Edgbaston Test: England 297 all out against Pakistan at 1st day close

Published August 3, 2016
This is Sohail Khan's first Test on English soil. — AFP
This is Sohail Khan's first Test on English soil. — AFP

BIRMINGHAM: Sohail Khan marked his return to Test cricket after a five-year absence with a maiden five-wicket haul as Pakistan dismissed England for 297 on Wednesday's first day of the third Test at Edgbaston.

After Sohail sparked a top-order collapse, England, who lost the toss, were indebted to left-handers Gary Ballance (70) and Moeen Ali (63) for taking them to what could yet prove a challenging total.

Sohail, a 32-year-old right-arm quick, removed a quartet of top-order batsman on his way to figures of five for 96 in 23 overs.

His return was all the more impressive as his previous two Tests -- against Sri Lanka at Karachi in 2009 and against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo in 2011 -- had yielded a combined haul of one for 245.

A stress fracture of the back after last year's World Cup provided a further check on his progress.

Pakistan's Azhar Ali (2R) celebrates after taking the wicket of England's Stuart Broad. -AFP
Pakistan's Azhar Ali (2R) celebrates after taking the wicket of England's Stuart Broad. -AFP

“When I played my first two Test matches, the pitches were flat and it didn't swing for me,” Sohail told Sky Sports.

“But no excuses -- I worked hard and it paid off."

“My plan was to hit the right area -- you can bowl against any batsman if you hit the right area,” he added.

All six times a side have posted 335 or fewer in their first innings of an Edgbaston Test, having been sent into bat, they have gone on to lose.

'Par score'

But Pakistan's top order have struggled this series and Ballance told BBC Radio's Test Match Special: “If we bowl well, this could be a par score. With a bit of cloud cover, we bowl well and get a second-innings lead, we will have a chance.”

Sohail was recalled in place of Wahab Riaz as Pakistan broke up the all left-arm pace attack they had deployed for the first two Tests of this four-match contest following England's 330-run series-levelling win at Old Trafford.

Sohail took the new ball after Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq won the toss on a gloomy morning, with some moisture in the pitch after overnight rain.

Alex Hales fell for an unconvincing 17 when caught behind off Sohail.

Joe Root had made a Test-best 254 at Old Trafford in a match where he and century-maker Alastair Cook, the England captain, scored 506 runs between them for just twice out.

'Pillars' removed

Misbah had described the pair as the “pillars” of England's otherwise fragile top order.

Pakistan knocked down the first of those pillars when Root, playing one of his favourite back-foot forcing shots, edged Sohail and was held by sometimes fallible slip fielder Mohammad Hafeez for just three.

Sohail had taken two wickets for eight runs in nine balls and England were 48 for two.

Left-handed opener Cook, carrying on from where he left off in Manchester, made 45 in 52 balls, including eight fours before Rahat Ali had him lbw.

Cook reviewed, more in hope than expectation, but was duly given out to leave England 75 for three. James Vince guided England to 100 for three at lunch.

But on 39, an uncertain defensive prod outside off stump against Sohail saw Vince, yet to mae a fifty in his eight Test innings, edge low to second slip Younis Khan.

Jonny Bairstow had rescued England from many a dire position in recent times.

But he made just 12 before, trying to cut a sharply bouncing Sohail delivery, he was caught behind by opposing wicket-keeper Sarfraz Ahmed.

Sohail had taken two for six in 10 balls, with England now 158 for five.

Ballance, increasingly assured after a shaky start, hit 11 fours.

But his 150-ball innings ended when a glance off leg-spinner Yasir Shah was well held by Ahmed, who made good ground to hold the tough chance in an example of Pakistan's much-improved catching.

Ballance's exit ended a sixth-wicket stand of 66 with Ali.

Ali completed a 99-ball fifty when he pulled Rahat for his fifth four.

Mohammad Amir then struck twice with the new ball, including removing Ali when the batsman's loose drive saw Ahmed hold his fifth catch of the innings.

Sohail, appropriately, ended the day's play when had No 11 James Anderson lbw for five. The paceman kissed the ground in joy, with Anderson's review all to no avail.

Teams

England: Alastair Cook (captain), Alex Hales, Joe Root, James Vince, Gary Ballance, Jonny Bairstow (wicketkeeper), Moeen Ali, Chris Woakes, Stuart Broad, Steven Finn, James Anderson

Pakistan: Mohammad Hafeez, Sami Aslam, Azhar Ali, Younus Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq (captain), Asad Shafiq, Sarfraz Ahmed (wicketkeeper), Yasir Shah, Mohammad Amir, Sohail Khan, Rahat Ali

England’s home Test record

This will be England's 500th home Test. Here's England's overall home Test record, a sequence of matches dating back to 1880:

  • Played: 499
  • Won: 206
  • Lost: 115
  • Drawn: 178

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