The Independent

Michael Atherton scored the last and slowest of his 16 Test hundreds

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In the gloom, the tourists won by six wickets.

After all these years it is still necessary to pinch yourself. It was a reward for England’s obstinacy. All they had done for three matches was hang in there. Michael Atherton scored the last and slowest of his 16 Test hundreds in the first innings, a model of obduracy, simply hoping a chink might appear in the opposition.

England will probably have to dig as deep this time in the UAE if they are to achieve something similar. They calculated wrongly four years ago, bamboozled by Saeed Ajmal and not sure what method to use to counter him, with the upshot being that his spin partner, Abdur Rehman, benefited too. Alastair Cook, their captain now, their vice-captain then, recalled it yesterday.

“The lessons I thought we learnt a little bit in the oneday series after,” he said [England won 4-0, Cook scored two hundreds]. “When you’re forced to play a little bit positively, you can put the pressure back on the opposition. That’s the way we want to play – it’s not going to be crash, bang, wallop like it was in the summer.

“We’ll play positively, but there will be times when you come in, the first 30 balls, when you have five men around the bat – you could have half an hour to tea. You’ve got to survive and get used to the conditions before you can push on. The guys are aware of that. We spoke a lot about it.”

Their discussion­s have mainly been with their batting coach, Mark Ramprakash, an admirable technician, and their temporary batting consultant, Mahela Jayawarden­e, a master of slow, turning pitches.

“A few have asked about batting for long periods and how you can keep going,” said Jayawarden­e. “We’ve spoken about a few techniques they can use that have helped me over the years. These guys are good at what they are doing. It is hard to concentrat­e for long periods in these conditions so you need to do certain things differentl­y and preserve your energy so you can keep more in the tank for the latter part of the day.

“So being smart is one thing we have spoken about. Try to keep things nice and simple and then concentrat­ion and focus becomes much easier. It’s about having those little battles in the middle in tough conditions and trying to control those battles. Once you get through that, you get into a zone and start to feel very comfortabl­e.”

The slowness of the pitches will be England’s biggest problem but the almost unfea sible heat – it is four or five degrees hotter than it was last time – will enhance their difficulti­es. They must then avoid being intimidate­d with men round the bat.

In all, England have won only two of their 27 away Tests against Pakistan, the first of all in 1961 when Bob Barber’s leg-spin took four wickets, and the win in 2000. Another one this time would show that this team are on their way somewhere.

Vincent joined the Chandigarh Lions, in the Indian Premier League in 2008, and said he had been approached by an Indian man offering cash and the services of a prostitute to join his match-fixing circle. When he told Cairns, Vincent says Cairns told him: “You work for me now.” Vincent said Cairns agreed to pay him $50,000 per game to underperfo­rm. Vincent admitted to doing so in four matches in 2008.

Vincent said he was initially shocked when Cairns told him about fixing. He told the jury he was “mentally unstable” at the time and “felt good to be part of a gang”. He said: “It completely caught me off guard. I didn’t expect to hear that.

“In a funny way, when he [Cairns] did say, ‘That’s good

Chris grabbed a bat and held it over me. I messed up his fix

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 ??  ?? Chris Cairns (left) played with Vincent for the Chandigarh Lions in the Indian Premier League
Chris Cairns (left) played with Vincent for the Chandigarh Lions in the Indian Premier League

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