The Australian team is looking forward to a much-improved pitch for the second Test in Pakistan after the lifeless track that led to a "bore draw" in the opener in Rawalpindi was ruled as "below average".
- The Pakistan Cricket Board says it is confident the pitches for the second and third Tests against Australia will be better
- The match referee said the Rawalpindi pitch "hardly changed over the five days"
- The PCB chairman had admitted the pitch was prepared to blunt Australia's pace attack
Australia's much-vaunted bowling attack was blunted, capturing only four Pakistan wickets throughout the entire series-opening stalemate, in what was widely criticised as a terrible advertisement for Test cricket.
On Thursday, the governing International Cricket Council handed a demerit point to the Pindi Cricket Stadium.
Match referee Ranjan Madugalle rated it "below average", saying: "The character of the pitch hardly changed over the course of five days and … there has been no deterioration apart from the bounce getting slightly lower.
"The pitch did not have a great deal of pace and bounce in it for the seamers nor assisted the spinners as the match progressed.
The pitch, though, did avoid the harsher punishments of three or five demerit points which are awarded to those venues whose pitches are marked as poor and unfit, respectively.
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ramiz Raja had earlier effectively admitted that the pitch had been prepared specifically to stymie the Australian pace attack.
He said he understood the frustration of fans but added that "just for the heck of it, we can't prepare a fast pitch or a bouncy pitch and put the game in Australia's lap … It's important that when we play at home, we play to our strengths".
After the ICC ruling, though, the PCB said a project to overhaul and relay all pitches in Pakistan was underway, and it was "confident and optimistic" there would be "good contests" in the Karachi and Lahore Tests.
Altogether, 1,187 runs were scored in Rawalpindi for the loss of just 14 wickets across three innings, with Imam-ul-Haq notching up twin centuries and both Azhar Ali and Abdullah Shafique scoring a century apiece for the hosts.
It all left Australia opener David Warner to sigh on Thursday: "I just want a game where you can actually create 20 chances, something that's going to be exciting and entertaining for the crowd."
The Karachi Test, which is expected to favour spin, begins on Saturday.
AAP