Western Mail

Canny old dogs do trick as England take control in second Test

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AN unapologet­ically tried and trusted attack did the business for England on the first day of the second Test against Pakistan, with James Anderson leading from the front.

With captain Joe Root eager to bring in all-rounder Sam Curran to strengthen a batting line-up missing Ben Stokes’ game-changing abilities, England decided to abandon recent policy by standing down their two quickest bowlers.

Jofra Archer was officially rested and Mark Wood saw a recent niggle count against him, but there was also a feeling that Anderson, Stuart Broad and Chris Woakes were selected on outright merit as the most reliable unit available at a muggy, overcast Ageas Bowl.

All four pace bowlers enjoyed success as the tourists’ decision to bat first led them down a dead end to 126 for five, with Anderson taking the first two wickets to double his haul from last week’s win in Manchester.

Pakistan’s tally hinged on 60 from Abid Ali, but he required two drops to make it that far and much now rests with Babar Azam (25 not out) after a day when only 45.4 overs were possible due to bad light and rain.

Anderson’s flat performanc­e in the series opener in Manchester led to the country’s record wickettake­r denying rumours he was contemplat­ing retirement and Root made a point of throwing his faith behind the 38-year-old on the eve of the match.

Anderson needed all of eight deliveries to open his and England’s

account, swerving the new ball in to left-hander Shan Masood and thudding the knee-roll for an lbw decision that left nobody, from the umpire to the batsman himself, in any doubt.

Broad should have been celebratin­g similarly in the very next over but, when Abid sprayed a chance to third slip, Dom Sibley jerked to his left and juggled the chance.

Woakes, man-of-the-match for his efforts with bat and ball last time out, suffered even worse luck after entering the fray.

He thought he had Azhar Ali for seven when the ball nestled against the stumps via bat and pad, but the bails stubbornly refused to move, no matter how hard Woakes stared. Undeterred he found Abid’s edge on 21 only for Rory Burns to mimic Sibley’s carelessne­ss in the cordon.

The second-wicket pair turned their good fortune into a half-century stand and gladly took an early lunch at 62 for one when the first rain of the day arrived.

Only another 10.1 overs and 23 runs were snuck in before a bigger deluge blighted the afternoon session but that was enough for Anderson to take care of Azhar.

The under-pressure captain appeared to have got away with one when England declined to review an appeal for caught behind off Anderson – with UltraEdge showing a slight but tangible flicker – but he did not add to his score of 20.

He pushed at Anderson again and this time Burns was alert enough to gather a low chance.

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