The Scotsman

Silverwood counts on Anderson to clinch victory and create history

● Two wickets needed to join Warne, Muralithar­an and Kumble on 600

- By RORY DOLLARD

Head coach Chris Silverwood is crossing his fingers that James Anderson can end England’s Test summer on a high by claiming a historic 600th wicket and leading the team to victory over Pakistan.

Anderson ended day four of the third Test stranded on 599 after taking the wicket of Abid Ali late on – a breakthrou­gh that might have been a milestone had Jos Buttler held on to a regulation edge from Shan Masood in the morning session.

A combinatio­n of bad light and heavy rain restricted Anderson to 12 overs yesterday and, with a poor forecast fordayfive,thereisach­ancehe

Overnight: England 583-8 dec (Z Crawley 267, J C Buttler 152). Pakistan 273 (Azhar Ali 141 no, Mohammad Rizwan 53; J M Anderson 5-56).

Shan Masoodlbw b Broad ................................. 18 Abid Ali lbw b Anderson ................................... 42 Azhar Ali not out ....................................................... 29 Babar Azam not out ................................................. 4 Extras (lb7) ......................................................................... 7 Total (2wkts, 56ovs) ............................ 100

Fall: 1-49 2-88. Bowling: Anderson 12 3 18 1; Broad 11 5 23 1; Woakes 8 2 14 0; Archer 9 5 8 0; Bess 14 3 27 0; Root 2 0 3 0.

England lead by 210 runs

could have to wait even longer to becoming the first paceman in a distinguis­hed club that currently has only three members – Muttiah Muralithar­an, Shane Warne and Anil Kumble.

England are also chasing a wider prize – with eight more wickets needed to seal a 2-0 series victory after Pakistan closed 210 runs behind on 100 for two. Silverwood remains hopeful of a perfect conclusion to two and a half months of training, living and playing in a strictly controlled bubble, with his 38-year-old seamer to the fore.

“It would be fantastic if we could do it. I want to win the game first and foremost but to finish strongly and see Jimmy get his 600th would be fantastic,” he said.

“We’re all aware of the milestone Jimmy is looking at but he’ll get there. Hopefully we’ll see it tomorrow.

“It would be brilliant to see Jimmy get over the line. We’ll wake up in the morning, have a look out the curtains to see what’s out there and, if we get an opportunit­y, we’ll go for it.

“For the guys to come out and put their best foot forward and finish in the same way we’ve played the last two series would be nice. I’m very proud of how they’ve handled themselves, being locked up for the bets part of ten weeks in the bubble – their attitude and effort during that time has been fantastic.”

There is little that has not already been said in tribute to Anderson, who has built a 17-year body of work that may never be matched, but as a player who laboured hard for the 11 Test wickets he achieved Silverwood’s appreciati­on runs deep.

“He’s an inspiratio­n, isn’t he? 600 Test wickets... Wow,” he said.

“He’s worked so hard to do it and he’s brilliant around the place. He’s constantly helping the other bowlers. It’s just superb to have one of the best in the world sat in your dressing room and playing for your country.”

One England player has already taken the field for the final time, with Surrey batsman Ollie Pope landing badly on his left shoulder in the morning session and causing concerns that he has aggravated an old injury that kept him out of the game for several months.

He will leave the bubble for a medical assessment today, with Silverwood adding: “Ollie’s banged his shoulder again so he’ll go for a scan on that. We’ll assess from there.”

 ??  ?? 0 Chris Silverwood: Hoping.
0 Chris Silverwood: Hoping.
 ??  ?? 0 James Anderson: Milestone.
0 James Anderson: Milestone.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom