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England - Pakistan Test, Day 2 sees England on top



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England - Pakistan Test, Day 2 sees England on top
forwardone Offline
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England - Pakistan Test, Day 2 sees England on top

Alastair Cook and Ian Bell hit centuries as England took a huge first innings lead on day two but Steve Harmison pulled up in pain as Pakistan began their reply.

PLAYER OF THE DAY

Alastair Cook might grab the headlines for scoring his third Test century in seven games, but the best innings of the day came from Ian Bell.

Ian Bell hooks
Bell gave England's innings the impetus it needed
From the moment he walked to the crease, Bell was in bristling form.

Twice he on drove Mohammad Sami for fours to get him going, and he never looked back.

He gave England's innings precisely the impetus it needed, his century coming from only 127 balls.

The sting has been taken out of the direct competition between Cook and Bell because both Vaughan and Flintoff will miss this series.

But with Paul Collingwood's place also looking safe, one wonders where Vaughan will bat if and when he finally returns.

KEY MOMENT

The first ball delivered by Steve Harmison went straight to second slip, and the fast bowler immediately clutched his left ribs in pain.

Harmison clutches his ribs in pain
Harmison's struggles will be a major worry for England
The physio, Kirk Russell, signalled for him to come off the field for treatment, but to Harmison's credit he finished the over before Russell led him away.

It would be a devastating loss for England - who have only four front-line bowlers - if the injury stiffens up overnight and Harmison is unable to bowl on the third day.

TALKING POINT

The search for England's number eight continues.


Heavy rain has been forecast for the afternoon, and that might be Pakistan's best chance of taking the game into a fourth day

Ashley Giles' absence has left a gap that Liam Plunkett failed to fill satisfactorily before he became the latest injury case.

And Sajid Mahmood did nothing on here to suggest that he has a realistic future in that position.

While Pakistan field a weakened attack, the pressure on England's lower order is not so intense, but this will be a very different situation in the winter.

Giles is hopeful of being fit for the Ashes, but the most likely young candidate around the country is Leicestershire's Stuart Broad.

Given another season of first-class experience, he should be ready for the big time.

PROSPECTS FOR DAY TWO

Heavy rain has been forecast for the afternoon, and that might be Pakistan's best chance of taking the game into a fourth day.

Facing an enormous deficit, they need a miracle if they are to save the game while, if he is fit, Harmison's height and pace threatens to be a daunting and painful prospect.

Monty Panesar should enjoy the conditions too, and will be able to bowl to very attacking fields.

Source: BBC News
07-29-2006 07:51 AM
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forwardone Offline
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England Thrash Pakistan

England (461-9 dec) beat Pakistan (119 & 222) by an innings and 120 runs

After downward-spiralling in the first half of the summer, English cricket is on the way back up. In little more than 100 overs they twice dismissed Pakistan, with their daunting batting line-up, to win the second Test by an innings and 120 runs in well inside three days.

While England's batting has been solid all summer, thanks to the juniors as much as the seniors, three fresh ingredients have caused the turnaround. One is a captain who is in charge for every ball, another the revival of Steve Harmison as a strike-bowler, and the third the development of a match-winning spinner.

Harmison came first, setting the new tone and bouncing Pakistan out. He might have been a touch slower after tweaking his left side on Friday, but he still scared out the Pakistan tail when the ball had gone soft and finished not only with the man of the match award but also his first 10-wicket haul and his best Test figures.

The captaincy of Andrew Strauss came second, for a less natural leader would never have had a spinner on so early in the match. Together Harmison and Monty Panesar made the perfect combination on this pitch, out of which all the other bowlers in this Test derived little or nothing. The pair took 19 wickets for 169 - almost as good as Jim Laker 50 years ago - while everybody else laboured to take nine for 593.

It was a golden phase around Thursday lunchtime when the match was won and lost as Harmison bowled fast, often bringing the ball back into the right-hander, while the slow bowler spun the ball away. No wonder Pakistan lost eight wickets for 29 runs. What is a wonder is that so seldom in Test cricket has the combination of fast right and slow left been attempted before: John Snow and Derek Underwood made a rare previous pair.

Once Panesar had been wound up yesterday morning and set to bowl at the Warwick Road end (the one opposite to which Laker took 19 wickets for 90) until the conclusion, not too much captaincy was required. But it was still done capably and firmly, with attacking fields but without ostentation. To have a captain with his finger on the button all the time is crucial, and impossible when Andrew Flintoff is bowling. Strauss also took both slip catches that came his way and made his share of runs, to show that he does not think about the captaincy too much.

The one criticism that could be made of Strauss was that he did not have a few more overs at Pakistan on Friday evening when they were at their lowest ebb; South African cricket goes to show that not many matches are won if the possibility of defeat is completely eliminated first. But now he is no longer on probation, and has his first Test victory under his belt, he will grow in confidence.

Then came Panesar to tempt and turn and tease. His figures of five for 72 were the best of his eight-Test career, his match haul eight for 93. It may not be much of a title with Daniel Vettori and Ashley Giles on the treatment table and Harbhajan Singh wicketless save for one dream spell in the West Indies, but Panesar can claim to be the best finger-spinner currently in Test cricket.

After Harmison had bounced out Kamran Akmal with a throat-threatening ball, Panesar took the next five wickets, specialist batsmen all, as is his wont. Of his 25 Test wickets to date, 19 have been specialist batsmen, every one a Test century-maker, ranging from Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid to Kumar Sangakkara (twice) and Inzamam-ul-Haq.

After Lord's England had wondered if they would ever dismiss Mohammed Yousuf. Panesar did it twice in 28 balls, having him stumped second time around when Yousuf lunged too far forward at the first ball after lunch. In the morning Panesar had spun a ball out of the rough to have the left-hander Imran Farhat caught off bat and pad, but otherwise he turned off the true parts.

Panesar turned some balls as much as Pakistan's wrist-spinner had done. One spun so much that it went to slip; a couple more bounced so much they passed over the stumps. Giles can bore batsmen out, Panesar can bowl them out, and as such they would make a fine pairing in Sydney and any other ground which Australia prepare for Shane Warne and Stuart MacGill.

The bowler enjoyed an element of luck in Inzamam's wicket, but accidents will happen when a spinner bowls a long and accurate spell with men around the bat. Pakistan's captain - already bombed and bewildered by Harmison - played the ball down but up off his boot. Strauss must have realised his luck was turning when he saw somebody else out this way.

Younis Khan battled and ran busily between wickets but could find nobody to stay with him to form the long partnership Pakistan needed to avoid an innings defeat. The visiting vice-captain miscalculated when he shouldered arms to a straight ball. Not many people can claim to dismiss three of the world's top 10 batsmen in one spell, as Panesar did when removing Younis, Yousuf and Inzamam.

Faisal Iqbal has the reputation of being a fine player of spin, yet he too has been dismissed three times by Panesar. It was the classic left-armer's form of dismissal, turning and bouncing and taking the edge en route to slip. Imran Khan and Abdul Qadir, Alan Davidson and Richie Benaud, as well as Snow and Underwood, made famous pairs of fast and slow, but it is still surprising they have been so few.

Harmison returned to blast away the tail. It has been frustrating that he has not fulfilled himself for a year: if only he would do it just occasionally when a pitch does not stimulate him. The end was appropriate as Geraint Jones took the skier which the windy Abdul Razzaq put up, giving England's wicketkeeper a fifth catch in the innings in spite of the break in the tip of his right ring finger. If Jones is ruled out of the next Test, his replacement will have to follow a tough act who has begun to keep admirably.

Source: Telegraph.co.uk Big Grin
07-30-2006 11:00 AM
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forwardone Offline
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Obviously I`m pleased England won, but, sad that it only lasted 3 days. I never got to use my ticket to see the 4th day`s play! I SHOULD have been going today. Now I have to apply for a refund on my ticket to claim my £25 back. :roll:

Now, if I`d gone Thursday which was the other option I would have witnessed 12 wickets falling, gloriously sunny weather.....Oh well. :cry:
07-30-2006 03:38 PM
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deejay Offline
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Nice win for the Poms :shock:
07-30-2006 04:29 PM
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