Angry Pakistan fans cause destruction, after World Cup exit
At Adelaide, Pakistan were bowled out for just 213 and co-hosts
Australia chased the target down with relative ease to win by six
wickets despite a fiery spell from fast bowler Wahab Riaz.

A sad Pakistani fan after their defeat at Adelaide |
Islamabad: Angry Pakistan cricket fans smashed TVs and staged a mock
funeral for the team Friday after poor batting and sloppy catching saw
them dumped out of the World Cup. (Match Report)A limp display with the
bat saw Pakistan bowled out for just 213 and co-hosts Australia chased
the target down with relative ease to win by six wickets despite a fiery
spell from fast bowler Wahab Riaz. News channels showed footage of fans
smashing up a television set in anger at the team's elimination. (Afridi's
Flop-Show)
In the central Pakistani city of Multan around 50 fans organised a
symbolic funeral procession through the streets, complete with a coffin
with bats on top.Multan's residents are much given to protests and
staged a similar event after Pakistan's humiliating 150-run defeat to
the West Indies earlier in the tournament. (Wahab Riaz, Akram's 'Special
One')Downcast fans in Islamabad slammed the side's poor fielding, after
two simple chances went down at crucial stages in the Australian
innings."
They did their best but they get pressurised easily, that's why they
made a lot of mistakes in their fielding," Mubashir Khan told AFP."Two
men dropped catches, that's the main reason for our loss."But there was
praise for Riaz and the other bowlers, particularly as the side lost
several key players to injury and suspension in the months leading up to
the World Cup."I'm really disappointed.
But our bowlers played really well and we reached the quarter
finals," fan Jahanzeb told AFP."This team is our B-team. Our main
players are not there. Overall it's a good performance, but today, it's
really bad."
The defeat was set to bring the curtain down on the one-day
international careers of captain Misbah-ul-Haq and big-hitting
all-rounder Shahid Afridi. The hashtag Thank You Misbah was trending on
Twitter in Pakistan in the hours after the match as fans hailed the
40-year-old captain, whose steadying influence has pulled the side out
of trouble more than once. |