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June 8, 2001
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Fan chaos mars Pakistan win

Pakistan routed England by 108 runs at Edbagston in the opening match of a triangular one-day tournament on Thursday, but the contest was almost abandoned after a pitch invasion threw the match into chaos just before the finish.

England, chasing Pakistan's 273 for six, were on 159 for nine in the 44th over when hundreds of fans, the vast majority wearing Pakistan colours, ran on to the ground, forcing the players off and stealing the stumps as they swarmed all over the playing surface.

Waqar calming the crowd down Pakistan captain Waqar Younis and team manager Yawar Saeed made appeals to the team's fans, warning them the match would be abandoned unless they moved back behind the boundary boards.

The pleas followed a meeting between match referee Brian Hastings, the umpires and the two team captains.

Play resumed 31 minutes later, with Nick Knight and last man Alan Mullally eventually returning to the crease. A further interruption then followed after one ball from spinner Shahid Afridi when fans moved in front of the sidescreen.

Right-arm wrist spinner Afridi wrapped up the game in the 48th over as Mullally was caught behind, with England all out for 165. Number three Knight was not out 59 while Afridi ended with three wickets for 15.

Pakistan's victory -- greeted by another fan invasion and another disappearance of the stumps -- had been set up by opener Saeed Anwar's 77, his 40th half-century in one-day internationals, and Inzamam-ul-Haq's 79, his 60th, after the touring team had won the toss and opted to bat.

The pair put on 150 for the third wicket, scoring at almost a run a ball.

Inzamam's innings took him past 8,000 one-day runs, as he and man-of-the-match Anwar tore England's back-up bowlers to shreds, with all-rounder Ben Hollioake's six overs going for 53 runs.

England were in the hunt at 47 for one in the 10th over before their long collapse began.

Left-handed opener Marcus Trescothick's departure for 28 off 30 balls began a procession which saw five top-order wickets fall for 62 as Pakistan caught a string of fine catches.

Off-spinner Saqlain Mushtaq took a wicket with his fifth ball, a caught-and-bowled to remove Ben Hollioake, to make it 108 for six, and Afridi bowled Dominic Cork with his first, giving England no way back.

The second game sees Pakistan take on Australia in Cardiff on Saturday.

Thursday's incidents were reminiscent of similar crowd invasions during the 1999 World Cup, with extra security and army personnel drafted in after several crowd invasions.

Australian captain Steve Waugh was particularly outspoken in criticising the authorities for failing to secure player safety at the end of matches.

If there was a key moment on Thursday, maybe it came in the 24th over of the Pakistan innings.

The game, following an ill-tempered test series, had threatened to boil over when all-rounder Dominic Cork, attempting a run-out, appeared to push Inzaman as he retreated into his crease.

Inzamam-ul haq The batsman, who made scores of 114 and 85 to help Pakistan level the two-match test series on Monday, reacted furiously, waving his bat and gesticulating before England captain Alec Stewart intervened.

Cork and Inzamam, on 13 at the time, shook hands moments later but that confrontation surely convinced Inzamam to hang around for his third big score in as many innings.

England, who accepted their status as the tournament's also-rans before a ball was bowled, ended the game in disarray.

Their cause had not been helped by losing Andrew Caddick 24 hours before the match and Graham Thorpe a few hours before the start, leaving them short of five first-choice players.

Their feeble batting, however, followed two batting collapses in the second test ending on Monday, while their support bowling was again shown up as short on both variety and teeth.

Australia and Pakistan must already have their thoughts on their Lord's rematch.

Mail Cricket Editor

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