FinancePakistan v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one...

Pakistan v England: first men’s cricket Test, day one – live | Cricket

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Key events

13th over: Pakistan 56-1 (Shafique 31, Masood 19) When Carse pushes one wide of off stump, Shafique times a lovely drive through mid-off for four. Risk and reward, cricket’s eternal dance.

Masood is beaten later in the over, playing a slightly absent-minded cut stroke. Carse has been the most threatening of the England bowlers tis morning, though you’d also expect him to be the most expensive as the day progresses. After an interesting first hour, it’s time for drinks.

12th over: Pakistan 50-1 (Shafique 26, Masood 18) Woakes has an LBW appeal caught in the throat when he registers an inside-edge from Shafique. He does lunge around his front pad a bit at times so he should be an LBW candidate.

A single to Shafique brings up Pakistan’s fifty inside 12 overs, which is good going given how few risks they’ve taken.

11th over: Pakistan 49-1 (Shafique 25, Masood 18) This has been a good start from Carse, whose pace is now consistently around 89-90mph. Every mile helps.

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Masood is not out!

Masood had thick edged the previous delivery for four, so Carse went fuller and even straighter to hit the pad in front of middle and leg. It was clearly hitting and the only issue was where it pitched. Replays showed it was fractionally outside leg stump so Carse will have to wait for his first Test wicket.

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REVIEW! Masood given out LBW to Carse I reckon this pitched just outside leg stump and will be overturned.

10th over: Pakistan 42-1 (Shafique 25, Masood 12) Woakes changes ends to replace Atkinson, who bowled a first spell of 4-1-17-1. Shafique opens the face to glide his first ball wide of gully for four, an accomplished shot that adds a bit more colour to Woakes’ already flushed cheeks. The last ball, thrown deliberately wider, beats Shafique’s attempted drive. Woakes has bowled better than figures of 5-0-25-0 suggest, so we should definitely resist the urge to jump to conclusions. Should.

“It’s no surprise that Shan Masood, as Pakistan’s Test captain, has never quite captured the hearts of fans or the dressing room,” writes Zain Malik,. “Stepping in for the beloved Babar Azam, this university-educated, Yorkshire-bred skipper carries an air of elitism that seems out of sync with the rugged charm of Pakistani cricket.

“He presents himself as the ‘gentleman cricketer,’ a breed last spotted in Pakistan in the ‘80s. Every time he walks to the crease, he’s not just facing the opposition. He’s facing fans who aren’t sold on him and teammates who aren’t quite sure why he’s in charge. As he strides out early in Multan, Shan will be hoping to construct an innings that drowns out the critics, one ball at a time. If it goes to plan, that knock might just spell ‘Shan’ and, more importantly, ‘Ssshh’.”

Abdullah Shafique and Shan Masood are putting together a solid partnership for Pakistan. Photograph: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters
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9th over: Pakistan 36-1 (Shafique 19, Masood 12) Time for the debutant Brydon Carse. His first ball is closked at 87mph, which would be more impressive if we weren’t using to Mark Wood’s flamethrowing, and later in the over he beats Shan Masood’s attempted cut. An excellent start from Carse: a maiden and a top speed of 90mph.

“Talking of dreams,” begins Showbizguru, “if I take my wife’s statin last thing by mistake instead of my own brand I get some bizarre ones. Sometime during the night I was dreaming I was on a film set asking Daniel Craig when he could find time to do some press interviews. As ever he was the perfect gentleman. I have absolutely no idea why I dreamed this but I presume the clue is in my name.”

8th over: Pakistan 36-1 (Shafique 19, Masood 12) Too full from Atkinson and Shafique drives sweetly through mid-off for four. His shot selection so far has been really good. A leading edge from Masood runs away for three, which makes it 19 from the last two overs.

England’s three slips are starting to look redundant; it might be time for the captain Ollie Pope to get gently funky. Carse definitely, perhaps a spinner too.

7th over: Pakistan 27-1 (Shafique 14, Masood 9) A fraction of width from Woakes allows Shafique to play an impressive back-foot drive for three. “Class, proper class,” says David Gower on commentary. The outfield must be slow as that would usually have gone for four.

It’s the first of three consecutive threes, with Masood waving a short ball through the covers and Shafique clipping wristily through midwicket. Woakes looks a bit hot and bothered: the ball is doing nothing and he has figures of 4-0-19-0. Early days, everyone calm down.

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Why’s everyone using capital letters these days?

6th over: Pakistan 17-1 (Shafique 8, Masood 5) Pakistan have started cautiously, which is no surprise given their recent batting form. Even though they’ve lost an early wicket, the early signs are that there are plenty of runs to be had today. There’s a bit of bounce but almost no sideways movement.

5th over: Pakistan 14-1 (Shafique 8, Masood 2) Woakes has another LBW shout against Shafique turned down, this time on height and line. Good umpiring from Kumar Dharmasena as (almost) always.

There’s been no movement for Woakes apart from a couple of deliveries in the first over, and Shafique is able to collect a pair of twos in that over. Since his double hundred against Sri Lanka year Shafique has been in dreadful form, reaching 5 in only three of his last 10 Test innings, but he looks in decent order.

4th over: Pakistan 10-1 (Shafique 4, Masood 2) Before that wicket I’d typed that England might be in a for day of hard yakka, because there hasn’t been as much lateral movement as expected.

“I’m pleased to see Pakistan are batting as I dreamed that England were bowled out before lunch for 86 in stark contrast to the first day of the 2022 series,” says Dave Voss. “I also dreamed that I won a gold medal in the coxless pair at rowing with none other than Steve Redgrave, despite forgetting about the final and him finding someone else to row it with him but still giving me the medal. Not sure what it forbodes for the series but there you go.”

The first part of your dream is clearly PTSD from day one of the 2011-12 series, when England’s all-conquering batters were reduced to 43 for 5 on the first morning. The second part, I got no idea.

WICKET! Pakistan 8-1 (Ayub c Smith b Atkinson 4)

Saim Ayub is caught down the leg side. He gloved a short ball off the hip and was smartly taken to his right by Jamie Smith. At first it looked like a typical strangle but maybe he was undone by some extra bounce. Either way, a fine start for Gus Atkinson in his first overseas Test.

Gus Atkinson gets the early breakthrough for England with the wicket of Pakistan opener Saim Ayub. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images
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3rd over: Pakistan 5-0 (Shafique 1, Ayub 4) Saim Ayub, a talented left-hander playing only his fourth Test, is beaten on the angle by Woakes. This is a pretty good start from England – but when Woakes pitches one up, looking for swing, Ayub drives elegantly to the cover boundary. Lovely shot.

2nd over: Pakistan 1-0 (Shafique 1, Ayub 0) Gus Atkinson shares the new ball, as he did for most of an outstanding debut summer in Test cricket. You’d imagine he’ll learn more in these three Tests than he did in six in England.

He starts with a maiden to Shafique: very tight line and length, pace around 84mph.

1st over: Pakistan 1-0 (Shafique 1, Ayub 0) Chris Woakes opens the bowling to the right-handed Abdullah Shafique, with three slips in place. Zak Crawley, who has just recovered from a broken finger, isn’t among them. For now the line-up is Root, Duckett and Brook.

Woakes has an LBW shout second ball when Shafique pushes around his front pad. It was missing leg but this is a nice start, with the fourth zipping past the outside edge. Woakes averages 51 away from home and this is a huge series for him, essentially an exam to assess his suitability for next winter’s Ashes.

Shafique gets off the mark with a quick single into the covers.

“The numbers suggest it’s not as warm as the English summer of ‘22 when it hit 40°,” writes Med. “Hopefully Pakistan provide some opposition this time.”

Never was I happier to live in Orkney than during that week.

A reminder of the teams, who are currently lining up for the anthems.

Pakistan Ayub, Shafique, Masood (c), Babar, Shakeel, Rizwan (wk), Ali Agha, Jamal, Shaheen, Naseem, Abrar.

England Crawley, Duckett, Pope (c), Root, Brook, Smith (wk), Woakes, Atkinson, Carse, Leach, Bashir.

England and Pakistan players stand for the national anthems ahead of the first Test at Multan Cricket Stadium. Photograph: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters
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Simon Burnton

From our man in Multan

There are an extraordinary number of kites circling, swooping and settling on the outfield as I write. They might not quite outnumber spectators but there’s not much in it. We rarely get more than a scattering of pigeons in England – if the match between the nation’s cricket teams was preceded by one between their outfield avians it would be a short and extremely bloody battle. Anyway, here are the ticket prices for this series. Lord’s it ain’t.

Ticket prices for Pakistan v England in Multan Photograph: PCB

Pitchwatch

There’s a bit of grass, so England could have some joy this morning, but there are also cracks that will widen in the Multan oven. It sounds like batting first was a fairly straightforward decision.

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Ollie Pope speaks

These are the hottest conditions I’ve played in but we’ve trained really well and we’re ready for that challenge

We would’ve batted first. There’s a bit of moisture in the pitch so hopefully we can take advantage of that. I’m excited to see [Brydon Carse] go in Test cricket – he’s got that extra bit of pace and he’s exciting to watch.

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Ramiz Raja, conducting the toss, tells the Pakistan captain Shan Masood: “Keep that smile on your face boss, you’ll need it.”

Pakistan win the toss and bat

Chris Woakes, playing his first overseas Test of the Bazball era and his first in Asia since 2016, will be straight into the action.

1 December 2022: the day the world changed

Temperatures should reach 37 degrees in Multan today

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This McCullum fella needs to chill out a bit

“I don’t have any concerns, it was a combined decision” 🗣️

Brendon McCullum defends bowling consultant, James Anderson’s decision to play in the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship meaning he will miss the start of the first Test against Pakistan 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 pic.twitter.com/0B2CGkJUiu

— Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) October 6, 2024

Team news

Both captains named their XIs in advance, which saves us engaging in futile speculation. Brydon Carse, who has jumped the cab rank in the last six weeks, will make his Test debut for England. Zak Crawley and Jack Leach also return, with Dan Lawrence, Josh Hull and Olly Stone dropping out of the side.

No new faces for Pakistan but Aamer Jamal, who was hugely impressive in his debut series in Australia last winter, returns from injury to join Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah in an eyecatching pace attack.

Both teams have picked three seamers and two spinners, a balance they may regret if the pitch is as grassy as suggested. We’ll soon find out.

[Edit: this last bit was nonsense from me – both teams have the right balance. It’s as if they know what they’re doing.]

Pakistan Ayub, Shafique, Masood (c), Babar, Shakeel, Rizwan (wk), Ali Agha, Jamal, Shaheen, Naseem, Abrar.

England Crawley, Duckett, Pope (c), Root, Brook, Smith (wk), Woakes, Atkinson, Carse, Leach, Bashir.

Brydon Carse is presented with his Test cap by Ben Stokes. Photograph: Anjum Naveed/AP
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Preamble

Morning folks. Enjoy the off season? Less than eight days after the end of the English cricket summer, the winter begins with the first Test against Pakistan in Multan. Ordinarily that would generate a certain ennui. But when a man is tired of Pakistan v England, he is tired of sport; for there is in Pakistan v England all that sport can afford.

These series always give us something, from exhilarating cricket to pantomime controversy to surprise victories. Pakistan are in a bit of a mess, and were recently beaten 2-0 at home by Bangladesh, yet that often makes them more dangerous – especially now that Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah are back in the side. There are a few 2005-06 vibes about the build-up to this series. Pakistan low, England high; final score: Pakistan 2-0 England. And don’t get me started on 2011-12.

A more obvious reference point is England’s last tour of Pakistan, the remarkable 3-0 win in 2022 that elevated Ben Stokes to the ranks of truly great captains. He’s unfit for this game, though he will be in the dressing-room as both the boss of the family and consigliere to Ollie Pope.

In 2022 Stokes and England had to get blood out of a road to win. This time, by all accounts, the pitches could be much livelier. Rise and shine everyone!

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