Pakistan v England: Shoaib Malik hits century in first Test in UAE
- Published
First Test, Abu Dhabi, day one |
Pakistan 286-4: Malik 124*, Hafeez 98 |
England: Yet to bat |
Pakistan's Shoaib Malik marked his first Test for five years with a century as England struggled on the opening day of the three-match series.
Malik - caught off a no-ball on 40 - hit an unbeaten 124 and Mohammad Hafeez 98 to help Pakistan to 286-4 at the close of play in Abu Dhabi.
Younus Khan scored 38 to pass Javed Miandad's mark of 8,832 runs and become Pakistan's leading Test run scorer.
James Anderson claimed two wickets but Ian Bell dropped two simple catches.
While Pakistan will be content with their position, England's bowlers deserve credit for the perseverance they showed on a surface offering minimal assistance.
Stuart Broad and Mark Wood claimed a wicket apiece, but Test debutant Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali went wicketless in a combined 36 overs after the tourists lost the toss in unfavourable conditions at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium.
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Malik back with a bang
Playing his first Test since 2010 and his first first-class match for almost a year, 33-year-old Malik justified the selectors' faith with his third Test century.
The all-rounder, who has credited his wife - Indian tennis star Sania Mirza - with the revival of his international career,, external came to the crease with Pakistan 5-1 after Shan Masood was bowled via his helmet ducking into a James Anderson bouncer.
He showed occasional signs of impatience, most noticeably when he was caught by Joe Root at gully off a Broad no-ball.
However, he was largely untroubled as he added 168 for the second wicket with Hafeez, who was lbw playing across the line to Ben Stokes on the stroke of tea.
Younus tops the pile
Younus Khan was far from at his best in making 38, but he did enough to become Pakistan's leading run scorer., external
The 37-year-old overtook Inzamam-ul-Haq and Miandad, who had held the record for 30 years, when he clubbed Moeen Ali over mid-wicket for six to pass 19.
The third-wicket partnership was worth 74 when Younus drove Broad to Alastair Cook at the straighter of two short mid-ons.
Misbah-ul-Haq perished shortly after courtesy of a faint outside edge and a successful England review, but Asad Shafiq accompanied Malik until the close as Pakistan saw off the first three overs of the new ball.
Bell's butter fingers
On a day when England managed only four wickets in 90 overs, they were left to rue the mistakes which cost them three more.
Bell dropped two straightforward chances at second slip, both off Anderson.
Hafeez was put down when he had made only seven - a wicket which would have left Pakistan 12-2 - and Shafiq was reprieved on 10 in the penultimate over of the day.
But arguably of greater importance was the no-ball which aided Malik, who hit 13 fours on the way to a 182-ball century, his third in Tests.
The stats you may have missed
Alastair Cook has now taken 122 catches in Tests, more than any other England player. Andrew Strauss is next on the list with 121
James Anderson moved into 10th in the all-time list of Test wicket-takers, with 415
Shoaib Malik is only the fifth player to score century on his return to Test cricket after missing at least 40 Tests
What they said
England's Stuart Broad, speaking to BBC Sport: "I blame myself for the no-ball. We pride ourselves on our catching and not bowling no-balls. I can't think of many times I've had one chalked off, if at all. It's a feeling of distraught.
"I'm not a regular no-ball bowler so it took me a bit by surprise but it's not really acceptable at this level. After lunch it was a gusty wind and as a bowler it can affect your stride pattern. It's about millimetres really. I apologised at tea to all of the guys because it was disappointing."
Former England batsman Geoffrey Boycott on Test Match Special: "England need 10 wickets and it's hard enough.
"With Ian Bell dropping two catches and Stuart Broad taking a wicket with a no-ball, it adds up to a lot of runs and creates despondency. Pakistan have been given three extra lives."
Pakistan's Mohammad Hafeez on Sky Sports: "Once you get past the new ball, you can score runs. I can't believe I got out in the nineties, but hopefully 98 is enough for the team.
"England bowled well with the older ball but hopefully we can push beyond 400 now."
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