Sarfaraz savours the high of a thrilling comeback

“If someone would have checked my heartbeat, the meter would have exploded,” says the man playing his first Test in four years

Deivarayan Muthu26-Dec-2022The build-up to the Karachi Test was particularly chaotic. Pakistan had lost four Tests in a row at home for the first time, including an unprecedented 3-0 whitewash to England. Ramiz Raja was subsequently removed as PCB chairman, with a 14-member management committee headed by Najam Sethi taking interim charge of affairs. Shahid Afridi was originally named in the management committee, but he opted out and took over as the interim chief selector of the Pakistan’s men side and made some additions to the squad, two days out of the match.Pakistan’s batting in the first hour mirrored the chaotic build-up. Abdullah Shafique and Shan Masood both jumped out of the crease against spin only to be stumped. It was the first time in the history of men’s Test cricket that the first two wickets have fallen to stumpings. Imam-ul-Haq then toe-ended a catch to mid-off, having also advanced against spin. Pakistan were 48 for 3 in 15 overs; they could’ve been four down had Daryl Mitchell not dropped Babar Azam at slip when he was on 12. Then, when Tim Southee snagged Saud Shakeel, the score read 110 for 4.Pakistan’s superstar Babar and forgotten star Sarfaraz Ahmed, who returned to the XI amid a sea of change, overcame the chaos and stabilised the innings with a 196-run fifth-wicket partnership. It was business as usual for Babar – he scored his fourth Test century in nine Tests in 2022 – but Sarfaraz made a statement in what was his first Test in almost four years and his very first one at home.