Pakistan set to rain on England's parade

By Jordan Crick / Roar Rookie

Momentum and consistency are fleeting virtues in Test cricket, yet, as England’s Test side has shown, you needn’t have a team of world beaters to achieve them.

Their series triumph against a hapless Sri Lankan side – who showed few glimpses of proficiency in an otherwise ill-fated affair – capped off a stellar 12 months of Test cricket for a rejuvenated, dogged English side that has risen proudly from the ashes of a cataclysmic derailment just two years ago.

The idyllic state of English cricket has extinguished the markedly universal fan divisiveness born of declining form, bringing about aspirations of a return to the helm of the ICC Test rankings.

But Pakistan’s much-eulogised side – when not the subject of a corruption schmooze – might well spoil the English party.

They travel to England this summer in fine fettle and with an air of mystique surrounding their performances whenever and wherever they venture outside of Asia – which has occurred on just six occasions since 2011.

Not since the now-botched tour of 2010 have Pakistan experienced English conditions, and the unpredictable swing and seam of the Duke ball. During that time, Pakistan’s evergreen, fearless leader Misbah-ul-Haq has tossed away the conservative script – with it, Pakistan’s tainted past – to re-engineer a side in dire straits.

The prognosticated destroyers of England’s volatile and ‘fragile’ middle order – the latter being a cobbled summation of Wahab Riaz’s prose describing England’s batting following a tour game – are Mohammad Amir and Yasir Shah.

The former has successfully negotiated a considerable number of rehabilitation hurdles to clamber his way back into the hearts of Pakistan adherents and the minds of English batsmen.

His wide of the crease in-swinger and bouncer, have, if the tour match against Somerset is a suitable means for appraisal, improved out of sight since we last saw him as a shabby haired, impressionable, morally impaired 18-year-old. That’s some feat, given much of the period spent away from the game was under lock and key in a place unfamiliar with even the most reprehensible adaptation of cricket.

The latter is a 30-something leg-break exponent whose Test career, while yet to reach a crescendo, is making waves on the international scene. His participation and influence will go unheeded though if he is unable to extract turn from the mid-summer green seamers he is presented with across the four Tests.

He was the leading wicket-taker in dissimilar, spin-friendly conditions in the UAE against England last October. If he can channel this form, and put into practice his recently revamped googly, he shapes as the series’ chief wicket-taker.

The discernable similarities of the two bowling cartels is an oddity that has made itself scarce in this current decade. Yet, herein lies perhaps the most mouthwatering, decisive battle of the four-match series.

England’s seamers will come into the series high on confidence, having finished off the battered carcass of Sri Lanka in a series where just one touring batsman managed to bat beyond a hundred.

But Pakistan’s street-smart batsmen are a different kettle of fish. Their level-headed middle order, led by the guile of Misbah and accompanied by the eccentric, yet immaculately honed strokeplay of Younis Khan, are bound to prosper no matter how well England’s bowlers execute their discipline.

Their spin-orientated batting line-up mightn’t be the most qualified to cope with the Lord’s slope or an Edgbaston green top, but you can sure as hell expect their tenacity and wristy homegrown techniques – perfected on the slowest wickets the world over – to grind out a great profusion of runs on a regular basis throughout the series.

On the other side of the ledger is an English batting unit struggling for any real consistency. All the signs of a developing fissure in the middle order were there against Sri Lanka’s bowlers, who – bearing little more ammunition than a glorified county attack – proceeded to routinely take the outside edge and batter the front pad of England’s premier batsmen. With the exception of a Moeen Ali hundred at Durham, England’s scores were inflated by the blistering form and twin centuries of Yorkshire’s Johnny Bairstow.

There is a stark contrast between the textbook, forward defence of England’s 10,000-run custodian Alastair Cook, and the gung-ho merchants of Pakistan’s lower order. But this series will seek to prove that application and monotony at the batting crease are reserved for the faint hearted and unadapted in this day and age.

England’s unrushed, more considered stroke play will be required to match the ingenuity of Sarfraz Ahmed and Asad Shafiq operating at full throttle – an eccentric style of play that keeps the scoreboard ticking over with vigor.

England’s one saving grace, Ben Stokes, whose Cape Town double century is an example of this enigmatic style, will be absent from the XI at Lord’s, leaving a significant void in the English middle order.

Is this England’s most settled side in recent history, or are they the most gettable outfit in world cricket? This series will give us an indication.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-17T08:47:36+00:00

Tanmoy Kar

Guest


Without Anderson & Stokes, England looks a weaker side between the two. By promoting Root from No.5 to no.4 & now to No.3, they have exposed their middle-order consists of Vince & Ballance to the hungry Pakistani bowlers. Now at the end of Day3, England looks like losing the First test as well.

2016-07-15T03:59:55+00:00

Craig Swanson

Guest


Root can be a little reckless at times. Not really what you want from your #3 I would have thought. He has shown in the past also that he sometimes gets caught on the crease and can knick behind if the ball is still swinging or moving off the seam. I would keep him in the middle order as his best value is when the shine has left the ball.

2016-07-14T13:24:02+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Root will be a success if or when he does move to 3. The guy is a superstar and could one day be the best English batsman ever, or at least in the past 40 years

2016-07-14T08:26:44+00:00

Andy

Guest


Please put down the thesaurus when you write and embrace the idea that less is more when writing. Its a very good article just way too flowery.

2016-07-14T07:24:52+00:00

Eski

Guest


I agree root shouldn't have to move but to hold his average at 3 against him is a bit rough considering he has not had an extended go there his main experience at 3 is in 3 tests in a terrible 2013 ashes series and He seems to have improved significantly since then that may be because he has moved down the order but time will tell I guess

AUTHOR

2016-07-14T06:01:29+00:00

Jordan Crick

Roar Rookie


Averaged an uncharacteristic 21.75 against a pretty modest Sri Lankan bowling attack. If the rumours are true, and Root bats at three this series to protect Gary Balance, chances are he will be found out against the swinging ball like he has been when batting in that position in the past (he averages just 28 at three for England). Bringing a player back into the team should not force a player to bat out of position. Why move Root from five where he averages 73?

2016-07-14T05:30:39+00:00

Timbo

Guest


'England’s one saving grace, Ben Stokes, whose Cape Town double century is an example of this enigmatic style, will be absent from the XI at Lord’s, leaving a significant void in the English middle order.' Apparently, they've picked some kid called Joe Root as well. Some observers claim he's half-decent.

Read more at The Roar