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"In all three disciplines, Pakistan have led the way" : Nasser Hussain [Update post#24]

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The first Test match of the England summer is so nearly upon us, so we've paired up David Lloyd and Nasser Hussain to preview the upcoming two-match series against Pakistan.

Jos Buttler back in Test squad

Bumble: "I think that when the selectors talked about a batsman at No 7, Liam Livingstone would have been in the conversation as well. Buttler has got it, and I think it is a good pick, as is the decision to move Jonny Bairstow up the order."

Hussain: "We travel all around the world and people constantly come up to us and ask 'how is Buttler not in your Test side?' What a freak this lad is, such a sensational talent.

"He probably doesn't deserve to come back in - he averages about 31 in first-class cricket and only 18 last year - but because he has such potential, it's worth giving him another go as he could prove to be an absolute genius at Test match level too."


Mark Wood or Chris Woakes?


Bumble: "Definitely, Woakes will play. His record in England is good, plus he lengthens the batting at No 8. If we were having the conversation in September about the tours of Sri Lanka and the West Indies, I'm not sure you'd take him. Should we already be planning for this winter? No we shouldn't; we need to focus on winning this Test match."

Hussain: "It's a good point from Bumble. Woakes could have a phenomenal summer - gets hundreds and wickets - someone might still have to turn to him and say, 'we don't fancy you abroad'. He's brilliant at home, but its horses for courses, basically.

"In football, Jose Mourinho wouldn't set up a team in exactly the same way for a game at home at Old Trafford as he would for a game away at Stoke. Look at the opposition, at the type of players you need. Sometimes in cricket we don't do that enough."


Joe Root's move up to No 3

Hussain: "The captaincy hasn't affected Root's batting - the stats are virtually identical. He should be batting at No 3; look at the two greatest sides ever, West Indies had Viv Richards and Australia had Ricky Ponting.

"What England have done by having vulnerable No 3s - Gary Ballance, James Vince or whoever - is that when the opposition take that first wicket, the next lad is immediately under pressure, playing for their future. Root can come in and counter-attack, and 10-1 can quickly become 50-1."


Dominic Bess' maiden call-up


Bumble: "This smacks of the selectors. When I was England head coach, the selectors took great store in the under-19s - are they ready? Two were, Andrew Flintoff and Ben Hollioake. Alec Stewart, captain at the time, said 'get them in'. There are pathways these days for young cricketers to be catapulted in - get them in there, playing alongside very established internationals."


Challenges Pakistan pose?


Hussain: "The worst thing England could do is write them off. They're mercurial - they can easily be 100 all out one game and then do what they did to England in the Champions Trophy semi-final last summer.

They've produced some great bowlers over the last 20 years, and even before that, but the key for Pakistan will be their batting. They've got a fairly young, inexperienced batting line-up - can they get runs on the board?"


http://www.skysports.com/cricket/ne...yd-and-nasser-hussain-preview-two-test-series
 
I think he's right that England shouldn't write us off. I don't think anyone expected us to smash them in the way we did last year in the CT semi final.
 
I think he's right that England shouldn't write us off. I don't think anyone expected us to smash them in the way we did last year in the CT semi final.

He is talking about test cricket and for that you don't have to look at CT rather Pak's last test series against in England where Pak drew.
 
The weather has been warm recently and looks to continue for a while. This means batting will be easier than usual in the month of May and early June. Pakistan batsmen need to knuckle down and get runs on the board, England will then be worried.

I have a feeling Pakistan will win one test and this would be a good achievement.
 
Pakistan will mostly get the better of England, always seem like a mental block for these English teams against PCT.

Predicting a drawn series again.
 
Indirectly, this is an insult for Pakistan.

Dont know why Pakistani fans take pride in their unpredictability or underdog status.


its really shameful for us that after such a long cricket history we still cant go into a series or tournament with confidence and have to keep our peoples hopes low. Which is why any win is celebrated hugely.
 
He is talking about test cricket and for that you don't have to look at CT rather Pak's last test series against in England where Pak drew.

True, but we don't have Misbah and YK this time so people are not taking PCT as seriously without these two.
 
Indirectly, this is an insult for Pakistan.

Dont know why Pakistani fans take pride in their unpredictability or underdog status.


its really shameful for us that after such a long cricket history we still cant go into a series or tournament with confidence and have to keep our peoples hopes low. Which is why any win is celebrated hugely.

Well everyone has their own opinion, I don't see an insult in this. He is just saying to on your toes don't take Pakistani team lightly, Yes they are a young team but you don't know what they can do to you.
 
Well everyone has their own opinion, I don't see an insult in this. He is just saying to on your toes don't take Pakistani team lightly, Yes they are a young team but you don't know what they can do to you.

which means that everyone views Pakistan as a minnow which could end up showing a good performance sometimes but overall a minnow. We are Ireland of the top 10 teams
 
Indirectly, this is an insult for Pakistan.

Dont know why Pakistani fans take pride in their unpredictability or underdog status.


its really shameful for us that after such a long cricket history we still cant go into a series or tournament with confidence and have to keep our peoples hopes low. Which is why any win is celebrated hugely.


Well, it is about pride. Even when you are not performing & nearly beaten by a minnow your opponent is wary of you.
Compare this to other sides who are called chokers despite being full of top class players. And sides who are rubbished just because they were unlucky not to win.
 
which means that everyone views Pakistan as a minnow which could end up showing a good performance sometimes but overall a minnow. We are Ireland of the top 10 teams

LOL what?

Had this series been played in the UAE Pak would have been massive faverouts to smash England. Just look what Pak did to them last 2 visits to the UAE.

Pak will win the Lords test match.
 
which means that everyone views Pakistan as a minnow which could end up showing a good performance sometimes but overall a minnow. We are Ireland of the top 10 teams

Sir, that's what our Pakistan team set a standard can you predict the result? no who like to be called unpredictable but we take it as "we are the threat to them so better do your homework or Pakistan will crush you" in that sense brother :-)
 
Can a team which lost 5 of its last 7 games away afford the luxury of a number 7 with an average of 31
 
I really like Nassar's comment about how, in cricket, teams seem to ignore the opposition when selecting the squad. They are too concerned with the match conditions and not the opposition. That's why I think Pakistan should seriously consider playing two spinners (if they had them). It does not matter that this is May or that the pitches might be green. At the end of the day, England's weakness is spin.
 
England have been pounded left, right and centre by all and sundry over the past few years and they're in no position to write anybody off.

With that said, Pakistan are in a relatively similar state and I won't be surprised if there is one innings victory and one innings defeat for either side in this series.
 
Can a team which lost 5 of its last 7 games away afford the luxury of a number 7 with an average of 31

What the selectors are saying here is that County form doesn't matter so much, and they will back raw ability instead.

Which I rather like. It will be interesting to see how Buttler goes in these two tests.
 
Nasser is just voicing the caution which has become quite common with opponents facing Pakistan. They can be hopeless on many occasions, but they do have dangerous players who can turn a match in a session. The bowlers are a case in point, Rahat Ali is hopeless most of the time, but he could easily knock over a couple of top order batsmen if he gets his line right. You would expect England to win this comfortably 2-0, but it wouldn't be a huge shock if Pakistan won a test either.
 
Right from when I became a cricket fan, outside the subcontinent Pakistan always seem to play their best in England followed by NZ. England can never afford to take them lightly. Moreover the last 5-6 years or so, England has become a punching bag for Pakistan who have competed well in the island and blown them away in the desert. Pakistan is a really tough match up for them and will have a psychological heads up, although that will disappear fast if they get off to a poor start.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Inexperienced squad<br>4 bowlers playing their first ever Test match in England<br>Packed house at Lord's<br>Lose the toss<br>Bowl England out for 184<br>Just another day in the crazy world of Pakistan cricket <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ENGvPAK?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ENGvPAK</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/999677797361733632?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 24, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Nasser knows Pakistan cricket very well :)

Some excellent performances from the Pakistani players today.
 
I was thinking as the rain lashed down at Sehri time that it would be a good toss to loss. Ordinarily given how dry it has been I would want to bat especially as our bowling, Abbas apart, has been lacking in penetration.

Overall I have got the impression that England have really underestimated Pakistan. It can be the only explanation for the selection of Buttler. He averages 8 against us and can only have been picked to bed in for the India series. In addition England's first test against India will be their 1000th. Again feel they wanted it to be against India rather than give us an extra game.
 
Dont think they wrote Pakistan off.
There was difference in class between a young Pak team and an experienced English team.

Have been saying all this time that this probably is the best bunch of young cricketers we have and they will come good. Also just compare the young English cricketers and young Pakistani cricketers. The difference in class is there for all to see.
 
Nasser Hussain hails Pakistan's discipline and guts after they carved out a 166-run lead over England on day two of the first Test at Lord's…


Apart from one ball - Sarfraz Ahmed's shot to get caught at fine leg - Mickey Arthur will be so proud of his Pakistan team over the last two days. They have been outstanding.

Pakistan should also be proud as a nation. Their side bowled with discipline, caught brilliantly - just compare it to England's catching - and have now been well-organised with the bat in conditions that are not easy and with Ben Stokes and Mark Wood bowling hostile spells.

In all three disciplines, Pakistan have led the way.

When they drew in England two years ago, I think they were a bit reliant on senior players, such as Misbah-ul-Haq, Younus Khan and Mohamad Amir.

Now you notice a culture change. They look after each other and are busy between the wickets, something that was evident in the near-century stand between Shadab Khan and Faheem Ashraf.

Azhar Ali, Asad Shafiq, Babar Azam and co showed good defence and played the ball late, right underneath them and with soft hands so if they did nick it, it went down - a lot of England players, in contrast, played way out in front and went hard at the ball

Pakistan also played with guts. Their one issue, I suppose, is that they are missing a No 6, with Sarfraz a place too high in that spot. That's why England could have bowled first on Thursday.

I'd also pinpoint Pakistan's preparation. A lot of teams don't prepare well enough for Test cricket but Pakistan have come over early, played that Test in Ireland, and look ready.

You could argue their preparation has been better than England's, who have had one or two coming back from the IPL and few players in any kind of first-class form.

Stokes is one of those back from the IPL and, to be fair, his performance on Friday was the best he has bowled since returning to the side. He pitched it up, got the ball to swing and was fast and accurate.

I think his well-documented absence impacted more on his bowling than his batting - bowling is a rhythm thing and bowlers love to bowl, whereas with the bat you can get into nick pretty quickly.

Ben has also tinkered slightly with his action and run-up so it will take time but he has looked as good as he has in a long time. Babar certainly felt his force with that hit on the forearm.

Stuart Broad, especially up front, was also tighter with his length on day two, although James Anderson, after being driven for four twice in an over, dragged his length back a little bit.

You can see, though, that they are not being stubborn anymore. England bowling coach Chris Silverwood has drummed into them about bowling full, something Pakistan showed was the way to go.

Dom Bess, meanwhile, has done absolutely fine for a young spinner on debut on day two at Lord's in May - remember, he has never played at this ground before either.

I like the way he wants to set his own fields - he overruled Joe Root when the captain wanted a man on the boundary. He also bowled a fairly attacking line, bringing the outside edge into play at the Nursery End, and tossed it up outside off-stump.

I think England were right to select him over Moeen Ali once Jack Leach got injured. Moeen is a very fine cricketer but when you bring someone back in there has to be a reason and after his difficult winter, he now needs to get back scoring runs and taking wickets for Worcestershire.

He's certainly an option later this summer, though - he bowled very well the last time India were over here in 2014.

England also need to tighten up in the slip cordon - they've been fragile in there for a while. If you ask Trevor Bayliss what's the one thing that has wound him up, I reckon he'd say slip catching. They've shelled a few and even though they put it right at times, it then comes back to haunt them.

Four or five dropped catches in this Test have helped Pakistan into a very sizeable lead.

http://www.skysports.com/cricket/ne...-over-first-two-days-against-england-at-lords
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">8 sessions now in this Test match:<br>England won 0<br>Pakistan won 8<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/EngvPak?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#EngvPak</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1000386482601906176?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 26, 2018</a></blockquote>
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Just a better side turning the screw from the very first ball.
 
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