Khaleej Times

England’s Ali ready for life in the pink

- AFP

birmingham — Moeen Ali is confident it will take more than a pink ball to put him off his stride during England’s inaugural day/ night Test.

The off-spinning all-rounder was England’s man-of-the-series after starring with both bat and ball during the recent 3-1 Test triumph at home to South Africa.

Now Birmingham-born Ali returns to the city’s Edgbaston ground, where he came through the youth ranks with Warwickshi­re before joining Midlands rivals Worcesters­hire, for what will also be the England team’s first taste of floodlit Test cricket in a series opener against the West Indies starting on Thursday.

There has been much talk about how the pink ball — required for floodlit Tests as the players’ traditiona­l clothing makes the white ball familiar from one-day internatio­nals as unusable as the standard red — will affect bowlers. But Ali, who hit a fifty but bowled just three overs during the day-night round of County Championsh­ip fixtures scheduled as preparatio­n for this Test, said: “It’s different... it feels lighter off the bat.

“Sometimes you don’t feel like you’ve hit it, and it goes; other times you’ve nailed it, and it doesn’t,” he added. “But you get used to it ... I did by the end of the (net) session.”

As for bowling with a pink ball, the 30-year-old Ali, who against South Africa became the first man to take 25 wickets in a fourTest series, said: “The seam is good — it’s not quite as slippery. It spun, maybe because the seam is hard. “Seeing it is fine. It will be interestin­g at twilight, but I will try not to think about it.”

There have been suggestion­s that the pink ball does not swing as much or for as long as the traditiona­l red cricket ball. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Moeen Ali talks to Chris Woakes while training. —
Reuters Moeen Ali talks to Chris Woakes while training. —

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