Battered Pakistan seek livelier pitch in second Test against England
Pakistan hope to get more life from the pitch when they take on England in the second Test in Multan starting Friday
MULTAN: Pakistan hope to get more life from the pitch when they take on England in the second Test in Multan starting Friday.
England took full advantage of winning the toss — and their batting depth — to win the first Test by 74 runs Monday on a dead Rawalpindi wicket that offered nothing to the bowlers.
Multan, however, despite not hosting a Test match for 16 years, could provide more spin if recent domestic matches are anything to go by.
Pakistan skipper Babar Azam, who scored a century in Pakistan's first innings in Rawalpindi, said he wanted something more lively.
"We wanted a spin pitch (in Rawalpindi)," he told reporters.
"I gave my input ... but unfortunately it was not what we planned."
Rawalpindi yielded 1,768 runs in four innings — the third most in Test history — with seven individual centuries and five 50s.
But Multan helped spinners in the last first class match played there, with former Test spinner Yasir Shah taking five wickets in each innings.
Still, leg-spinner Zahid Mahmood — who conceded a whopping 319 runs for his six wickets in the first test — may get the axe from the Pakistan selectors.
Mohammad Nawaz and the uncapped Abrar Ahmed are vying for his spot.
Fast bowler Hasan Ali will likely fill in for the injured Haris Rauf, himself a replacement for world-class pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi, who is out of the series.
England will also make an injury change, with wicketkeeper-batter Ben Foakes likely coming in for Liam Livingstone, who is heading home for treatment on his knee.
Regardless of the Multan surface, England skipper Ben Stokes has promised no end to "Bazball", the brand of aggressive cricket coined from the nickname of head coach Brendon McCullum.
"We´re going to play to win every game," he said after Monday's win — the seventh in eight Tests since the McCullum-Stokes partnership took over in May.
"It´s not always going to work, but if you´re brave enough and willing enough to go out and play in that way, if you lose a game, it´s still going to be entertaining."
The weather could also be a factor.
Provincial authorities have issued a fog alert for the next few days, which could eat into playing time.
Teams
Pakistan: Babar Azam (captain), Mohammad Rizwan, Imam-ul-Haq, Abdullah Shafique, Azhar Ali, Mohammad Ali, Faheem Ashraf, Mohammad Nawaz, Nauman Ali, Saud Shakeel, Zahid Mahmood, Mohammad Wasim Junior, Naseem Shah, Agha Salman, Sarfaraz Ahmed, Abrar Ahmed, Shan Masood
England:: Ben Stokes (captain), James Anderson, Harry Brook, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ben Foakes, Will Jacks, Keaton Jennings, Jack Leach, Jamie Overton, Ollie Pope, Ollie Robinson, Joe Root, Mark Wood, Rehan Ahmed
Umpires: Marais Erasmus (RSA) and Aleem Dar (PAK)
TV umpire: Joel Wilson (WIS)
Match referee: Andy Pycroft (ZIM)
-
Ex-UFC fighter Tiki Ghosn knocks out streamer DeenTheGreat in viral clip
-
David Goyette’s hockey career faces major blow after 20 game AHL ban
-
Winter Olympics 2026: Mark Callan defies age as moonwalking ice sensation dazzles crowd
-
Women’s curling results: USA falls to winless Italy at Winter Olympics
-
Elana Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Humphries shine in monobob final
-
Ilia Malinin breaks silence on ‘vile online hate’ after Winter Olympics 2026 setback
-
Winter Olympics 2026 curling cheating scandal: Everything you need to know
-
Tre Johnson, former NFL guard and teacher, passes away at 54