"They are an excellent team and have a long history of producing quality fast bowlers": Jos Buttler

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"They are an excellent team and have a long history of producing quality fast bowlers": Jos Buttler

England captain Jos Buttler has paid Pakistan's fast bowling attack the ultimate compliment on the eve of the ICC Men's T20 World Cup final by declaring some of their quicks will finish their careers among the best pace bowlers the country has ever produced.

Buttler will go head-to-head against Pakistan's bevy of quality pacers in Sunday's T20 World Cup final at the MCG and his battle at the top of England's batting order will go a long way to deciding who claims the coveted trophy.

Left-arm quick Shaheen Afridi already has 10 wickets at the tournament and is renowned as one of the best quicks in T20I cricket, while Naseem Shah, Haris Rauf and Mohammad Wasim have been among the better performed seamers at this year's tournament.

Pakistan have been well renowned for producing quality fast bowlers over a long period of time, with the likes of Wasim Akram, Shoaib Akhtar, Waqar Younis and Imran Khan among the best quicks to have ever played.

But Buttler rates the current batch so high that he believes many will finish their careers among the best fast bowlers from Pakistan.

"They are an excellent team and have a long history of producing quality fast bowlers, and the team we are up (on Sunday) against is no different," Buttler said at the MCG on Saturday.

"I am sure some of the guys we will go up against will go down at the end of their careers as some of the best bowlers Pakistan have ever produced and that’s a huge part of why they have got to a World Cup final."

Buttler said he used to dream about getting the chance to hold the World Cup trophy aloft when he was growing up in England and the dynamic opener gets the opportunity to make that dream a reality in his first ICC tournament as captain.

The right-hander only took over from former skipper Eoin Morgan earlier this year and could become the second England men's player to captain a T20 World Cup side to glory after Paul Collingwood achieved the feat in the West Indies in 2010.

"You certainly have a few dreams about that kind of thing and it really links back to your time as a kid and the kind of stuff you would be doing in the back garden with your brother and sister and pretending to lift the trophy and that kind of thing,” Buttler recalled.

"Now to be able to have that opportunity to have a chance to live that kind of thing out is incredibly special."

Buttler said England's recent series victory in Pakistan will have little bearing on Sunday's result, given conditions expected in Melbourne will be vastly different to what they experienced on the sub-continent during the seven T20Is against Babar Azam's side.

"We have played against them a lot recently but that was in very different conditions,” Buttler noted.

"Even though we have played each other in quite a few games, here in Melbourne is going to be a bit different to the series in Pakistan.

"We know we are up against an excellent team and that is what you expect in a World Cup final.

"We will focus on them a bit and on us a lot to ensure we turn up tomorrow and give the best account of ourselves."

Buttler is hopeful of regaining key fast bowler Mark Wood (hip) and top-order batter Dawid Malan (groin) from injury for the MCG contest after the pair missed England's emphatic 10-wicket triumph over India in Adelaide on Thursday.

The England skipper said the duo will be given right up until the toss on Sunday to prove they have recovered from their ailments.

https://www.t20worldcup.com/news/2903768
 
Jos the boss bring very diplomatic. Reality is, England are one of the most devastating Limited Over teams ever. Need this and to defend ODI
Cup next year to really be placed in that pantheon of great sides.

No attack can match a rampant England
 
"It is the best bowling attack in the tournament against the best batting line-up."

Those the words of Sky Sports Cricket's Nasser Hussain as Pakistan and England prepare for Sunday's T20 World Cup final in Melbourne (8am UK time weather permitting).

England's brutal and deep batting line-up plundered 179 against New Zealand and then cantered to a target of 169 against India in Thursday's semi-final with 24 balls to spare.

'Batting line-up' is actually a bit misleading with regards to the victory over India with only openers Jos Buttler and Alex Hales required - Buttler contributing 80 from 49 balls, including the match-winning six, and Hales 86 from 47 in a record T20 World Cup stand.

The battle between England's batters and Pakistan's pinpoint pacemen and shrewd spinners will be fascinating to watch - if the rain stays away and allows for a game to be contested.

Speaking on the Sky Sports Cricket Podcast, former England captain Eoin Morgan said: "If Pakistan get through the bulk of England's runs - Hales and Buttler - they will ask questions.

"Each one of their pacers bowls upwards of 90mph, it's quick stuff, and they also have a wrist-spinner in Shadab. They will try and bowl England out as if England bat well for 20 overs they score 200 or more and I don't see Pakistan chasing it down."

Shadab and Shaheen have 10 wickets each, while Haris Rauf, who can bowl at the speed of light but also has an array of slower balls, has collected six and Mohammad Wasim seven. Of that group, only Rauf has gone at over seven runs an over across the tournament, with Naseem Shah going at just six.

Hussain added: "India had to get above par with their bowling attack but Pakistan will feel that if they get a par score [that might be enough] with their bowling attack.

"Their bowling has kept them in this tournament, not their batting line-up. There is that new-ball threat and they haven't gone around the park against anybody."

Pakistan have picked up regular powerplay wickets in this tournament, starting when they snared three against India in that remarkable game at the MCG on October 23.

They took two in the first six overs against New Zealand in Wednesday's first semi-final in Sydney and early scalps on Sunday could expose an England middle order with tremendous talent but little time at the crease of late.

Phil Salt, set to bat at No 3 if Dawid Malan's groin injury sidelines him once more, had only a watching brief against India as Buttler and Hales slammed India for a combined 23 boundaries.

Salt is yet to face a ball in the tournament. Ben Stokes has faced just 55 - 36 of them as he guided England to the nervy win over Sri Lanka that sealed a semi-final spot. Liam Livingstone 43. Harry Brook 35. Moeen Ali 33. Pakistan will be hoping they can catch them cold.

"England's middle order have not faced a lot of balls and with the weather around, there will be something on offer regardless of what the wicket is like. If you lose the toss and find yourself three down, that's the way Pakistan will beat England - if they can."

Getting through Buttler and Hales could be Pakistan's problem, though, with England's top two astonishingly good against India on Thursday and amassing 410 runs between them at the World Cup.

Buttler has 199 runs at an average of 49.75 and a strike-rate of 143.16, while Hales has 211 at an average of 52.75 and strike-rate of 148.59. The openers' form has been one of the main reasons England's middle-order men have not had a chance to find theirs.

Pakistan's top two, Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan, have been astonishingly good over the years but not so in this tournament. Not until New Zealand came along.

Babar averaged below eight in the Super 12 stage with four single-figure dismissals out of five, while Rizwan was unable to register a fifty, topping out with 49 against Netherlands.

That changed against the Black Caps, though, as Babar and Rizwan each hit half-centuries during their ninth century partnership in T20 international cricket. No other pair has more hundred stands and no other pair has more than their 2,509 runs in unison.

Babar and Rizwan take a different approach to Buttler and Hales. For them, it's more about accumulation rather than instant destruction, which lays a fine foundation when it comes off but can leave the middle order with a lot to do when it doesn't.

Most century partnerships in T20I cricket
Babar Azam, Mohammad Rizwan (Pakistan) - 9
KL Rahul, Rohit Sharma (India) - 5
Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma (India) - 4
Martin Guptill, Kane Williamson (NZ) - 4
Aaron Finch, David Warner (Australia) - 4

Both fell before victory was clinched against the Black Caps, as did 21-year-old Mohammad Haris, but only after playing a third boundary-filled cameo in as many matches.

Hussain said: "Babar and Rizwan will play a little bit old-fashioned and will chew up deliveries. If those two go well, then the middle order [will feel more comfortable].

"Haris has given them the arrogance and swagger of youth - he doesn't fear the situation and could smash 50 off 20 balls and take the game away from you."

He could - but you sense the game may rest on the battle between the best bowling attack and the best batting line-up.

SKY
 
Joe Root speaking on Sky Sports:

"They have got some brilliant match-winners within their team; some brilliant bowling outfit, and some very talented batters"

"Lot spoken about the two lads at the top [Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan], and how consistent they have been in this format for an extended period.

"There are some wonderful players in there, so you know they are a very dangerous team, and you gotta make sure that you are right on top of your game when it comes to the big final."
 
Why are all these English players talking about Pakistan as much. Shouldn't they be mentioning both set of players?
 
The thing is Pak needs to bring their best performance to win the final but England can afford to be a bit clumsy yet may still win it.
 
This England side is very strong.if Pakistan don’t take early wickets then England will win easily.
 
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