Vusi Sibanda to the sidelines. M'shangwe was a straight
swap for Tafadzwa Kamungozi.
Bangladesh sat Al-Amin Hossain aside for the local boy Rubel Hossain,
but the more marked change was in how their batsmen ground the
opposition down over by over by over.
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