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Pakistan Tour of England 2020

Stokes and Woakes drag England back into Test with late Pakistan wickets


Vic Marks at Emirates Old Trafford

Fri 7 Aug 2020 20.08 BST
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355


In the old days the advice would be to make sure you turn up on time on Saturday because this is the type of match where every ball seems to count. After three days of captivating cricket Pakistan are the favourites to win the match. They lead by 244 and have two wickets remaining; all their batsmen have gone. Even if the last two were dismissed immediately on Saturday morning England would be faced with a formidable target on a surface that is becoming increasingly dry and unreliable.

But if just two England batsmen could cobble together significant scores then an amazing heist remains possible. Pakistan have dominated nearly all of the past three days yet in a bizarre final session England, who were far from flawless out there, contrived to take seven wickets. And the game is still alive. As is Ben Stokes, who did his utmost to deliver his Lazarus impressions by snatching the ball late in the day and taking two wickets. Whether that affects his fitness for the next Test remains to be seen.

There were other moments of mystification. Chris Woakes was England’s most potent-looking bowler and took two wickets yet bowled only five overs in Pakistan’s second innings. Dom Bess struggled to find a consistent length yet Joe Root kept the faith for a remarkably long time. Unusually Jimmy Anderson was below his best in his second spell.

But such queries can wait until the end of the match; they may evaporate if England somehow knock off the runs. One certainty is that Stokes is more likely to bat well in the second innings because he is an all-action cricketer and he has been in the game even if he was hobbling at the end of a long day.

Pakistan’s faltering progress in their second innings, despite the comforting ballast that stems from a three figure lead, highlighted the difficulties of batting on a deteriorating surface even though England did not help themselves. Stokes, stationed too close to Root, dropped a relatively straightforward catch off Anderson, who kicked the turf with a venom not seen since the halcyon days of Angus Fraser. Yet the wickets kept coming. Shan Masood, the heroic centurion of the first innings, failed to score after edging down the legside off Stuart Broad.

Abid Ali, who had benefited from the Stokes drop, holed out in Bess’s first over. Then Woakes intervened with the vital wicket of Babar Azam, caught by Stokes and then striking the front pad of Azhar Ali, which produced an unreviewable lbw. A partnership of 38 between Asad Shafiq and Mohammad Rizwan was tilting the balance further in Pakistan’s direction when Dominic Sibley made his first impression on the game. The batsmen hesitated over a single and the new sleek Sibley swooped and hit the stumps with Shafiq almost out of the picture. Stokes was resurrected to take two wickets, Broad removed Shadab and the final-innings equation was almost complete.

Given that England were 12 for 3 inside six overs in their first innings a total of 219 could have been much worse. In the morning session the ball beat the bat so frequently that it was a minor miracle that they had lost only one wicket by lunch after resuming on 92 for 4. In the first hour the total advanced by 19 runs and eight of those were byes. The Pakistan pacemen were on target. Jos Buttler managed one scoring shot. Even the busy Ollie Pope was becalmed. It sounds dull; it was actually riveting. Pope posted an invaluable half-century and then there was no disgrace in his departure. A delivery from Naseem Shah jumped, took the edge of his bat and terminated in the hands of Shadab in the gully.


Jos Buttler is bowled by Yasir Shah during a fine spell by the Pakistan leg-spinner after lunch. Photograph: Lee Smith/PA
Out came Woakes, not the reassuring sight that it once was since he had only scored more than six once in his previous nine Test innings. He ducked into his third delivery from Naseem and the ball sped to midwicket off his helmet. Yet he soon reached double figures with pleasant drives off the pacemen and by lunch England had scraped to 159 for 5.

However the innings subsided after the break and the architect of England’s demise were the wrist spinners. Until this point Yasir Shah had been unreliable but that all changed after his second ball of the afternoon. The first, bowled to Buttler, was left as it spun a long way from outside the off stump; the second had a peculiarly devious quality: it was straight. Buttler pushed forward with a barely discernible gap between bat and pad and the ball passed through it to clip his off-stump.

Now Yasir was transformed; he was relaxed yet still feverish for the fray and he began to hit his length far more frequently. Bess pushed forward and the ball turned and bounced before brushing his glove and being nimbly caught by a diving Shafiq at slip. Then Woakes was bowled for 19 by a quicker top-spinner, which he was trying to pull.

Stuart Broad threatened another technicolour counterattack and he ended up unbeaten on 29 after playing some bold strokes but this time he could not impart significant damage. He took three boundaries in an over against Afridi, two of which came from the middle of the bat; this prompted Azhar Ali to remove Afridi after one over and turn to his second leg-spinner, Shadab. There were some high jinx but Shadab soon ended up with two wickets as Pakistan ended up with a significant lead. How significant we discover on Saturday.
 
Naseem Shah ready to join ranks of great bowlers as junior member


The 17-year-old has made a big impact as part of an entertaining Pakistan attack that has everything a side could want

Andy Bull

Fri 7 Aug 2020 20.23 BST
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22


The first thing you notice about Naseem Shah is his action. It’s smooth and slick and sideways-on, as if the unnatural act of bowling fast were a perfectly instinctive thing, and those strange, awkward contortions of legs and arms, the leap and twist, the tangle of limbs, were all as simple and obvious to him as putting one foot in front of the other. His coach, Waqar Younis, once said it reminded him of watching Dennis Lillee bowl, which is rare praise. And that’s what the fielders were crying out to him in between deliveries, “Lillee Shah! Lillee Shah!” Whip, snap, crack, whoosh, what a thing. Capture him mid-stride, and he’d be a study for Phidias.



Then there’s his smile. Naseem is young, 17, officially, although there was a lot of back-and-forth in the Pakistani press about whether that is accurate after the PCB pulled him out of its Under-19 World Cup team last year. Someone dug up an old Andy Roberts quote from 2016, when he’d said how impressed he had been with a “16-year-old” fast bowler called Naseem who he had spotted on a talent hunt programme. But Naseem’s old coach says his paperwork is all in order, and the PCB says the tests have been done to prove it. He doesn’t look like he has much use for a razor. And he’s young enough, certainly, judging by his childish delight for the game.

He enjoyed every breath he took during his 16 overs, seemed alive with excitement, and full of admiration for his own bowling, as if he was thrilled to discover what his own body could do. The ball that got Ollie Pope on Friday morning popped up off a length, smashed into the handle of the bat and flew away to gully. It was all but unplayable. Naseem stared at the batsman as he shouted in celebration. It may have been the only wicket he took in the innings, but it was such a good one. Pope was well-set on 62, and, along with Jos Buttler, the only batsman left threatening Pakistan’s lead. Naseem was buzzing now and three balls later he clattered Chris Woakes on the helmet with a wicked short ball.

There’s an energy to his bowling, it isn’t so very frightening, lightning quick yet. He’s up towards 90mph, not much above, but he makes the ball whizz off the pitch and weave through the air. And the old pros in the commentary box spoke about how he has the potential to get better yet. Wasim Akram, who admitted even he hadn’t actually seen him bowl very much before, explained the changes Naseem could make in his run-up to help him generate more swing, Michael Holding spoke about how he could make better use of the crease. But the way they talked made you feel that these great old bowlers already considered him a junior member of their club.

Now Naseem is out of age-group cricket, the only people who really worry about his age will be the statisticians counting the youngest men to play the game. He was listed as 16 years 269 days when he made his debut against Australia in Brisbane last year, which puts him ninth on their list. There are five other Pakistanis in the top 10. They’ve always believed that if you’re good enough you’re old enough too, since Abdul Kardar picked a 16-year-old leg‑spinner, Khalid Hasan, on their first tour of England in 1954. All together, Pakistan have given Test debuts to 37 players who were under 19 at the time. England have only done it once, with Brian Close.

Naseem’s teammate, Shaheen Shah Afridi, was another of them. Between the two of them and Mohammad Abbas, Pakistan have come armed with an attack that has every last thing a team needs; pace, guile, and left-arm variation. And that’s before you mix in the two leg-spinners, Yasir Shah and Shadab Khan. They are shaping up to be one of the very best, and most entertaining, bowling units any team has brought on tour to England so far this century. A friend who supports Pakistan texted to say that she was enjoying them so much she hadn’t even remembered to “think wistfully of Amir & Asif and what could have been, which would have been my usual reaction these last few years”.

Of course Mohammad Amir was one of those 37 young men, too. He was 17 when he made his debut, against Sri Lanka in 2009, and 18 when he arrived in England a year later. And there are lessons there, if Naseem or anyone else needed them, about how hard the game can be. It’s not just that he was banned for spot-fixing. Amir is still only 28. He could be alongside Naseem in this attack, but he quit Test cricket last year because the demands of playing in all three formats were too much. He said he was “screaming on the inside” that “his body won’t let it happen”. There are no guarantees, even when you have Naseem’s talent. It’s why he is right to cherish every last second of this. We all should, too.
 
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11th over: England 22-0 (Burns 10, Sibley 11)
Naseem Shah arrives, the young quick, and there are tricks in this pitch! One ball almost crawls through the Rizwan. The next takes a big chunk of dirt out of the surface, pops up high, then drops as it nears the keeper. Very erratic. Worrisome for England. A maiden.



 
WICKET! Burns lbw Abbas 10 (England 22-1)
It was a matter of time! Abbas has been relentless today, constantly nagging away. Wobble seam again from around the wicket, seaming in. It hit him above the pad, but on the back leg which is angled down the way that Burns steps forwards. In front of middle, and the DRS review shows it as umpire’s call at the top of middle stump. Abbas gets the first incision!
 
15th over: England 34-1 (Sibley 17, Root 6) What a delivery from Naseem! Produces the ball of the day for Sibley, and it nearly takes the shoulder of the bat as it seams off a length and bounds off the pitch through to Rizwan. Sensational, coming from that mini-Lillee action that he has. Sibley breathes deep and bats through a maiden.
 
17th over: England 36-1 (Sibley 17, Root 8) Nicks one, Sibley, but survives! It falls short of Rizwan. The folks on the telly reckon the whole slip cordon is too deep. A proper edge there, just died in front of the keeper. Next ball nearly nails Sibley on the pad but he gets an inside edge. Good over.
 
LIVE

1st Test, Manchester, Aug 5-9 2020, Pakistan tour of England

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PAK
326 & 169


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ENG
(20.5 ov, target 277)

219 & 51/1

Day 4 - Session 1: England need 226 runs. CRR: 2.44
 
England are 124 for 5 and need 153 to win. Pakistan 1 more wicket and we are in the bowlers
 
England 2nd Innings

Batsman How Out Bowler.............. Runs Mins Balls 4s 6s SR

Total
(53.0 overs) 167 -for 5 wickets

Burns
lbw b Abbas .............10 53 28 1 0 35.71
Sibley c Shafiq b Yasir............. 36 148 114 4 0 31.58
Root c Babar b Shah.............. 42 110 84 7 0 50.00
Stokes c Rizwan b Yasir............... 9 33 20 2 0 45.00
Pope c Shadab b Shaheen ..............7 30 18 1 0 38.89


Buttler not out .................32 49 31 5 0 103.23

Woakes not out............. 26 35 26 4 0 100.00

Extras 3nb 0w 0b 2lb 5
 
What a game this is turning out to be! England is leading a counter-attack currently but can they sustain it?

A stat from CricInfo:
England has lost all the first matches of the series that they've played since 2019.
 
3rd session has started. England get a run off the first over. England need 109, Pakistan need 5 wickets.

It looks like England are going to target Pakistani spinners but they have to be really calculating against Yasir who already has taken 2 wickets.

Yasir (ER 3.7) and Shadab (ER 4.66)
 
England are literally playing like they have nothing to lose. They need 94 now. Shadab has leaked 12 in the 2 that he's bowled this session.
 
England clawing there way to victory

woakes and butler going at 1 a ball have victory in their sites
 
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