Saeed Ajmal is applauded by his teammates as he walks off the field of play holding a ball skywards after taking the final wicket of Graeme Swann.—AP

DUBAI: Rival captains Misbah-ul-Haq and Andrew Strauss showed surprise at England's capitulation which saw them lose the first Test against Pakistan by ten wickets here on Thursday.

And the manner of victory surprised Misbah.

'Obviously, we were not expecting it would finish so early, but I guess all the credit goes to the bowlers. No team would have expected such a victory against the world number one,' said the Pakistan captain.

The win also gave Misbah seven wins in 13 Tests as captain since taking over in October 2010.

'We are trying to be one of the best teams in the world, but I think it's still a long way to go, we have to just improve much more than this, and we are just on the right path,' added the 37-year-old Pakistani captain.

Misbah praised his bowlers. 'It's a wonderful performance by our bowlers, they stuck to their task and it was total variations of Saeed on which they made mistakes. It's a very big win for us which will increase our self-confidence,' remarked Misbah.

The Pakistan captain, however, expects England to bounce straight back.

'When you are number one team there is something that makes you number one, they have good quality cricketers, they are fighters and they can really come hard on us,' he added.

England captain Strauss said Pakistan surprised them after they won the toss and batted on day one.

'We were caught off guard in the first session of the first day on a very flat wicket, from then on Pakistan were in front and never let us back into the game and you need to congratulate them for the way they played,' said Strauss.

Strauss, under whom this is England's first defeat in ten Tests, pointed a finger at batsmen.

'Obviously we are disappointed by the way we batted in the both innings, primarily in the first innings because it was not a 50 for five wickets. So you need to learn some lessons from that and move forward.

'The most important thing is not to be too carried away by the result and obviously learn the lessons from that and make sure you don't make those mistakes again,' said Strauss, who added that he was not worried about the number one ranking.

'This is not the time for us to be worrying about number one or anything like that. What we need to do is make sure we don't play this type of cricket we played in this game in the next Test and that is what our focus is on.

'The feeling of disappointment is a good motivation to make sure that it does not happen again,' said Strauss.

Strauss, whose team played the first Test since beating India in August last year, refused to agree England were under-prepared.-AFP

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