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My memories from the 1st Test match between England & Pakistan at Lord's 1996

shahzadddd

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England v Pakistan , Lords , 25-29 July 1996

Match scorecard: http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/engine/current/match/63716.html

The Pakistan team during this period was arguably the strongest set of players the country has fielded in it’s cricketing history. We had Sohail and Anwar opening up, Inzy and Ijaz in the middle order , Moin Khan and Rashid Latif top keepers battling it out , and probably the most potent bowling attack in world cricket at the time comprising of Wasim , Waqar and Mushy.

The 1996 tour to England was off the back of the World Cup in the subcontinent where Pakistan had been knocked out by India in the Quarter Finals. India had just toured and England had done pretty well but they knew Pakistan were coming with a point to prove. This tour was Pakistan’s first trip back since the eventful 1992 tour where Javed Miandad led his team to a 2-1 win, but was remembered for the ball tampering controversy and an altercation between Miandad and Umpire Roy Palmer.

To add a bit more spice to the game, whilst the test was in progress, Imran Khan and Ian Botham were battling it out in the court room over a libel case.

This was a time when Test Cricket was still on the BBC, Pakistan was a box office attraction and it was school summer holidays so I could watch every single ball.

My dad, brother and myself had tickets to the fourth day’s play which is the business end of the game and where the pressure is on. Which meant the first 3 days were in front of the TV and Teletext for when the cricket was interrupted by the news or something equally as insignificant.

:wasim Wasim Akram won the toss and put his team into bat first. Maybe he was thinking about the game at the same ground in 1992 when Pakistan batted last on the fourth day and nearly messed up reaching a low target if it wasn’t for heroics from himself and Waqar Younis with the bat. It was a bit murky and Simon Brown a relatively unknown swing bowler from Durham was making his debut. With the score on only 7 , Aamer Sohail left one he thought was going through and hit the roll of his pads. England had struck and Pakistan weren’t starting the summer well. Ijaz was dismissed pretty quickly and questions were raised over his technique in seaming conditions. But this brought the big man – Inzamam-ul-Haq to the crease. 4 years earlier he was the young gun who was a rising star after the 92 world cup win, but now Inzamam was the man :inzi . He and Saeed Anwar rebuilt the innings and he brought up his hundred with a 6 over mid-on. Inzy eventually departed scoring 148(his highest Test score at the time) and the day ended with the visitors on 290/9 with England looking to be ahead on points.

Day 2 began with Rashid Latif and Ata-ur-Rehman frustrating the England bowlers by putting together a fifty partnership. Now it was England’s turn to bat and the first opportunity of the summer for the famed Pakistani bowling attack to make their mark. Atherton was out early to Wasim, but Nick Knight and Alec Stewart started to put together a solid partnership. However Waqar wasn’t going to let the home side build a match turning partnership. He and Mushy took 3 wickets for 9 runs and Hick who had his troubles against the 2 Ws on the previous tour was bowled with a trademark Waqar inswinging yorker. Thorpe led a recovery and England ended the day on 200 for 5 and things seemed to be just about even.

On the third day Thorpe continued to play steadily and chip away at the deficit. England accumulated 60 runs, but then once again Waqar and this time his partner in crime Rehman took the last 5 wickets in the space of 25 runs. The tail was just blown apart by the pacemen, and put Pakistan right in the driving seat with a lead of 55. Pakistan in their second innings came out positively and Saeed Anwar scored 88 , but as Sohail picked up an injury the debutant Shadab Kabir opened up with him. At the close of play Pakistan reached 162 with Ijaz and Inzy at the crease.

So now time for our trip to the home of cricket, Lords. The weather forecast looked good, Pakistan are in control , Inzy is at the crease , life is good. I had been to a few county games and some of the tour matches in 92, but this was my first experience of a test match. We were sitting in the old lower grandstand which is square of the wicket on the right of the pavilion. The view wasn’t amazing, but the atmosphere was lively. It wasn’t the boisterous kind of Pakistani crowd which became familiar during the later nineties, but there was more of a sprinkling of support around the ground. Inzy and Ijaz pushed Pakistan to a lead of 350 and on a tiring pitch it was all about how much time will the bowlers need to take 10 wickets. After Inzy departed, Wasim made a quick 30 or so runs and then called for the declaration. Wasim had set a target of just over 400 and he and his bowlers would need to bowl out England with 4 sessions remaining, comprising play after tea and the whole of the fifth day. The 2 Ws came out pumped up and Waqar picked up Knight early with an LBW. The crowd anticipated an England collapse, but the reliable pair of Stewart and Atherton steered England to the close of play without losing another wicket. As Athers blocked out yet another delivery, an announcement was made that tickets on the fifth day would be available for £10 . My brother and I turned our thoughts to Monday and the possibility of witnessing a test victory.

So now to the final day’s play. Would Pakistan manage to take 9 wickets and take a 1-0 lead? On the way to the ground there was some drizzle around and it looked like there would be a delayed start. There were mostly young Pakistani supporters in the queue at the box office and it didn’t look like there would be many people in the ground. We took our seats in the upper mound stand where most of the Pakistanis seemed to congregate. Even though the crowd was in the hundreds , we seemed to be making a lot of noise with the “Zindabads”. Athers and Stewart carried on with their no risk approach from the previous evening. We got to lunch and it seemed the air hand gone out of the sails. No wickets and not a chance to speak of. Bumped into a few guys from School and we decided that we would probably leave early as the game would probably meander towards a draw.

After a walk around the shops we were refueled and the Zindabads were back in force, but more with a feeling of hope rather than expectation. All of a sudden Atherton succumbed to Mushy and Asif Mujataba took a sharp catch. A few minutes later Stewart tried to leave one pitching outside leg, it spun up his pads, up onto his left glove as his hands were trying to get out of the way and just looped to a close in fielder. Pakistan were in the game and now had a sniff of victory. The small crowd was now going crazy as this is what they had been waiting for all day. Now it was time for the Waqar and Mushy show. The crowd were chanting “Who’s the man with the golden hand, WA-QAR YOU-NIS”. Hick was the new batsman and the Burewala Express was steaming in under the afternoon sun, the Pakistani’s were looking for the knock-out blow and Younis was lining up the right hook, in the blink of an eye the stumps went flying , Hick was dimissed by another inswinging beauty. Now the crowd were almost delirious. This is what they had waited for four years. Cork was the next man with his head on the block. It looked like he was a dead man even before Waqar began the long run up from the pavilion end. This time not a yorker , but a lowish full toss, but the result was the same, stumps cart-wheeling faster than a team of IPL cheerleaders. With one or two wickets left and still a half hour before tea, we sensed that victory was now close and we may get a chance to run on to the pitch once the result was completed.

We and about 50 other Pakistani supporters ran to one of the lower stands at the nursery end. Saeed Anwar was fielding near the boundary and we were making so much noise he couldn’t hear instructions from the captain. Ian Salisbury put up some resistance with a 50 stand, but fittingly the skipper Wasim claimed the final wicket. We hurdled the advertising boards and ran towards the players, who anticipated the invasion and had already made their way close to the pavilion. We were on the hallowed Lords pitch, Pakistan had won the test match and the chorus of Zinabads was the only thing that could be heard.
With the TV cameras now facing the crowd , some guys started to sing “Botham is a Liar, Imran is a hero”. In preparation for the post match ceremony David Gower who was commentating for the BBC at the time emerged on the balcony and the crowd started to chant Gower is a hero instead. When Atherton made his way to get interviewed and collect the loser’s cheque, he was met with a chorus of boos. But when the victorious Wasim came out to accept the winners spoils he earned the greatest cheer of the day. Waqar won man of the match and the partying on the ground went on for another half an hour.

After leaving the ground and looking for the bus stop we bumped into Saeed Anwar and his wife around the ground who seemed kind of lost. We offered our salaams and congratulations. He was so down to earth and it was hard to believe that this was one of the premier batsmen in the world and he was happy to have a chit chat with a couple of random teenagers. We also bumped into Alan Mullaly , an English fast bowler at the time and he said something how he’d take us next time. We met up with some other guys at the bus stop and they boasted how they went into the Hilton opposite the ground and met Waqar and co as they downed a few pints. Not sure how true this was, but at the time we took their word for it. :younis

All that was left was to get home, record the highlights and see if we could spot ourselves on TV.
 
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We went off to a bad start,12-2 but Inzi and Saeed were brilliant that day
 
Wow - some excellent memories there! I was visiting from Canada that summer - what a summer to remember !
 
Mullaly, Brown, Ealham, Salisbury. What a terrible attack. Only Cork was test class.
 
My memories of last time I visited UK to follow Pakistan cricket aren't so good with respect to crowd. It was a tri-nation ODI series between England Australia and Pakistan, and in EVERY FREAKING Pakistan game, we had a pitch invasion by some very Jahil desi youth. Even the captain, Waqar Yonus, begged the crowd on the big screen but they wouldn't listen. I remember members of local English crowd were disgusted by this. A few black sheep would bring such a shame to all of us.
 
One good thing about that series was that skippers Atherton and Wasim were Lancy team-mates and combined to put the long-term Anglo-Pak acrimony behind them.
 
We can repeat the same this summer if we have Aamer,Asif,Shoaib playing in tandem....except the Big Question is how will our batsman (if we can call them all batsmen) face the current Much Better england bowling attack??
 
zubair_786_7 said:
i was there on the last day.......we invaded the pitch lol......i was at the last test too at the oval


There may be some fun in invading the pitch I agree, but what exactly do you get out of it which is strong enough to justify AND ignore all the shame and disgust this act brings to the entire race of South Asians in UK... specially to Pakistanis.
 
Uncle Sam said:
There may be some fun in invading the pitch I agree, but what exactly do you get out of it which is strong enough to justify AND ignore all the shame and disgust this act brings to the entire race of South Asians in UK... specially to Pakistanis.



every pakistani at the ground invaded the pitch and it wasnt jus me.....i was young at the time....but it was relly fun.....it was worth every minute of it

:wasim :younis :inzi
 
Oh the memories. I was there on the 4th & 5th days of that test. Also the Oval one.
 
Robert said:
Mullaly, Brown, Ealham, Salisbury. What a terrible attack. Only Cork was test class.

1990s (especially late 90s) were the years of 'bit and pieces' bowlers for England IMO. Great batting line up though (on paper at least).

The only memories i have of the tour is my dad phoning home every afternoon to remind my older brother to remember to tape the highlights on BBC and a (ever boring :D) Richie Benaud in the highlights! :))
 
Uncle Sam said:
There may be some fun in invading the pitch I agree, but what exactly do you get out of it which is strong enough to justify AND ignore all the shame and disgust this act brings to the entire race of South Asians in UK... specially to Pakistanis.

In those days the crowd used to be able to go onto the ground at the end of the match. So the pitch invasions used to be a sort of pre cursor at the end of the match and it wasn't only during Pak matches in the UK.

It was only after the moronic behaviour of some of our fans during the 2001 tour that the general public were restricted from going on to the ground at the end of matches. If memory serves me correct the idiots used to flood the pitch before the matches were complete.
 
SAVIO said:
In those days the crowd used to be able to go onto the ground at the end of the match. So the pitch invasions used to be a sort of pre cursor at the end of the match and it wasn't only during Pak matches in the UK.

It was only after the moronic behaviour of some of our fans during the 2001 tour that the general public were restricted from going on to the ground at the end of matches. If memory serves me correct the idiots used to flood the pitch before the matches were complete.


well sed savio
 
There was the famous incident in the 99WC semi final where the Pakistan fans ran onto the pitch as Anwar hit a ball up in the air and could have possibly been out caught! :))
 
What a Summer! Got my first chance to look at the legendary Paras Mahmbrey before the main event of the Summer. Still remember Nass's comments after being man of the series against India that the real test was coming up...how times change.


shahzadddd said:
We met up with some other guys at the bus stop and they boasted how they went into the Hilton opposite the ground and met Waqar and co as they downed a few pints. Not sure how true this was, but at the time we took their word for it. :younis

Lol, still remember a massive gasp going up when a crate of lager was delivered on to the Pak team coach after the Oval test! Hilarious thinking back and remembering ppl trying to preach to the players on the coach via sign language and other controversial means.
 
On a side note I'd reckon that along with the great Windies and OZ teams of the past that Pak must be the only team to win three successive series IN England, which they did after '96. Maybe someone could confirm.
 
SAVIO said:
On a side note I'd reckon that along with the great Windies and OZ teams of the past that Pak must be the only team to win three successive series IN England, which they did after '96. Maybe someone could confirm.

Sounds unlilkely - Pakistan lost 2-1 in 1982, won 1-2 in 1987 and drew 1-1 in 2000 as I recall, before losing 3-0 in 2006.
 
SAVIO said:
If memory serves me correct the idiots used to flood the pitch before the matches were complete.

Exactly !!!
I remember the police finally had to bring in the canine dogs to push back the crowd from invading the pitch.
 
Robert said:
Sounds unlilkely - Pakistan lost 2-1 in 1982, won 1-2 in 1987 and drew 1-1 in 2000 as I recall, before losing 3-0 in 2006.

We won three consecutive series in England - '87, '92 and '96.
 
could we also beat australia like this do u ppers some memory when we last time beat australia in test. i
 
i was there in the oval match last day! i remember ata-ur rehman invited me my dad and brother to the pavilion to watch the match. can clearly remeber the atmosphere and the last wicket wasim took. bowled him!!!!!!!!
 
RE pitch invasions , in those days it was perfectly acceptable for spectators to enter the field of play once the game was over.

As others have mentioned it was only from the 99 world cup and 2000 tour when things started to go out of hand and people started to invade the ground before the game was over.

I also attended the fourth day of the oval test match... it wasn't as memorable as this game too.

Next time I think I will write my account from the 1999 world cup. I attended the Pak v SA and Pak v Zim games.
 
Was this the match in which Ijaz got bowled around his legs? It was definitely one of the matches on this tour. Incredible.
 
Ijazs dismissal was hilarious! God knows what he was attempting!

Inzis inns was probably his best test knock in my eyes, right up their with a similar one at Old trafford in 2000/1.

Pakistan were a very strong test side at that point in time!
 
shahzadddd said:

We and about 50 other Pakistani supporters ran to one of the lower stands at the nursery end. Saeed Anwar was fielding near the boundary and we were making so much noise he couldn’t hear instructions from the captain. Ian Salisbury put up some resistance with a 50 stand, but fittingly the skipper Wasim claimed the final wicket. We hurdled the advertising boards and ran towards the players, who anticipated the invasion and had already made their way close to the pavilion. We were on the hallowed Lords pitch, Pakistan had won the test match and the chorus of Zinabads was the only thing that could be heard.
.


So its you Shahzaddd who put Saeed Anwar in trouble .Winning moment of that match :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80TUgUWNT6U
 
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Robert said:
Sounds unlilkely - Pakistan lost 2-1 in 1982, won 1-2 in 1987 and drew 1-1 in 2000 as I recall, before losing 3-0 in 2006.

Pakistan won 1-0 in 87, 2-1 in 1992, 2-0 in 96 and drew 1-1 2000.

Pakistan were unbeaten in test series in england for 24 years! :14:
 
Very enjoyable read!

Have to admit, I hardly followed any cricket from about 1995 to 2003 - family, jobs, loss of interest.

Only got back into it when I discovered PP.
 
Amjid Javed said:
Last day of the Oval test, England collapsed after tea. Have to say, the decision Bucknor gave against Nasser Hussain was simply atrocious. Ball bowled by Mushy from around the wicket, pitching a foot outside leg stump and with the spin was going to comfortably miss off stump. Not to mention Nas was on the front foot. He was looking pretty solid too.

But at best England could've only drawn the Test, and still would've lost the series 1-0.
 
Oxy said:
Very enjoyable read!

Have to admit, I hardly followed any cricket from about 1995 to 2003 - family, jobs, loss of interest.

Only got back into it when I discovered PP.

One of the best, if not the Best period of Pakistan Golden Cricket History, Since then we are pushing the limits of mediocrity and rubbish.

I should add, in terms of individual and sheer brilliance of top class players.
 
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ali110 said:
One of the best, if not the Best period of Pakistan Golden Cricket History, Since then we are pushing the limits of mediocrity and rubbish.

I should add, in terms of individual and sheer brilliance of top class players.

No doubt - although I made sure I followed Waqar Younis....
 
d0gers said:
Last day of the Oval test, England collapsed after tea. Have to say, the decision Bucknor gave against Nasser Hussain was simply atrocious. Ball bowled by Mushy from around the wicket, pitching a foot outside leg stump and with the spin was going to comfortably miss off stump. Not to mention Nas was on the front foot. He was looking pretty solid too.

But at best England could've only drawn the Test, and still would've lost the series 1-0.

Bad decisions sadly happen. Even so england collapses were pretty common place against Pakistan in those times!
 
Great article by Shahzaddd - now featuring on our home page as well.
 
Some good memories and an excellent example for our Essay Competition :D
 
SAVIO said:
We won three consecutive series in England - '87, '92 and '96.

Oh, fair enough, you said after 1996 which is what confused me.
 
Ah those were the days . Their bowling was simply unplayable. The only match i witnessed which involved pakistan was when they won the famous chennai test. :wasim pulled a victory from no where.
 
That was a terrible England attack. Cork the one test class bowler. No Fraser, no Caddick, no Gough.
 
Good Lord, repeated my statement of a decade ago without remembering it.

Got to watch this deep dive posting....
 
That was a terrible England attack. Cork the one test class bowler. No Fraser, no Caddick, no Gough.

Unfortunately there was no consistentcy in selection from england back in them days It was a revolving door with players picked and dropped randomly

Injuries from playing excessive county cricket didnt help help matters either
 
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