Babar Azam stars for Pakistan with fine fifty in England opener
Pakistan's Babar Azam underlined his status as one of the world's leading batsmen with a fine unbeaten fifty before rain stopped play on the opening day of the first Test against England at Old Trafford on Wednesday.
Pakistan’s Babar Azam will now also lead his country in Test cricket, as he’s done in T20 cricket and ODI cricket. Picture: AFP
Pakistan were 121-2, with Babar 52 not out, when the umpires ordered an early tea in Manchester.
Together with left-handed opener Shan Masood (45 not out), he had put on an unbroken 78 for the third wicket before the weather intervened.
Pakistan were 43-2 when Babar came in to bat after captain Azhar Ali, who had won the toss, fell lbw for a duck to Chris Woakes.
Azhar, asked on Tuesday if Babar could join Australia’s Steve Smith and India’s Virat Kohli in the top bracket of Test batsmen, said: “I think he is right up there already.
“People are thinking and talking about it. He is just hungry for runs and I think if he keeps doing that he will be up there for quite a long time.”
It was easy to see what Azhar meant, even when Babar started cautiously in tough conditions.
But after the interval the 25-year-old, who had scored four hundreds in his five previous Tests, unfurled an array of stylish attacking shots.
He struck express fast bowler Jofra Archer down the ground for four before driving off-spinner Dom Bess for another boundary to bring up Pakistan’s hundred.
Bess, however, should have removed Masood for 45 when he took the left-hander’s outside edge but wicketkeeper Jos Buttler dropped the chance,
Babar drew level on 45 not out with Masood, who was on 22 when the right-hander came into bat.
Babar then went past his team-mate to complete an impressive 70-ball fifty, including nine boundaries.
– Tough conditions –
With leg-spinners Yasir Shah and Shadab Khan in Pakistan’s side, there was a logic in Azhar’s decision to bat first after he won the toss, with his slow bowlers likely to be more effective on a wearing pitch.
Nevertheless, the overcast skies and piercing floodlights made life tough for the opening batsmen, with conditions favouring England’s four-man pace attack, who had been involved in last month’s 2-1 series win over the West Indies, completed at Old Trafford.
In contrast, Pakistan’s preparations for the three-match series amounted to just two intra-squad warm-up games.
Before play began there was a minute’s silence for victims of the coronavirus in both Pakistan and Britain.
Masood and fellow opener Abid Ali did well to survive the first hour against an attack featuring James Anderson and Stuart Broad — who have more than 1,000 Test wickets between them — Archer and the in-form Woakes.
After an hour of sound Pakistan resistance, Archer struck.
Having tested out Abid with several short-pitched deliveries the paceman, with no obvious change in action, bowled him with a full-length delivery for 16 before Azhar was lbw to a Woakes nip-backer for a six-ball nought.
England have not won a Test series against Pakistan since 2010 and they came into this match having lost the series opener in each of their past five campaigns against all opponents.
As was the case during the West Indies series, the match is taking place behind closed doors on health grounds, with Pakistan denied the vibrant and vocal support they usually enjoy in England.
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